RE: What created God?
June 25, 2010 at 4:26 am
(This post was last modified: June 25, 2010 at 4:27 am by tackattack.)
(June 25, 2010 at 1:39 am)tavarish Wrote:I'm not intentionally trying to glaze over any topic or not address your points so allow me to structure this a bit. I assure you I can be assuaded by logi and I won't intentionally skim over your points. Answers in red, please respond by number.
1-Your original post included:
a-God does not operate under cause and effect, as he is timeless, but he willed something into existence,which is something that only works as a causal construct. It all sounds like a case of special pleading to me. I never said God doesn't operate under cause and effect when interacting within this universe. When someone can jump to anywhere on the space time "track" and go in either direction doesn't mean that while he's traveling on the track he isn't part of the space time.
and
b-I'd like to hear the best explanation of why an infinite regress is not possible, and preferably one that does not negate the qualities or necessity of the God in question at the same time. An infinite regress outside the universe is possible. Within this universe an infinite regress isn't possible because we know that the universe at some point started, then begs the question what started it (the big bang). That leads to the question, if there was nothing before the universe then what started the big bang, what was the initial cause to start the causal chain. If you see a design to teh universe then that answer is typically God, if not it typically stops at random chaos from the big bang.
let's add
c-You can't have this if he was created. It also means that as a creation, he is subject to laws that were put in place before him in order for him to exist in the first place. Laws of someplace outside this universe which we're not privy to. God being created still doesn't affect this universe at all from what I see.
2- If a version of God is literally indistinguishable from an infinite amount of other versions of God, including those that don't exist objectively, what good reason is there to believe in your particular version? through religious study the things I attribute to God are best described by Jesus's interpretation or what God is, as described in the Bible
3- You asked my contention of the following:
1. God did not send a clear enough message for humans to understand
2. God did not want to send a clear message for humans to understand, intentional obfuscation
3. God did not send a message for humans to understand
4. God does not exist objectively.
This is evidenced by the literally billions of versions of God's attributes, intentions, and commands by people the world over. You'd think an all-powerful being could make himself be known in some detail, to avoid the damnation of his creation, not to mention clear up thousands of years of religious strife and hardship. I would say I'm at none of the above. God did send a clear message, he can't be fit in a box (despite our best attempts), yet who I see as my personal concept of God is quite clear.
4- So, given that you've asserted that there is no consensus on what "God" is, have demonstrated that such a being would be necessarily finite and not all-powerful, you now contend that the glaring contradictions of your own belief system are somehow irrelevant? The eternalness of God (whether he grew up or just always was) has nothing to do with his power (powerfull enough to created everything in the universe). There is a concensus as to what God is. Let's just assume that God did grow up, he'd be "alive long enough" to be the closest thing to eternal that we know, and therefore from our perspective endless.
You'll have to forgive me I'm tired tonight I'll catch up later.
"There ought to be a term that would designate those who actually follow the teachings of Jesus, since the word 'Christian' has been largely divorced from those teachings, and so polluted by fundamentalists that it has come to connote their polar opposite: intolerance, vindictive hatred, and bigotry." -- Philip Stater, Huffington Post
always working on cleaning my windows- me regarding Johari
always working on cleaning my windows- me regarding Johari