, the concept of a God indeed broaches . . . the many domain's of philosophy, — 3017amen
may know a thing or two about this.— Wayfarer
Natural vs. supernatural
What do we mean when we say something is a natural phenomena? In it's simplest form we mean that this phenomena is part of the physical universe we live in and can observe. Matter & energy & space & time. — EricH
I entirely agree. Some people think though that the supernatural element is the creation of something out of nothing.That is the essence of my problem with the term "supernatural."
How do you know this? Why do you define "supernatural" this way?... anything "supernatural" essentially means something that exists that does not exist.
That is asking for a circle with corners...or triangles with four sides. — Frank Apisa
Punshhh
2k
↪Frank Apisa
That is the essence of my problem with the term "supernatural."
I entirely agree. Some people think though that the supernatural element is the creation of something out of nothing. — Punshhh
180 Proof
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... anything "supernatural" essentially means something that exists that does not exist.
That is asking for a circle with corners...or triangles with four sides.
— Frank Apisa
How do you know this? Why do you define "supernatural" this way?
Maybe all that "super-natural" means is higher dimensional e.g. 3-d sphere in relation to a 2-d square? or gas vapor in relation to solid ice? or noise in relation to signal? where the first term has more (countable or even uncountable) degrees of freedom than the second term.
I agree that 'impossible objects' do not exist in so far as their predicates are self-contradictory or they contain inconsistent properties (Meinong); but - if by "nature" what's meant is an ordered dynamic self-generative (computable) system complex enough for self-aware agent-subsystems to emerge - that does not preclude 'nature beyond nature' such as, for instance, 'our nature nested within greater natures' like matroyshka dolls.
If there are "gods", Frank, to say they are "super-natural" might mean only that such entities exist at near-infinite distances (Epicurus) from us, from Earth, from the Milky Way, from this universe, which, maybe once upon an eon ago, they somehow left to traverse the multiverse (or "the bulk" that is between and encompasses countless "branes"). I don't see anything conceptually problematic with calling travelers between universes - cosmic nature-systems - "super-natural" in this sense (rather than in the woo-woo "occult" or "religious" senses) and therefore call them "gods" (certainly in relation to flatlanders like human beings). — 180 Proof
I think the usage of supernatural here is doing us a disservice. It seems more as if you guys are actually talking about reality as a whole. i.e if something exists it is part of reality.IF there are things that we humans cannot "observe" (sense or perceive in any way);..those things are as much a part of nature as the things we can observe, sense, or perceive. The fact that we cannot observe, sense, or perceive them does not change the fact that they exist. ANYTHING and EVERYTHING that exists (if it exists) is a part of nature independent of whether we (very limited) humans can detect it. — Frank Apisa
IDoppyTheElv
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IF there are things that we humans cannot "observe" (sense or perceive in any way);..those things are as much a part of nature as the things we can observe, sense, or perceive. The fact that we cannot observe, sense, or perceive them does not change the fact that they exist. ANYTHING and EVERYTHING that exists (if it exists) is a part of nature independent of whether we (very limited) humans can detect it.
— Frank Apisa
I think the usage of supernatural here is doing us a disservice. It seems more as if you guys are actually talking about reality as a whole. i.e if something exists it is part of reality. — DoppyTheElv
Good. I think180 is right on point with what i'm trying to argue. — DoppyTheElv
Assertion without argument again. Fine if you define "supernatural" this way, but definitions are neither true nor false; they're either useful or not for helping advance arguments which themselves are either true or not. What you're saying here, Frank, just seems wholly arbitrary and even tautological. Also, using "reality" and "existence" interchangeably confuses more than clarifies your point.Nothing that "is a part of REALITY" is supernatural...just as nothing that exists is SUPERNATURAL. — Frank Apisa
Thank you for teaching me new words and things. :joke:Assertion without argument again. Fine if you define supernatural" this way, but definitions are neither true or false; they're either useful or not for helping advance arguments which themselves are either true or not. What you're saying here, Frank, just seems wholly arbitrary and even tautological. Also, using "reality" and "existence" interchangeably confuses more than clarifies your point. — 180 Proof
Quite, we are all in the dark about our origins, which means there are a large number of questions, or issues which we can't answer, or resolve.If the idea of gods seems absurd to a person, how does the idea of something coming from nothing not also seem absurd?
There are many different threads in your post - way too many to respond to. E.g. you spend a lot of time talking about hostility & anger of non-theists towards theists. I'm gonna skip this - but if you are really interested, suggest you open up a new topic - make sure you are clear in your OP that you are not interested in debating specific theistic issues but instead want to discuss the hostility and anger you are seeing. Of course it is likely that this conversation will end up embroiled in theological disputes anyway. :smile: But I think you will get some useful information out of it. — EricH
So my question to you is very simple - when you use the word "God" - are you referring to a being/entity who is completely in the natural world - or does "God" have some supernatural aspect?
My hunch is that your "God" has some supernatural aspect to it - after all your "God" "existed" before the natural world existed - so your "God" is at least in some respect "outside nature"
So when you respond, please start off by being direct. Is your "God" "natural" or "supernatural". Of course you can add any additional explanations that you wish to make things clear. :smile: — EricH
So we're agreed that there is some supernatural aspect to your concept of "God". Next you need to define the word "exists". Then you need to explain how these two words form a coherent sentence.The concept of God is both natural and super-natural. — 3017amen
The ephemeral beauty of transcendence,What transcends Objectivity? — 3017amen
What transcends Objectivity?
— 3017amen
The ephemeral beauty of transcendence,
Will last beyond eternity.
It will rise from the grave of uncertainty
To grow to the heights of the one and only Objectivity.
Nay! In it's all knowing indefinable one and only Truth,
It will last forever! — EricH
I don't think this is a correct statement. But you can probably change my mind.More poetry here. — EricH
I usually find definitions - talk about and use - of a/the deity wholly arbitrary and subjective, barely or not at all related to traditional religious (or philosophical) usage which alludes to what most believers actually have always confessed to believing in and that are either undefined or vague to the point of being useless to discuss.Frank Apisa & I have been having a long back & forth conversation about how to define/use the word "God". — EricH
The crux of the matter in these "god discussions" is fourfold:NB: By 'intervener' I understand agency that causes changes in or to the (scientifically) observable, physical, world (i.e. nature), independent of the agency's alleged provenance (i.e. whether natural or super-natural), which are therefore also (scientifically) observable. E.g. "parting the Red Sea", "raising the dead", "curing incurable diseases via intercessionary prayer", "flooding the world", "creating the world c6000 years ago", "being on both sides in a co-religionists' sectarian / civil / holy war", ... IN GENERAL: "suspending conservation laws with each 'miraculous' transformation of a natural person place or thing", etc — 180 Proof
And so, what do you think transcends Objectivity? — 3017amen
Yep, ↪Punshhh makes a good point to ponder. He/she is basically saying you don't even understand your own conscious existence, so how can you, through logic, deny another's conscious existence (Jesus)? — 3017amen
I have no problems with your definition of the term objectivity (allthough for some weird reason you insist on capitalizing it) — EricH
One might also say that the notion that the singularity in the Big Bang event popped into existence from nowhere, is a poetical flourish in spite of how illogical that is. — Punshhh
Consciousness is logically necessary to perceive existence and by extension is metaphysically necessary. — 3017amen
And that's because the physical laws (mathematical timeless truths) describing existence transcend physics itself. — 3017amen
So the question to you is, if our concept of rational explanation derives from observations of the physical world, and from evolutionary inheritance, does it provide for adequate guidance when we are tangling with ultimate questions about existence? Meaning, is our understanding of the nature of existence and its properties lie outside the usual categories of rational human thought? — 3017amen
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