Oh, whoops, I didn't mean to overlook the "in space" part. But that doesn't matter because it's nonsense to say that God exists outside of space, unless perhaps you just mean a concept, but that would trivialise God. — S
Either the universe accounts for its own existence - by some inexplicable magic - or an entity beyond it does, which necessarily has the attributes of being timeless and immaterial. They are not arbitrary designations, and simply calling it nonsense does not make it so. — AJJ
But God is God precisely because he is not a part of anything. — AJJ
which necessarily has the attributes of being timeless and immaterial. — AJJ
If there are timeless and immaterial things, per how I use language, the universe has timeless and immaterial things. — Terrapin Station
The only "things" I know of which could possibly qualify as having those attributes are concepts. If you're going to suggest that God is not a concept, and that God is a special exception, then you have a burden to justify that. — S
God is a logical alternative to atheism’s universe-by-magic. If the universe is not the source of itself, then its source is beyond it, and so necessarily timeless and immaterial. The argument for God is an argument for, and a justification for believing in, a spaceless, timelss Creator. — AJJ
Now you're being all Aspieish about "part." That's not the idea. If there is an x--whatever imaginable x is--I label it as "the universe" — Terrapin Station
If there are timeless and immaterial things, per how I use language, the universe has timeless and immaterial things. — Terrapin Station
Saying it’s a dodge does not make it a dodge. — AJJ
Settle down. So if x is a pencil, you label the pencil “the universe”? Perhaps you’ve mistyped — AJJ
God can’t be “had” by the universe for the same reason I gave in my last post; he would be subject to it, — AJJ
What's arguably timeless, immaterial, and outside of space are concepts. If God is not a concept, then justify what appears to be special pleading. — S
My justification is that to avoid atheism’s universe-by-magic, you must posit a source beyond the universe, which, being beyond the universe, is necessarily spacless and timeless, not arbitrarily so, because it is beyond the universe, of which space and time are a part. To have creative power it must also be conscious, because as I think you’ll agree, concepts have no creative powers per se. The name we give to this entity is God. — AJJ
Your definition is problematic because it makes it impossible to speak properly about God, — AJJ
Solving 4 of Einstein’s 10 field equations for GR gives rise to the possibility of quantum singularity at t0, from which the origin of the Universe as we know is given. Maybe. — Mww
That's not a justification, because atheism doesn't posit a universe-by-magic, and your supposed alternative possibility to atheism is implausible and an instance of special pleading. — S
A concept can't create the universe. A concept can't take actions. And a concept is all I have reason to believe might have these attributes you mention. — S
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