無 is a Japanese word that cannot be translated accurately into english. It can loosely be translated as "Unask the question" or "The question itself is wrong".
無 is used for such questions as "Have you stopped beating your wife?". To answer yes or no would be wrong, and would not create a good impression; The question is based on a potentially flawed premise, as such saying "no" would technically be correct, but would probably be interpreted as admitting to beating one's wife.
The lack of an equivalent to 無 leaves english-speakers unable to fully answer yes or no questions.
無 is the answer to the question "Is God real?". Anyone knows that there are people with contradictory views on God and therefore people who's views on God are false, and false views on God mean a false God.
The correct question is "What is God?"; This question would have many answers depending on who you asked, differences of opinion which, logically, cannot all be simultaneously accepted or rejected by giving the question a "Is God real?" a yes or no answer.
This is a trap many atheists fall into: Rejecting all versions of God because of finding a version of God that isn't convincing.
Someone who has had an NDE (Near-Death-Experience) and not gone to hell will probably say they saw God and God was real and he was radiating intense, unconditional love beyond description and he was shiny.
Reading some of the NDE stories you'll find, you will have 4 logical choices: Believe the God you read about and throw the bible out the window (Figuratively and/or literally speaking), believe this version and try to fit it into the Bible's story, Believe it, and, let's say, leave the Bible where it was (if you didn't believe it beforehand), or reject this version of God and move on to the next one.
Of course, you can eliminate a lot of versions of God at once by saying there's no universal creator, but then there's still things people call God that don't create universes, (Try googling Osho, he's said he was God many times), some say the universe itself is God (Osho included), and some say God is consciousness, meaning we're all God (Osho again).
The funny thing is, Osho also said there was no god, but the point is, I think some things people call God have an existence most people can agree on.
So, there's my opinion for you.
無 is used for such questions as "Have you stopped beating your wife?". To answer yes or no would be wrong, and would not create a good impression; The question is based on a potentially flawed premise, as such saying "no" would technically be correct, but would probably be interpreted as admitting to beating one's wife.
The lack of an equivalent to 無 leaves english-speakers unable to fully answer yes or no questions.
無 is the answer to the question "Is God real?". Anyone knows that there are people with contradictory views on God and therefore people who's views on God are false, and false views on God mean a false God.
The correct question is "What is God?"; This question would have many answers depending on who you asked, differences of opinion which, logically, cannot all be simultaneously accepted or rejected by giving the question a "Is God real?" a yes or no answer.
This is a trap many atheists fall into: Rejecting all versions of God because of finding a version of God that isn't convincing.
Someone who has had an NDE (Near-Death-Experience) and not gone to hell will probably say they saw God and God was real and he was radiating intense, unconditional love beyond description and he was shiny.
Reading some of the NDE stories you'll find, you will have 4 logical choices: Believe the God you read about and throw the bible out the window (Figuratively and/or literally speaking), believe this version and try to fit it into the Bible's story, Believe it, and, let's say, leave the Bible where it was (if you didn't believe it beforehand), or reject this version of God and move on to the next one.
Of course, you can eliminate a lot of versions of God at once by saying there's no universal creator, but then there's still things people call God that don't create universes, (Try googling Osho, he's said he was God many times), some say the universe itself is God (Osho included), and some say God is consciousness, meaning we're all God (Osho again).
The funny thing is, Osho also said there was no god, but the point is, I think some things people call God have an existence most people can agree on.
So, there's my opinion for you.