I've come a long way in my thinking since those days. — MikeL
it wouldn't exist at all had it not been created
— Wayfarer
That's the claim that needs evidence. — Michael
Why doesn't the scientific community at large try and do that, I wonder? — MikeL
I don't think this particular religious believer is saying that some particular thing is 'evidence' of God, but that the whole universe, the entire shebang, is evidence. — Wayfarer
But that's a claim that needs to be justified — Michael
Based on the premise that science relies on proof, can science prove that the universe is infinite? Surely they would need to go to the point of infinity to prove that.. but hang on... that can't be proved so surely science must reject the notion of infinity not only of the universe, but in all its connotations? Does that serve as a reasonable comparison for this argument? — MikeL
I don't know. She could say - take it or leave it. The claim is after all made in the context of a philosophy forum, which, hopefully, is situated in the context of the history of philosophy. So it's not a completely arbitrary and meaningless claim, like that of a 'dog barking', unless indeed we have come to the point where the whole idea of God has become completely otiose. In which case - nothing to discuss. — Wayfarer
Mike, in terms of Einsteins present, obviously there is one, we are in it right now and now and now, but I think the point he was making was that time can be viewed linearly, as it is, but rather than travelling from one end of this linear string to the other, the entire string may be moving in one motion sideways instead so that the past present and future of the string occur at once. — MikeL
You're not Mike? Sorry, somehow I must have overlapped who I was talking too. My spatial analogy of time gives the sense that past present and future are relative concepts. Just as a meter ruler can have a very definite length when viewed one way, that definition changes with perspective. I'm not giving any real definition of time here, just trying to illustrate an example. — MikeL
Here's something to consider. In the Old Testament, when Moses asked God, who are you, God answered "I am that I am". "I am" commonly refers to being at the present. Further, many people interpret Einstein's special theory of relativity as stipulating that there is no such thing as the present. These people, if they hold and believe in the truth of special relativity, deny the possibility of God under this fundamental definition of God. — Metaphysician Undercover
Okay Metaphysician Undercover, I have your statement. I have glossed over it a bit too easily, so I'll take another look at it even though we are talking religion here and not God. — MikeL
To say that "I am" commonly refers to being at the present, by your own admission does not predicate it in every instance, and while I am sure you are correct in this translation, it seems a bit of a stretch to me. You say that many people interpret Einstein's relativity as stipulating no such thing as the present, again if I do concede this to you, "many people" is not all people. So we have one highly ambiguous statement stacked upon another ambiguous statement, drawing from a document written by Israelites thousands of years ago in Babylon and juxtaposed against a theory of the universe written in the 1920s in order to draw out a contradiction on the nature of God. — MikeL
So come on scientists, prove to me there is no God and let me see how strong your arguments really are. — MikeL
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.