n his post, Marco suggests that the established physics fails to explain all observations in three main aspects. First of all, he points out that our current knowledge of physics cannot explain how the universe began and everything about the beginning of the universe is now still under the category of science fiction. Secondly, he states that our established physics cannot explain why fundamental constants and other properties of the universe are as they are. Lastly, he talks about the second law of thermodynamics and suggests that the established physics can only describe this law, but cannot explain why this is the case. Therefore, he comes to the conclusion that the existence of God can explain all these things, for there are records of God doing something scientifically impossible. — Isabel Hu
Some people do, and some people don't. The irony is that Philosophy itself, posit concepts of God.
And of course science does as well (theoretical physicists, cognitive science). — 3017amen
(1) If established physics cannot explain all observations, then there should be something else that can explain all these. FALSE
(2) If there should be something else that can explain all these, then it should be the existence of God. FALSE
(3) Therefore, if established physics cannot explain all observations, then the existence of God is necessary to explain all these. FALSE (necessarily, as one cannot derive a true conclusion from false premises) — Isabel Hu
The flying spaghetti monster works just as well. — Pro Hominem
Over 75% of Philosophical domains invoke God, Ummm, no? — 3017amen
Theoretical physicists invoke God, in some way shape or form (causation), no? — 3017amen
Cognitive science does studies on things like the Religious Experience Ummm, no? — 3017amen
In Christianity, was Jesus Italian? (For some reason I thought he was Jewish.) — 3017amen
Not sure what exactly you are claiming here, but you're going to need to cite some evidence. I suspect you don't have any. — Pro Hominem
No. If you are using "God" as a synonym for "causation" you are distorting both terms beyond recognition. — Pro Hominem
Yes, along with all sorts of other delusions and disorders. — Pro Hominem
He's usually depicted as a tall thin pale-skinned guy, often with some facial hair — Pro Hominem
I know, his existence is real. — 3017amen
Oh, forgot to add:
Philosophy of Religion: God
Ethics & Political Philosophy (separation of church and state/In God we Trust). — 3017amen
A partial list of philosophical ideas and topics? Perhaps you're confused what the word "evidence" means? Or are you asserting that, say, all math is about the Christian God? Because if you are, you're just talking crazypants! :D — Pro Hominem
Oh, well, that clinched it.
— Pro Hominem
Are you acquiescing already? — 3017amen
But by all means, tell me about math... :roll: — Pro Hominem
So without further ado, are mathematical truth's invented or do they have an independent existence? — 3017amen
math actually correlates to observable reality. — Pro Hominem
. What is required for survival of the fittest is for there to be organisms, and for the environment to shape those organisms such that some traits survive and others do not. Don't even see how you got here from math, but ok. — Pro Hominem
Are you sure? You're implying that mathematical truth correlates to the reality of consciousness. Is there a mathematical formula that explains consciousness? — 3017amen
Are you sure? Surviving in the jungle doesn't require knowledge of the laws of gravity do they? Survival depends on appreciation of how the world is; not any hidden underlying order. Surely that couldn't be the case, could it?
So using that example, it seems like you're implying that in order to evade falling objects, I must first run calculations (or at least have knowledge of mathematics) in order to avoid the object. But if I did that, how would I have enough time to avoid the object itself? Wouldn't sensory perception in itself be sufficient? — 3017amen
There might be, but I don't know it. As — Pro Hominem
Must be lonely. — Pro Hominem
Well let's parse one thing at a time carefully. Are you saying that mathematical formulas cannot explain the nature of your conscious existence? Or can it only explain things like laws of gravity... (?) — 3017amen
I'm a little confused, what does loneliness have to do with mathematical truths? — 3017amen
Are you sure? Surviving in the jungle doesn't require knowledge of the laws of gravity do they? Survival depends on appreciation of how the world is; not any hidden underlying order. Surely that couldn't be the case, could it? — 3017amen
So using that example, it seems like you're implying that in order to evade falling objects, I must first run calculations (or at least have knowledge of mathematics) in order to avoid the object. But if I did that, how would I have enough time to avoid the object itself? Wouldn't sensory perception in itself be sufficient? — 3017amen
Neither. This is a false choice. Mathematics doesn't explain things. It correlates with them. Mathematics will allow you to design an aircraft, but it doesn't explain why it flies. — Pro Hominem
Consciousness exists because complexity accumulates in the universe. — Pro Hominem
Rationality will allow us to uncover our further evolution. — Pro Hominem
The world IS, and some survive in it. — Pro Hominem
I keep praying for God to deliver manna from heaven, but he's not — Pro Hominem
Okay. What then explains existence? — 3017amen
Why should it be explained?We humans just try to fit everything in our tiny brains and take for granted that everything should be explain in this vast universe.What if everything is senseless?. — philosopher004
Or think of it another way. In Christianity Jesus was known to be the metaphorical son of God who had a consciousness. You have a consciousness. And neither of which, it seems, can be explained using logic, right?
And as far as tiny brains, are you suggesting the bigger the brain is, the better?
Anyway, what do you mean by senseless? Do you mean a sense of purpose? — 3017amen
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