DeepThinker
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Telephone said:No intention to 'agrivate' (sic), just having fun.![]()
Do carry on if it amuses you, I'll even try speling bader iff ya lioke.
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Telephone said:No intention to 'agrivate' (sic), just having fun.![]()
DeepThinker said:2. Yes you can sin, but you wouldnt, if you did you might loose out on being in heaven, and no one who got there would want that.
DeepThinker said:This would make sence because when satan (in the fallen angel sence) was in heaven and he sinned by trying to overthrow God, so he was expelled from heaven. It would be harder to sin in heaven though as sinning would be much more clear, you would have the whole set of rules set into you, so it would not be like on earth where sinning is less clear cut and sometimes we forget, remember we would be at a higher state of consiousness so forgetting would not be an issue.
DeepThinker said:Do carry on if it amuses you, I'll even try speling bader iff ya lioke.
DeepThinker said:Silly question realy, if God created science there was no need for him to fit inside their constraints before he did so, he did not have to be created by anything
Eudaimonist said:To my knowledge, there is no constraint that the universe has to be created.
eudaimonia,
Mark
DeepThinker said:Only a scientific one (something cannot come from nothing), but i agree that science is flawed and can never be used as an absolute proof.
Eudaimonist said:I'm not so certain that is a scientific principle, but even if it were, if the universe has always existed, i.e. did not "come from nothing", it wouldn't violate the principle.
eudaimonia,
Mark
I don't get why you think "God" is an option. You capitalize it, implying you are talking about a specific god. If so, then you have left the realm of the general and started with specifics, so we should list all of the myriad specific theories out there.DeepThinker said:Totallyfor these are the 3 veiws on creation. Either created from nothing, always have been there or be created by God. (I hope I have not missed out a possibility)
michabo said:I don't get why you think "God" is an option. You capitalize it, implying you are talking about a specific god. If so, then you have left the realm of the general and started with specifics, so we should list all of the myriad specific theories out there.
To be fair, I think you should call that option "god(s)", or more accurately "magic". Perhaps an even better answer would be "we don't know."
Hmm... I think I reconsider that option. Since with any god/magic "theory", then we still have the problem of where the god/magic came from, and so this reduces to the "always have been there" option.
If you were being totally accurate and honest, you should list:
1. Always been here
2. Appeared from nothing
3. Don't know/combination of the above.
Same problem. If something created our universe, then we still want to know what created that, leaving us with the same choices. You can't beg off the question - either something is eternal, or something came from nothing.DeepThinker said:When I talk about a God What I should have said is that something created it
Oh? I know how to validate a scientific claim. How do you validate a religious claim?but remeber that science has no more validity than religion when you think about it openly, which of course you cannot do.
michabo said:Same problem. If something created our universe, then we still want to know what created that, leaving us with the same choices. You can't beg off the question - either something is eternal, or something came from nothing.
Oh? I know how to validate a scientific claim. How do you validate a religious claim?
Religion has no validity, as there is no way to support or falsify any metaphysical claim.
Well, did God come from anything or not? I'm not asking if he had to, only if it did.DeepThinker said:Right first point before the Universe existed there was no universe, so a "God" would not have to hold by the same constraints as that universe ie he would not of had to come from anything
You would validate a scientific theory using the scientific method.How do you validate a scientific claim? Using science
How do you validate a religious claim? Using religion
michabo said:Well, did God come from anything or not? I'm not asking if he had to, only if it did.
You would validate a scientific theory using the scientific method.
What would this religious method be? Can you give me an example of how one would go about supporting or falsifying a religious claim?
Then your "God" option is the same as "came from something".DeepThinker said:First answer if there was a God wether or not he came from anything is irelevant, as we are talking about how the universe started and if God is real it started with him creating it.
That doesn't seem to prove anything. At best, it would show that someone wrote that God wasn't a duck, but I don't see how it would disprove that God was a duck.Secondly, depends on the religion and the claim, if you claimed that the Christian God was a duck you need only to look in the Bible and see that he based man on his immage so no God cannot of been a duck.
michabo said:Then your "God" option is the same as "came from something".
That doesn't seem to prove anything. At best, it would show that someone wrote that God wasn't a duck, but I don't see how it would disprove that God was a duck.
What if we want to learn about what God really is, instead of what some book says about God (or more like, what we interpret some book to say about God)? That's really what we're talking about. Your example seems to be textual criticism and not theology.
I was giving answers for where everything came from, not specificially where this universe came from. Pardon for the miscommunication, I may have misread.DeepThinker said:yes but created from something was not one of the options you used it was one of mine.
yours were, came from nothing
always been there
dont know
It's easy to come up with religious texts. I could write one in a few hours. Would that prove that God was a duck?What the Bible does say is that it is the word of God, therefore all you need to prove Cristianity using a Christian method is the Bible.
DeepThinker said:at least thats what you think
michabo said:I was giving answers for where everything came from, not specificially where this universe came from. Pardon for the miscommunication, I may have misread.
It's easy to come up with religious texts. I could write one in a few hours. Would that prove that God was a duck?
How do you handle different interpretations?
When I read that passage about us being created in God's image, I don't think it is being created in his physical image, do you? So we still have no way of resolving the question of whether or not God is a duck. Even within the increasingly narrow confines of biblical analysis (no longer talking about religious methods in general).
Now, you had said that you can verify religious claims, just as you can verify scientific claims. I've heard you say that you would use a bible, but this can't tell us anything about God or anything metaphysical, it can only tell us what others have written about God. Many others have written totally different things about God. How can we settle these disputes? Do you really believe that every religious text is correct, or is this religious method comparable to asking what colour Harry Potter's eyes are - textual analysis, nothing more?
Asimov said:With good reason too, considering you have no way of showing that I am wrong.