What are you talking about, being a troll? You're off topic and brushing my commentary aside without even considering it. It's not off topic. Try to be a little more open minded. — whollyrolling
and you've chosen to focus primarily on that aspect of my commentary. — whollyrolling
How can God be non-material if God doesn't exist, and how can you begin a discussion by assuming that God exists if there's no foundation for the claim? My commentary is directly related to the topic. The OP has begun by assuming that God exists, which implies that it doesn't, and I'm arguing that it's a contradictory, self-defeating and unproductive position. The existence of God has to be demonstrated in order to discuss its properties. — whollyrolling
Please don't pretend you're adding to a conversation. All you're doing is trying to shut down feedback you don't want to hear and talking about ants and apes and imagining there was ever a time in recorded history, or prior to it, that religion didn't exist in some form. — whollyrolling
How can God be non-material if God doesn't exist, and how can you begin a discussion by assuming that God exists if there's no foundation for the claim? My commentary is directly related to the topic. The OP has begun by assuming that God exists, which implies that it doesn't, and I'm arguing that it's a contradictory, self-defeating and unproductive position. The existence of God has to be demonstrated in order to discuss its properties. — whollyrolling
"It seems simple to me, the universe can't have existed forever (it would have no start so none of it would exist)
— Devans99
Yeah, yeah. And Achilles can never catch up with the tortoise. And the flying arrow is motionless. — S
christian2017
154
I noticed through out this forum topic that accusations were made in the OP that were never clarified on certain concepts. The 4th post down is an example of this. The poster of the 4th post F.A. said things were stated but infact they were never stated in this forum topic. The OP started a new thread because he/she had new insights new ideas. Some of your are being trolls today. — christian2017
One last thing, Christian...
...and this is "off-topic" also...
...you sound like a sock puppet for Devans.
Are you? — Frank Apisa
I don't understand how you can doubt there is a first cause... — Devans99
I don't see for example how anything can logically exist without a first cause. — Devans99
Do you understand how it can be doubted that Achilles can never catch up with the tortoise, and that the flying arrow is motionless? — S
Does cause and effect apply to God, for example? — Pattern-chaser
What do you hope that this topic will (could) achieve? Surely it is possible that God is non-material, but if She is, what of it? — Pattern-chaser
I suggest that, sans evidence, we are constrained by logic to refrain from reaching any conclusion at all — Pattern-chaser
Do you understand how it can be doubted that Achilles can never catch up with the tortoise, and that the flying arrow is motionless?
— S
I don't find either paradoxical; the universe is discrete, so not very good examples.
A logical argument can lead to something at odds with common sense? This is true. Relativity and QM are both examples where common sense does not cut it. — Devans99
Although you have not - probably wisely - defined what God is, I see no reason to assume She is bound by the same constraints that apply to us humans. [And no reason to assume She is not so bound.] Perhaps She has divine powers that make things different for Her, or maybe our misunderstanding of (in this case) time leads us to misunderstand? And so on. Speculation often only leads to ... more speculation.Does cause and effect apply to God, for example? — Pattern-chaser
God is timeless so he is beyond cause and effect. The only way out of the infinite regress of time stretching back forever is to have a timeless first cause. — Devans99
The "2nd law of thermodynamics" is not a law, in the sense that it does not bind us, the universe or God. It's a guideline we have discovered that appears to apply to most of the things we know of, most of the time. It might apply to a material, or non-material, God, but if it did, how would it apply?What do you hope that this topic will (could) achieve? Surely it is possible that God is non-material, but if She is, what of it? — Pattern-chaser
Anything material is probably subject to the 2nd law of thermodynamics - it becomes disorganised with time - ages and dies effectively. So there is an argument that a material God would be dead by now. So the argument of material Vs non-material God could be cast as dead Vs alive God. — Devans99
I suggest that, sans evidence, we are constrained by logic to refrain from reaching any conclusion at all — Pattern-chaser
We can make some deductions. For example, how did material God get away from the Big Bang? It would [have] blown him to bits setting that off. Hence non-material God seems more likely. — Devans99
Describe the bad logic please. — Devans99
Although you have not - probably wisely - defined what God is, I see no reason to assume She is bound by the same constraints that apply to us humans. [And no reason to assume She is not so bound.] — Pattern-chaser
Perhaps She has divine powers that make things different for Her, or maybe our misunderstanding of (in this case) time leads us to misunderstand? And so on. Speculation often only leads to ... more speculation. — Pattern-chaser
The "2nd law of thermodynamics" is not a law, in the sense that it does not bind us, the universe or God. It's a guideline we have discovered that appears to apply to most of the things we know of, most of the time. It might apply to a material, or non-material, God, but if it did, how would it apply? — Pattern-chaser
Describe it yourself. Describe to me the faults in Zeno's arguments.
When you were at school, did you just sit back and ask your teachers to explain everything to you, so you didn't really have to learn through tasks and challenges? If you had've done so, how do you think your teachers would've reacted? Is this reflective of your understanding of education? — S
I was asking you to describe the faults in my arguments. I don't see what purpose a discussion of Zeno's arguments serves at this point. — Devans99
Your suggestion of divine powers is not logically derived from anything. My suggestion of a non-material nature of God is logically derived. I suggest we can make progress by sticking to logic rather than speculation. — Devans99
Your suggestion of God (and Her existence) is not logically derived from anything. — Pattern-chaser
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