Your "proof" depends on the assumption that, in the absence of a god, nothingness should be expected. Can either of you defend that assumption?Ah, why is there something rather than nothing?
Because of God.
Awesome reason indeed!
— SpaceDweller
Yes, agree. — Jackson
Proofs of God are deductive because one has to start already believing God exists. — Jackson
Hegel brought this to my attention — Jackson
Yes.1. Does it matter whether God exists/not? — Agent Smith
Yes.2. Can we prove God'sexistence/nonexistence?
if one begins an argument by assuming what is to be proved, this implies that argument is "deductive"? — jgill
My overall point is that nature CAN be explained without g/G and morality CAN be justified without g/G from which it"s reasonable to imply that g/G is not (a/the) "necessary being" (pace Anselm) and, therefore, does not exist (re: theism). Thus, contrary to reals, g/G requires "faith". :fire: — 180 Proof
Your "proof" depends on the assumption that, in the absence of a god, nothingness should be expected. — Relativist
My overall point is that nature CAN be explained without g/G — 180 Proof
morality CAN be justified without g/G — 180 Proof
If a God were all knowing and all powerful and had no wish to be discovered than they never will be. — TiredThinker
I was looking at God's relevance from a moral perspective, not without good reason: A favorite question of atheists (to theists): Are you good only because God exists? — Agent Smith
This is not my question nor topic of thread. But discussion of your interests is fine. — Jackson
A thousand apologies. — Agent Smith
Like the rest of nature, 'human nature' – especially during persistent, elemental eras of raw survival – takes paths of least resistance / effort (i.e. caloric expenditure) as frequently as possible; making shit up (i.e. woo-of-the-gaps) is so much easier than working things out and thinking them through (i.e. trial & error heuristics) that, like early human development, the habit of make-believing (faith) takes hold long before evidence-based thinking for oneself (reason) is learned and practiced. — 180 Proof
Most interesting! — Ms. Marple
It is fine to discuss your interests. I was only referring to proofs of God failing to prove anything. — Jackson
The term ‘god’ exists. How it is used and what exactly it may or may not be referring to would, by itself, show if any kind of proof was possible. — I like sushi
In a rather simplistic manner a great number of people encapsulate ‘god’ as ‘life’ in general — I like sushi
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