I called in the world's foremost expert on Frank Apisa...and he corroborated everything I said.
Everything I said was ABSOLUTELY TRUE.
What more do you want? — Frank Apisa
Sorry, not following that one. — 3017amen
In Christianity, it's Jesus. — 3017amen
It was recording in history that Jesus was both God and man. — 3017amen
Oh okay.
God is consciousness. — 3017amen
1) Do you think you have an answer to the God question?
2) Do you think the God debate will ever deliver an answer?
3) If you answered no to both of these questions, are you still interested? — Hippyhead
Nice!!! See that was easy. Next question! — 3017amen
The people espousing the "the question is blah, blah, blah" (meaning without merit or unreasonable or any of the other crapola you people are selling) should be ashamed of yourselves.
— Frank Apisa
I'll continue to hold that position until YOU give a coherent definition of god to me. I can't discuss god simpliciter only what one thinks a god should be or defines it as. . . remember there are thousands or religions with varying perspectives on god that may not even overlap. Am I to. . . regardless of context be. . . agnostic to every god ever even though some definitely don't exist while others are defined as such that they do. — substantivalism
Great question. Let's see, it's a mottled color of truth. Does that metaphor speak to it? — 3017amen
3017amen
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I called in the world's foremost expert on Frank Apisa...and he corroborated everything I said.
Everything I said was ABSOLUTELY TRUE.
What more do you want?
— Frank Apisa
Awesome. And of course, only you know you!!!!
180 must be doing either a spin on that one, or he's drinking his frustrations away LOL
This is more fun than a barrel of monkeys! — 3017amen
Really? I said Jesus was part God and man as recorded in history. What's wrong with that? — 3017amen
First give me a coherent definition of both "coherent" and "definition." — Frank Apisa
Few things I enjoy more than discussions with atheists...or atheists who describe themselves with some other word. — Frank Apisa
Are you saying then that your conscious existence is also nonsensical? I don't get it... — 3017amen
Jesus is human, god is human consciousness, so your saying a human existed that was conscious. — substantivalism
Are you saying then that your conscious existence is also nonsensical? I don't get it... — 3017amen
Again, another famous strawman of yours but you just gave a coherent definition of god, god=human consciousness, just that it's an equivocation of terms that doesn't really add much. — substantivalism
First give me a coherent definition of both "coherent" and "definition."
— Frank Apisa
To define a word is to specify what in reality that word represents or the meaning attached to it.
Note a definition is either descriptive or prescriptive about the meaning of a word. There is a difference between what a word is meant to be as represented in a dictionary use wise versus how people use it which can be person specific.
To be coherent is to both be understandable to us but also not be inherently contradictory. A square circle is a popular example or a married bachelor which are contradictory. Also something like the "color of existence" which according to definitions of those terms doesn't really give a coherent understanding as the concept of existence doesn't give off radiation nor interacts with luminal radiation so it cannot be colored. — substantivalism
No not entirely. I'm saying God created consciousness through Jesus. — 3017amen
How is it straw man? — 3017amen
Thanks for that.
Now, if it is not too much trouble, please give me a coherent definition of both "coherent" and "definition." — Frank Apisa
So god has the ability to create other conscious beings. . . I don't have that ability so that must be something unique to god. . . almost as if you need to note his properties or specifics. — substantivalism
More like a mis-construral of my position. How can anyone read my posts then ask AFTER you have given a coherent definition of god which I accepted to discuss with you and didn't say any definition of god isn't inherently incoherent, "why is my definition then incoherent to you?". — substantivalism
substantivalism
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Thanks for that.
Now, if it is not too much trouble, please give me a coherent definition of both "coherent" and "definition."
— Frank Apisa
Coherent - Logical and consistent.
Definition - The meaning/representation intended by a word in relation to other concepts/ontological entities. Also can be a prescription regarding what people think the word should be mean't to mean versus description based definitions which describe how people generally have used the word to mean.
You know what i'll ask you question then. So does it exist? — substantivalism
Yes, through inductive reasoning that appears to be the case. Nonetheless, as Frank alluded to earlier ( with atheist 180), only you yourself know yourself, therefore, who knows the mind of God(?). — 3017amen
Okay, but remember, you changed your position on that. It went from, any discussion about God is incoherent, to okay, let's talk about God. Just sayin. — 3017amen
Does what exist?
A god?
Beats the hell out of me. — Frank Apisa
Does what exist?
A god?
Beats the hell out of me.
— Frank Apisa
There you go. A distinction between ignorance on the topic of god versus ignorance on the existence of said entity which to me are two different things thus the term i'm using. One is a meta-analysis the other merely a surface level analysis. — substantivalism
You don't seem to know the mind of god because you don't give specifics beyond "it's conscious" but it can also create other conscious beings which I cannot and thusly I don't know if any conscious being could. — substantivalism
discussion about "does ____ exist?" is incoherent and won't go anywhere nor could you take any position much regarding what is supposed to go in the blank but if you could define and specify what does go within the blanks (that is coherent) then we can begin analyzing it or taking bets. Where is your evidence post wise that I went from "god is forever under any discussion completely and utterly incoherent thusly not worthy of discussion" to "it's incoherent to talk about something existing and taking bets on it before understanding what it is as well as whether it even is coherent to discuss its existence". Remember, YOU have to go back into the previous posts with proper context and paste that part of a previous post that says this is what I held or what I defined ignosticism as. — substantivalism
You asked "Does 'it' exist?"
I asked you what you meant by "it."
There was no predicate for the "it."
Still no answer. — Frank Apisa
And then said what I have said a dozen times already in this thread...I DO NOT KNOW. — Frank Apisa
I can define God. God is that which designed a conscious being known as Jesus.
And I say 'that which' because I don't know if God has a gender or not. The history book known as the Christian Bible is metaphorical, among other things. Beyond this, if you care to, I would not take any exception to someone claiming God is a concept that presumably is super-natural and transcends logic.
...a bit more fodder for you to chew on if you will... . — 3017amen
Linguistically, it's a universal word for every single being/entity, even for computers. — Shawn
If you don't know it, then you cannot communicate about it? How 'bout that? — Shawn
Could you more specifically define god? What are the properties of it you claim it has? — substantivalism
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You asked "Does 'it' exist?"
I asked you what you meant by "it."
There was no predicate for the "it."
Still no answer.
— Frank Apisa
That is the point of that question its incoherent to ask without prior context or further if I even substituted a word that the word in question truly mean't anything to anyone or specified a particular entity to be ignorant towards.
And then said what I have said a dozen times already in this thread...I DO NOT KNOW.
— Frank Apisa
Does skdfksj exist? You say "i don't know" here but that assumes it possesses a meaning to someone its just hidden behind the text. You are assuming there is meaning there to then attribute that word to something in the real world to then be ignorant about. When you say "I don't know" there is a difference between "I don't understand what is going on" and "the entity that is being stated here i'm personally unsure if it exists". — substantivalism
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