It cannot have existed forever in time. Thats impossible as Thomas Aquinas showed and I have shown many times on this forum. — Devans99
OK I'm not getting any value out of talking to you so I quit. — Devans99
He is regarded as one of the greatest philosophers of all time. — Devans99
Christoffer
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If anything, I am an agnostic. — Frank Apisa
Not a foundation for a rational argument, irrelevant.
I do not know if gods exist or not;
I see no reason to suspect gods CANNOT EXIST...that the existence of gods is impossible;
I see no reason to suspect that gods MUST EXIST...that gods are needed to explain existence;
I do not see enough unambiguous evidence upon which to base a meaningful guess in either direction...
...so I don't. — Frank Apisa
THIS IS NOT A VALID ARGUMENT — Christoffer
S
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At least I don't assume the universe was created by magic. — Devans99
But I don't. I don't assume that the universe was created, let alone created by magic.
Whereas my mockery version of your argument, which resembles the logic of a little child, is actually pretty much your actual argument. — S
Devans99
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↪S
It cannot have existed forever in time. Thats impossible as Thomas Aquinas showed and I have shown many times on this forum. — Devans99
Ah, okay. So everything is water. — S
Devans99
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↪S
He is regarded as one of the greatest philosophers of all time. Certainly you should not dismiss him without at least spending some time on the 5 ways. — Devans99
Christoffer
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↪Frank Apisa
In the context of the argument being discussed, it is not valid and does not have any relation to it at all. So, what is your point? The argument isn't valid to support what is being proposed. — Christoffer
Obviously have to be selective about it. — Devans99
Devans99
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↪Frank Apisa
I agree the 4th is not valid. What are your objections to the others?
a minute ago
Reply
Options — Devans99
They all end with..."...this everyone refers to as God." — Frank Apisa
Devans99
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They all end with..."...this everyone refers to as God." — Frank Apisa
Apart from that bit which I agree is a stretch, what do you disagree with?
Do you reject the logical necessity of a first cause? — Devans99
In most of your posts to me...and about me...you are being a jerk-off. — Frank Apisa
I deduce my beliefs from my axioms. Causality is one of my axioms. That leads to a first cause. That agrees with Aquinas's arguments. — Devans99
Do you reject the logical necessity of a first cause? — Devans99
You need belief outside of the conclusion in order to attach what that first cause was — Christoffer
You might want to study philosophy from Aquinas and forward to really get the depth of how simplistic his argument really is — Christoffer
S
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In most of your posts to me...and about me...you are being a jerk-off. — Frank Apisa
It's the stick approach, as opposed to the carrot approach. You use the same approach, but I'm better at it, and more funny. It might be seen as a jerk-off thing to say, but it is true that you could improve your writing if you set aside your pride and took on board my criticism, as well as that of Christoffer. — S
Ah, okay. Confirmation bias, you mean? It's not a bad argument when it's about God. — S
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