RE: Even if you choose not to believe in god, you’re actually believing in god
June 1, 2016 at 7:07 am
(June 1, 2016 at 5:15 am)Blueyedlion Wrote: Pretty sure i don't have the scientific background applicable to sufficiency sell you a promising god theory.
So instead I'll just use logic
I really, really doubt that...
(June 1, 2016 at 5:15 am)Blueyedlion Wrote: and in doing so ill reaffirm the depth of what it means for a god to be omni present, omni-being and omni-everywhere which implies god is never absent from anything and anyone. So in other words let's hypothetically say there is a god and it is -
Present in all moments of time. Moments of time you experience as you, and all moments of time everyone else experiences as them.
Everywhere in every parts of space. Your body, your environment and everyone's body and environment.
Being as everyone. Being as you as you are right now and everyone else.
So let's deconstruct the personal implications of what this means to yourself shall we -
Imagine as you are right now, you're god... That means that everybody and everything, in all of space and time is within you and us all. The whole infinite universe is literately your very being. And everything you see from your body to people walking down the street, to the violence in the middle east, to the furthermost reaches of stars you can see and beyond are only a external representation, a reflection, a mirror of you. And every moment that you interact with the reflection of yourself, the more that reveals about who you already are.
In this way of thinking, are you absent from yourself? Is space, is time? Since these three things are you right now - You are space, time, being. The next question is, how can time separate itself from itself? or space? ...or being...
I'll leave the rest up to you.
Uhm... Still waiting for the logic bit. I was really looking forward to it, alas - yet another disapointment. All this are just assertions, meaningless, but pleasantly sounding platitudes and some stuff you imagined. I guess your background in logic is not particularly extensive either, huh?...
"The fact that a believer is happier than a skeptic is no more to the point than the fact that a drunken man is happier than a sober one." - George Bernard Shaw