The End of (the catholic) Church

Quote from kut2k2:

This is why many of the Founding Fathers were Deists, not theists. But I wouldn't expect a chucklehead like Lowcunt to get that.

Didn't you mean low kunt2k2?
 
Quote from trefoil:
1. G-O-D.
2. Total entropy, pretty obviously. Your point?
My point is that a timeless and eternal being (oh gawd, there I go again!) would be looking into our limited and physical Universe from a POV which would pretty obviously be outside of that time constraint, which is a function of our movement towards total entropy. A very simple point, actually. I'm having a hard time understanding why that's such a sticking point.
3. The Founding Fathers weren't arguing against religion in the First Amendment. I hope you didn't think that?
4. Cool your jets. If you have friends, guess what? Some of them might actually be, you know, religious. Or do you think they're all doofuses for believing?
There is nothing obvious in what you are saying as you state there is. You started out with a contradiction and have now added a bunch of faulty assumptions to it.
Earlier you had a problem with contradiction. That is except it seems, when you make one.


Quote from trefoil:
A stopped arrow of time. Hmm. Where do you find one of those?
At total entropy. What exactly is your difficulty with that?



You talk of an unobserved (imaginary) "timeless and eternal being" which contradictorily isn't affected by entropy, when the universe and everything in it is.
Apparently you have no difficulty accepting a contradiction when it's a made up being, but apparently will very quickly get snarky and irrational when anyone queries the conflicting things you say about it .
 
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