Originally posted by stu
You can't define God then you can't prove him and it becomes difficult to discuss things you can't define. You may believe in such things but you can't then make categorical statements such as "To God, the past, present and future are linear and finite". Under such conditions your "God" is unknowable, it is your personal god. It cannot rightly be stated to be the TRUTH. Truth requires examination, observation and confirmation within our known context. It is a.k.a.Science.
Originally posted by stu
Originally posted by rs7
Is this what Jesus would do? This statement really helps your case. Do unto others, etc.
I guess there is a big difference between believing in God and believing in humanity.
Apart from the humorous side of that, rs7 is right.
Christians and the like would make a better start by practising what they want to preach.
If you defend righteousness in the name of your God to the extent that you do , such comments suggest an insincerity which defeats and denies your cause and your God, whom you try so hard to say exists
Originally posted by goldenarm
While we DO know what free will means, we DON'T know how to define a being of unlimited power. Therefore, you can't define the properties of God. Comparing a defined term to an undefined term yields an undefined result.
Daniel_m, if I serve you at McDonald's I'll be sure to piss on your fries!![]()
Originally posted by TriPack
The fallacy I see is that predetermination is not the same thing as having foreknowledge. Omniscience is indicative of foreknowledge, but not of predetermination. To get predetermination god would have to directly interfere with the choices made by men. God would have to actively prevent us from making decisions that would be "wrong" and force us to make decisions that would be "right" according to the will of god.
Originally posted by MUChris
I think we have a choice as to the way we live out our lives. A good point though is that even though it feels like a choice, it has already been made by us before we make it.
I seem like I'm babbling but follow me on this. Think of tim as this line:
______+______
Now lets say for agument that the present is the middle of the line marked +. At this point we all "feel" like we have infinite choices. I could continue typing this post, trade 10,000 S&P Contracts, or jump out the window, etc. Now lets assume for a minute that it is physically possible for you (you can insert God here instead of yourself, for those of you at least that believe there is one) to travel into the future. If you could do that, say travel 5 seconds into the future, that time (call it +5), would be your present, while my present would still be + since I haven't made my decision yet. But since you traveled 5 seconds into the future, my past-present decision was made (I jumped out the window
) and my decision is irrevocable since my present has become your past.
Now I know the correction you will all make, you're going to say, but Chris, I can't travel through time, you're full of shit. If its impossible to travel through time though, then nothing can travel through time (since if something could travel through time, you(God) can too). And if nothing can travel through time, time is not linear anymore but a single point:
+
where everything (including God) is situated and the future is not fixed, (and the past is forever gone, even to God).
By the way, you can not choose to believe that God can not place himself in another time, make it his present and also make him omnipotent, so you have to make a choice here, whether you believe time is a line or a single point.
I personally believe time is a point, so in my universe God CAN exist, and so can my free will.
Anyway, let me know what you think!
MUChris
Originally posted by axeman
Thanks! You too surf!
Just for the record Surf.
If the creator actually DID exist, then I would agree
that the creation probably cant fully fathom the creator.
However, the existence of the creator is the very
thing we are debating, which has not been proven, so
that statement cannot be used in the argument or
it would be circular reasoning.
peace
axeman
originally posted by goldenarm
While we DO know what free will means, we DON'T know how to define a being of unlimited power. Therefore, you can't define the properties of God. Comparing a defined term to an undefined term yields an undefined result.
Originally posted by I Missed Boat
this is actually very true, and an important reason why free will and "omniscient" may not be mutually exclusive.
Originally posted by daniel_m
couple of things:
1) we DO know how to define an all-powerful being, but such a being would be self-contradictory. to the extent that the existance of such a being is possible, our knowledge of him becomes impossible.
2) we have no reason to believe that such a being of unlimited power exists. (a being who is usually claimed to exist in order to account for a "creation" event we have little justification for believing happened. wonderful)
3) if a being/s exist/s in a realm beyond our 5 senses and rational faculty, we have NO REASON to assume that being has unlimited power.
4) if it is possible for a very powerful/all powerful "creator" to exist outside this realm of reason, it possible for countless other beings with varying degrees of power, like dragons, fairies, 7 headed medusas, to also exist. in any case, we are justified in believing in none of them.
Originally posted by I Missed Boat
3) Why????? Makes no sense.
4) But to believe or consider that an infinite being is responsible for the order of the universe is as reasonable as unreasonable!