(December 27, 2015 at 4:05 pm)downbeatplumb Wrote:Does the question presuppose that God has to be in a particular place? Like an object of some kind?(December 27, 2015 at 2:24 pm)Delicate Wrote: No, I conceded that GotG appeals are false.
I just don't make GotG appeals.
And you misunderstand the GotG appeal if you believe all it says is "God is in the gaps of our knowledge".
As a faulty appeal, GotG is not actually a claim, but an inference. It's the inference, from 'gaps' to 'God must be in the gaps'
So if your god isn't in the gaps where is it?
People who claim to understand Christianity know that God isn't a physical entity bound to a location.
Which supports my view that people who claim to understand Christianity don't.
But laying that aside, can you explain why you presuppose God has to be somewhere?