What God is: Not. — StreetlightX
God does not exist.
People exist. Things in the universe exist. The planets in their courses exist. While there are clear limits to our knowledge, everyone knows what it means to exist.
God does not exist.
If God does exist, then that is not God. All existing things are relative to one another in various degrees. It is actually impossible to imagine a universe in which there is, say, only one hydrogen atom. That unique thing has to have someone else imagining it. Existence requires existing among other existents, a fundamental dependency of relation. If God also exists, then God would be just another fact of the universe, relative to other existents and included in that fundamental dependency of relation.
In other words, God could not be God. He would be at best some sort of super-alien, flitting about the creation flashing super powers, seemingly irrationally. That is what the Flying Spaghetti Monster is. Its “worshippers,” the “Pastafarians,” are the latest in a long line of skeptics, though with perhaps a finer sense of humor. And even if said Monster existed, it could not be God. There would be no reason to worship it; in fact, one would do well to avoid it and its “noodly appendages.”
Those who say they do not believe in God often give lack of evidence for their unbelief. This is a confusion of knowledge and faith. It is also an error of logic — absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. There cannot be any empirical evidence of the existence of God, for God does not exist. — Bishop Pierre Whalon
I think that the intelligence behind the creation of the universe must be from beyond spacetime — Devans99
In that sense maybe it — Devans99
God does not exist. — Bishop Pierre Whalon
that something is exists. — Pfhorrest
God must not come too near men, for the nerves of living beings have such a power of attraction for him that he would not be able to free himself from them again and so would endanger his own existence. — Canetti
How is that different from atheism? — jorndoe
If God does exist, then that is not God. — Bishop Pierre Whalon
Again, we're moving in the direction of mystical, paradoxical phraseology. Philosophy - even language - is spectator to this sport. — ZzzoneiroCosm
God as qualityless recession. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Whalon - like most mystics - is exaggerating, or contorting or molesting language, to make his point. — ZzzoneiroCosm
A good part of why logophile, logicophile philosophers are so hostile to god-talk. — ZzzoneiroCosm
https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/feuerbach/works/future/future0.htmReason, which conceives God as an infinite being, conceives, in point of fact, its own infinity in God.
The necessary being is one that it is necessary to think of, that must be affirmed absolutely and which it is simply impossible to deny or annul, but only to the extent to which it is a thinking being itself. Thus, it is its own necessity and reality which reason demonstrates in the necessary being.
“God is unconditional, general – 'God is not this or that particular thing' – immutable, eternal, or timeless being.” But absoluteness, immutability, eternality, and generality are, according to the judgment of metaphysical theology itself, also qualities of the truths or laws of reason, and hence the qualities of reason itself; for what else are these immutable, general, absolute, and universally valid truths of reason if not expressions of the essence of reason itself?
Philosophy presupposes nothing; this can only mean that it abstracts from all that is immediately or sensuously given, or from all objects distinguished from thought. In short, it abstracts from all wherefrom it is possible to abstract without ceasing to think, and it makes this act of abstraction from all objects its own beginning. However, what else is the absolute being if not the being for which nothing is to be presupposed and to which no object other than itself is either given or necessary?
— Feuerbach
Paradoxical phraseology is best suited to describe a certain kind of spiritual excitation. Better not to say a word. But these ecstatic moments can be so transformative and so exciting that it's difficult to hold one's peace. Mum is the wisest Word. — ZzzoneiroCosm
"One abyss calls to another
The abyss of my spirit
Always invokes with cries
The abyss of god -
Say which may be deeper."
Meister Eckhart
God is the not that is not not. — ZzzoneiroCosm
baffled by it — Wayfarer
'God' hasn't been established; so, all talk of 'is' or 'is not' can only amount to idle chatter, or worse, such as claiming is or is not as if it were true. — PoeticUniverse
So, if God is not composed of parts (being simple) and does not begin and end in time (being eternal), then God does not exist. This doesn't say that God is unreal - what it's showing is that a lot of the argumentation about God is misplaced. [ ... ] many of the atheist arguments against God, is against a God that really doesn't exist - hence, 'straw God arguments'. — Wayfarer
Pierre Whalon is bishop of the Convocation of Episcopal Churches in Europe and point he's making is perfectly orthodox; the fact that everyone here is baffled by it is predictable. — Wayfarer
recommends that some of us ought to shut our 'pious' holes since nothing true or intelligible or definite can be said (vide Witty), let alone sermonized, for or against g/G as such. — 180 Proof
There are indeed things that cannot be put into words. They make themselves manifest. They are what is mystical. — Wittgenstein
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