We proceed through time in one direction, at one speed,
Time has no speed, for something to have the attribute of speed it would need a reference.
It has none.
Would you know if this mysterious property of time you call 'speed', slowed down or sped up ?
Or if we suddenly rushed through time at twice the 'speed' we are 'travelling through time' now would you notice - how could you tell ?
Maybe you can tell me time's current 'speed' ? - is it one minute per minute perhaps ?
And the direction ? Is that 'forward" ? Would you know if it started to travel backwards tomorrow ?
This 'one direction / one speed' of time is a profoundly parochial understanding.
...and have little say in the matter. This is not true of the omnipresent God, to whom the linear nature of time has little meaning.
'Linear' suggests a constant, a constant we have no bench mark to validate it consistency against, there is nothing to show time is linear.
There is no "prior" to the creation of the universe, time and all of its related concepts are part of the universe.
We have at least established the intellectual notion that eternal is logically sensical, indeed it is attributed to god - so we know entities can be eternal and we know the universe has no period prior to its creation - so the universe is eternal.
So then the universe is eternal and if it is eternal then it was not created.
Tynan: There was no temporal nature to existence, no future, no past, how did he execute the process of design ?
I have no idea. However, the universe clearly exists at present.
We are not discussing whether the universe exists, that is something we can both agree on, we are discussing how it could be created without time.
The question remains how, without a temporal dimension, can temporal actions be acted ?
If you say you have no idea then how can you be inerrant in your beliefs that god did create ?
Tynan: It is sheer nonsensical language.
I'd be willing to concede this (the debate is starting to feel rather pointless to me) but realize that your own arguments are no more sensical
No Daily Blessings, my arguments are sound, feel free to question me on any of my arguments, I have the advantage of not having to conform my thoughts to a pre-decided immovable set of ideas to which I must conform all future knowledge, this means I am free to be right.
Tynan: Of course if we are to be honest the context of the conversation is nothing more that an abstract absurdity, the pivotal point in this conversation is not what god can and cannot do 'inside' and 'outside of time' - it is that those who wish to support the idea of a supernatural need to employ such plainly nonsensical conceits.
This I don't agree with. I don't believe in God because of some silly semantic debate
I said 'support' not 'believe' - I am saying you need to employ such plainly nonsensical conceits to support your beliefs.
I do not believe you think god is a real object because of language, that is an entirely different conversation, I just think that to defend your beliefs and all their absurd baggage you are compelled to fall back onto magical language that on even the most cursory inspection can be shown to be meaningless.
For example if I had to defend the 16,000,000 'magic blue time horses' that live in France, people may ask why they have not been sighted, I may have to employ the idea that they are invisible, when asked why nobody has knocked in to one as there are so many, I then might have to employ the idea that when you almost touch them they go back in time to 5 minutes prior when you did not try and touch them.
Horses going back in time is no less meaningless than a diety existing outside of time, in fact with the horses at least we know horses exist.
I play the game only because you seem to think that semantics can disprove the existence of God, and this is not the case.
I have made no attempt to
disprove the existence of God.
Why not check each of my 678 posts here on CF and see if I have ever sought to disprove god in any manner whatsoever - the cognition which informs you that I "
seem to think that semantics can disprove the existence of God" is mistaken, the same cognition that tells you with such inerrancy of gods and demons, inside and 'outside of time' and other such fanciful flights of the imagination.
The subject here is the nonsense of ideas such as 'outside of time', I am not here to disprove invisible, incorporeal, undetectable, silent objects that don't exist in time !
Since when is it unusual for someone to defend what they believe to be true?
It is not unusual at all, it is commonplace, I have made no claim that your defense of your supernatural beliefs is 'unusual'.
I have made the claim that you defend it with nonsensical and abstract language devoid of any real meaning, I also make the further claim that the nature of these religious thought patterns forces you to jump through increasingly convoluted hoops in order to hold together a rational conversation on the subject.
The magic in the bible is a stricture to rational conversation and to even hold your own you must rely on entirely vacuous notions.
If I come up with some clever new argument against the death penalty, is it "trickery" for you to produce a counterargument in favor of it?
The trickery is not in the engagement in discourse but the tools employed.
Namely 'outside of time'.
I mean, if we were talking about actual data that would be different, but this is all just word games. Frankly I severely doubt that any of us truly understand time, its nature, or its implications, any more than Newton understood quantum physics.
And yet you can say with certainty that god exists 'outside of time' this god can create time, he can action temporal acts without a temporal reference frame, and that we proceed through time in one direction and at one speed, you can say all this, you can guarantee its inerrancy and then add that you don't truly understand time ?