Mariner
As in God cannot be comprehended in a material/physical sense. — GreyScorpio
Rank Amateur
GreyScorpio
GreyScorpio
God himself is not falsifiable or fallible. Therefore, the meaning is completely lost, no? — GreyScorpio
Mariner
So, If God can not be comprehended in a physical sense then that means that, logically, he can have no effect on human experience I believe? — GreyScorpio
The non-physical cannot interact with the physical. — GreyScorpio
In another attempt, if God cannot be comprehended in a physical sense, then what sense do we comprehend such a being to be able to parade his existence. "God is watching over us", "God is speaking to me" implying that he is interacting with the physical and this seems to be entirely impossible and God cannot do the impossible. So what are we to believe? — GreyScorpio
GreyScorpio
This presupposes a meaning of "physical" that turns the sentence above into something tautologous. If we eschew this meaning and examine the issue more closely (see observation above), we see that the non-physical interacts with the physical all the time, non-stop. — Mariner
Quite simply, we should re-examine the dogma :D that the non-physical cannot interact with the physical. Let's do it by steps. What does "physical" mean? — Mariner
Mariner
The way in which these concepts and sensations are used are completely different. — GreyScorpio
"Physical" is something relating directly to the senses. Something that we directly observe. — GreyScorpio
GreyScorpio
Mariner
Rank Amateur
Mariner
You can believe things to be true by either, fact, reason or faith. — Rank Amateur
GreyScorpio
God (for people on both sides of the debate) is a powerful little word. It addresses much more than dogma and history. — Mariner
Mariner
Agustino
Rank Amateur
Right, I finally understand. So what is your main standpoint then? That God exists or he doesn't exist? — GreyScorpio
Mariner
If God exists in a similar sense that justice, truth, beauty, etc. exist, then why is it that some cultures and religions have no notion of God (in a transcendent sense, I'm not talking about the immanent Devas) - for example, Buddhism? How could they have missed it? — Agustino
Mariner
ibrust
Jake
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