cannot make myself think in a way that is not what i'm now. — substantivalism
apply further aspects of your worldview without elaboration as to how they do apply to me lest a straw-man is created. — substantivalism
no i've just seen later examples of William Lane Craig in his arguments or snippets of debates along with external knowledge as to his character that haven't exactly made me appreciate him as much. Perhaps in years previous he wasn't as much so. — substantivalism
Please get back to the rest of us when you have the answer. — EricH
Gosh, are you assuming Time is not in nature? Jeez, you atheists not only like to drop F-bombs (are angry), you're really unsophisticated too LOL! — 3017amen
Perhaps then if you are interested in the dissolution of the Eternalist/Presentist debate you could read this. — substantivalism
Indeed, sounds like another mystery associated with time and change. — 3017amen
Okay, Aristotle too? — 3017amen
Alternatively, here's another interesting one for you: — 3017amen
But if one day someone tries to 'clean up' language so as to remove all the contradictions built into it, and then proceeds to provide a consistent dogmatic theory about God, then do you guys think this will suffice as a proof for the existence of God, albeit only as an abstract concept similar to our concepts of numbers/mathematics today? — TrespassingAcademia
If we are not free to say what we want about this thing, then it exists. — TrespassingAcademia
True, but by this argument this is also a proof against evolutionary theory/ modern medicine/ any other modern science not formalized in this way. The facts generated in these fields are nonetheless considered to be true. — TrespassingAcademia
Would you reject the concepts of mathematics as irrational and not correlated to the real world? What I tried to do was explain that one may consider mathematical reality to be based solely on the fact that the language used to describe it is logically consistent. So my proposition is that if we can do the same for our language used to describe God, then this gives our concept of God as much 'reality' as mathematics. — TrespassingAcademia
This however does not yet prove the existence of a somewhat more 'platonic' God, but it does give us a sort of 'half' existence like mathematics/numbers/love etc — TrespassingAcademia
God on the other hand, does not correlate to the "real" world, and is not reflected in human interaction. It is a concept that was invented to concentrate power — Pro Hominem
Love is a specious label that we've attributed to various brain states and as a (problematic) descriptor for interpersonal relationships — Pro Hominem
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