So, I am asking more about how people see the idea of God as a basis for beginning to think about the existence of God. Is it simply best to dismiss the idea of God in relation to scientific knowledge? Or, is time to rethink the notion of God, in line with mythic or symbolic ways of understanding the philosophy of reality, including the underlying source of everything ? To what extent is arts and a basis for understanding the symbolic aspects of the God question, rather than simply asking about the existence of God from a scientific approach. Is science and art completely divided here , or is it about juggling different models to understand the nature of reality? — Jack Cummins
Science can only address the world as physicality. Since God is not asserted to be a physical entity, science would have nothing to say about it. — Jackson
That's deeeeep, dude! Deeeeeep — Agent Smith
Jung — Jack Cummins
God
(in Christianity and other monotheistic religions) the creator and ruler of the universe and source of all moral authority; the supreme being.
(in certain other religions) a superhuman being or spirit worshiped as having power over nature or human fortunes; a deity.
"a moon god"
Nope. What dictionary did you use? — praxis
You have no idea what people mean by spirit? — Jackson
What definition of God makes it a physical entity? — Jackson
God is often described as omnipotent. By that definition it can manifest physically anytime it wills it.
If it can't do that then it is not omnipotent so it would fail one of the omni definitions of god — universeness
Ok. How would a physicist investigate those physical properties? — Jackson
Okay. How does science examine the existence of God. You're much smarter than me. Explain. — Jackson
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