Can you make a case for your belief, or is it an article of faith?I do not believe the universe is a purposeless accidental event. — prothero
Are you saying the "signs of intelligence" in the universe are...us?In my view the universe displays signs of intelligence through its beings which would imply intrinsic intelligence embedded within it from the start, — kindred
So...the writers of scripture (2K+ years ago) were able to figure this out, but we can't.As to his reasons or motivations for creating, they cannot be inferred without resorting to scriptures. — kindred
Are you saying the "signs of intelligence" in the universe are...us? — Relativist
The gradual development of intelligent beings, somewhere in an old, vast universe seems much more plausible than an intelligence just happening to exist, uncaused and without a prior history of development. — Relativist
So...the writers of scripture (2K+ years ago) were able to figure this out, but we can't. — Relativist
This thread is about "proving" God. I hope you can see that you're not doing that. I'm fine with people having faith-based beliefs, but they shouldn't fool themselves into thinking it's based in reason.My view of intelligence is that it has always existed and what we observe in nature and us is just it manifesting itself. So it precedes us. — kindred
Compositional fallacy —> (believer's) confirmation bias. Also: your "creator deity / intelligent design" belief, sir, is refuted by the argument from poor design.My beliefs are based on observation of the natural world which as I’ve stated before shows signs of intelligence, design whatever you wanna call it. This to me constitutes evidence of God. — kindred
How do you/we know this?Just not possible.
How do you/we know this? — 180 Proof
There is no evidence that entails God.My beliefs are based on observation of the natural world which as I’ve stated before shows signs of intelligence, design whatever you wanna call it. This to me constitutes evidence of God. — kindred
What occurs, including what comes to exist, could very well be the product of chance. We exist as a consequence of the way the world happens to be. If it is actually possible for the world to have differred, other sorts of things might have existed. How does low probability consequence imply luck? Luck generally entails a contestant happening to be the beneficiary of chance. There is no set of contestants who participated in a contest to pick a winner. You could conjecture that our existence is low probability, but that gets you nowhere- low probability things happen all the time.The non god alternative is that these manifestations of intelligence occurred through dumb luck, which is not possible. — kindred
What occurs, including what comes to exist, could very well be the product of chance. We exist as a consequence of the way the world happens to be. If it is actually possible for the world to have differred, other sorts of things might have existed. — Relativist
then how do you account for an intelligent creator to produce the design? — Relativist
So you think intelligence, and knowledge just happens to exist uncaused?So you think processes such as cell replication or photosynthesis come to be by pure chance? A designer would have better explanatory power here. — kindred
Whatever gives you that silly idea? It's clear the universe evolves per laws of nature, and it'sWithout a designer matter would just remain stagnant and nothing would have happened or emerged, no life and certainly no intelligence. — kindred
As I said, because it's possible - and sufficiently probable to occur at least once in a vast, old universe in which a enormous number of (individually) improbable things occur.why has it produced something useful like a plant alongside the innate rock? — kindred
Non-sequitur. The probability is extremely low in any specific time or place, but again- a vast, old universe provides a sufficient number of chances for it to occur at least once.There are many factors which need to combine to create even the simplest life and although they could have come to be through chance to me it implies that there are intelligent rules or laws which enables such life to form. — kindred
Emerged from what? You claim the conditions needed for intelligence to emerge in the universe imply an intelligence behind it. So you'd have to assume the same thing for a God-like intelligence to emerge- thus an vicious, infinite regress.Existence is eternal therefore it’s possible that such a being could have emerged with capabilities to express his will through his creation as he sees fit. ... — kindred
Explain how this is more plausible than intelligence gradually emerging. It entails magical knowledge- knowing without a process of developing knowledge.Or another explanation which you might not like is that such a being has always existed and is uncreated.
So you think processes such as cell replication or photosynthesis come to be by pure chance? — kindred
The non god alternative is that these manifestations of intelligence occurred through dumb luck, which is not possible. It’s like 10,000 monkeys randomly typing on a keyboard and creating the complete works of Shakespeare. Just not possible. — kindred
It makes sense to you because you believe God created everything. Here's a more general metaphysical perspective.It makes sense then to attribute intelligent laws to an intelligent agent or lawmaker hence my argument. — kindred
Here is an argument for the existence of God:
1. If anything exists, then there must be something that exists.
2. If something depends on another for its existence and the second thing exists, then so must the first.
3. If everything depended on another for its existence, then nothing would exist.
4. Therefore, if anything exists, and there exist things that depend on another for their existence, or not, there must exist something that does not depend on another for its existence.
5. Consequently, if anything exists, there must exist something that does not depend on another.
6. Something does exist.
7. So, there must exist something that does not depend on another. — NotAristotle
So the question is: which is more plausible? A being of infinite complexity, with magical knowledge of everything it could do and it's consequences OR a natural state of affairs that evolves due to its internal characteristics? Each is uncaused and exists without deeper explanation. Which is the more parsimonious, and thus better, explanation? — Relativist
So the question is: which is more plausible? A being of infinite complexity, with magical knowledge of everything it could do and it's consequences OR a natural state of affairs that evolves due to its internal characteristics? Each is uncaused and exists without deeper explanation. Which is the more parsimonious, and thus better, explanation — Relativist
According to the classical theism of Augustine, Anselm, Aquinas and their adherents, God is radically unlike creatures and cannot be adequately understood in ways appropriate to them. God is simple in that God transcends every form of complexity and composition familiar to the discursive intellect. One consequence is that the simple God lacks parts. This lack is not a deficiency but a positive feature. God is ontologically superior to every partite entity, and his partlessness is an index thereof.
Omniscience entails an infinitely complex set of knowledge, existing by brute fact. Divine simplicity doesn't deal with this.You’re making an assumption about the nature of god, instead I would argue for divine simplicity instead of complexity. — kindred
It's the job of physicists to figure out why there's an imbalance between particles and antiparticles. It doesn't make much sense to attribute every unsolved problem to God; it certainly doesn't "prove" Goddidit- that would be an argument from ignorance. — Relativist
It's logically impossible for existence to be created.The only unsolved problem that could truly be blamed on a god is the problem of how existence was created. — alleybear
Philosophers can only speculate. Physicists engage in speculations too, but then they test them.All other "unsolved problems" are just detritus from the opening act. And perhaps it's the job of philosophers to figure out why there's an imbalance between particles and antiparticles.
God is omniscient, then, not in virtue of instantiating or exemplifying omniscience — which would imply a real distinction between God and the property of omniscience — but by being omniscience. And the same holds for each of the divine omni-attributes: God is what he has as Augustine puts it in The City of God, XI, 10. As identical to each of his attributes, God is identical to his nature. And since his nature or essence is identical to his existence, God is identical to his existence. This is the doctrine of divine simplicity
It's logically impossible for existence to be created. — Relativist
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