RE: My Inquiry
June 17, 2015 at 11:59 am
(This post was last modified: June 17, 2015 at 12:00 pm by Longhorn.)
(June 17, 2015 at 11:44 am)onmytablet512 Wrote: Alright. So it seems most of the arguments I am getting right now are something along the lines of "we have no proof that God exists, therefore he must not exist." I can rebutt that with "we have no proof that God does not exist, therefore he must exist," but that's past the point. I'd like to present to you guys my argument for the existence of God and see what you guys respond with (so far I have not been able to come up with any rebuttal for it.) Please look at this with the open mind that I will look at your rebuttals with
The large majority of atheists do not assert that god does not exist . They acknowledge there is a possibility of him existing, but it is a rather small one and thus they are not convinced of his existence and live their lives under the assumption that he doesn't in fact exist; but most atheist would never claim as a fact that there is no god. This is a very common misconception.
Moreover, take into consideration that the god claim is an untestable one; that means it cannot be proven either way. Other similar claims include Russel's Teapot. Now you have no way of knowing whether there is a tiny teapot orbiting the sun between Earth and Mars, so small that even the most powerful of our telescopes cannot detect it, but it would be perfectly reasonable of you to assume that there is no such teapot, unless you were provided with evidence to the contrary.
Quote:I believe that God exists because of the complexity of the universe. In my opinion, there is absolutely no way this could have all happened by chance. It honestly feels like way too many coincidences to result in the universe we know today.
This is known as the argument from incredulity, implying that because you cannot imagine something happening, it could not have happened . This is an informal logical fallacy.
Quote:Take a chromosome. Those seem pretty small and unimportant; I mean, we only have 46 of them. But our 46 chromosomes have about 6x10^9 base pairs in them, totaling up for an information storage of 1.5 gigabytes of data. It also happens that these 6 billion base pairs are perfectly lined up so that we come out as a unique living creature. Just one chromosome pair being off of the 6 billion can give genetic diseases, so if there is no God, why are there so few errors in the chromosome pairing? Shouldn't we have so many errors from the random creation of humans that we are born completely messed up?
You could also take a look at the Earth and, namely, it's position in the Universe. We are perfectly positioned, both by axis of rotation and distance from the Sun, so that we have just enough heat to be comfortable but not contract heat stroke by walking outside and just enough cold to be comfortable but not catch hypothermia or frostbite upon leaving the house. The Earth even has an elliptical orbit that leads to the seasons being created, which seems like an extremely delicate balance to be randomly created.
I'm afraid you've got it all backwards friend. It isn't that the universe and Earth are perfectly conditioned for our existence, rather that we exist as a result of the conditions in the universe and on earth. consider however the north and south pole, for example, or the Sahara desert, or that 2/3 of our planet is covered in oceans yet only roughly 2-4% (might misremember) is appropriate for our consumption. The conditions on earth, however sufficient for our existence, are far from perfect.
Quote:What about life itself? And not even life, but all the things that come with it- conscience, emotions, etc. We don't have a scientific explanation I know of that can explain the "little voice inside your head." So if there is not a God, what is our explanation for this? How was life first created? And if it was created from biological slime, why haven't we been able to reproduce that?
I suggest you research abiogenesis.
Could you elaborate on what you mean by little voice inside your head?
Addressing your final question, the conditions that allowed life to form are no longer present, and we do not know exactly what they were and thus we have not yet recreated the event.