MedVision ad

Does God exist? (5 Viewers)

do you believe in god?


  • Total voters
    1,568

TacoTerrorist

Member
Joined
Mar 16, 2008
Messages
692
Location
Melbourne
Gender
Male
HSC
2007
I'm a Deist, it's not a religion. I'm just sick of arrogant atheists.

EDIT: Spaghetti Monster is a weak weak weak argument. There is no reason or precedence for a FSM. For a creator there is.
 
Last edited:

Enteebee

Keepers of the flames
Joined
Jun 25, 2007
Messages
3,091
Location
/
Gender
Male
HSC
2004
EDIT: Spaghetti Monster is a weak weak weak argument. There is no reason or precedence for a FSM. For a creator there is.
The 'FSM' is one interpretation of what the creator may be... If your argument rests upon 'something created our universe' but you don't provide any explanation at all about the nature of such a thing then this doesn't seem at all to me to be proof of god (even if I accepted it) but merely proof that something created our universe.
 

Enteebee

Keepers of the flames
Joined
Jun 25, 2007
Messages
3,091
Location
/
Gender
Male
HSC
2004
TacoTerrorist said:
^ My belief is that the 'nature of such a thing' is a god. This in itself is not proof, just my belief.
Yes and such a belief is equal to claiming the 'nature of such a thing' is the flying spaghetti monster. There is no acceptable epistemology imo that could lead you to accept the existence of 'god' (idk what you mean by that, it may just be white noise) as the nature of such a creator over any other possibility...

If you can provide one I am truly interested as I would love to believe.
 
Last edited:

duy.le

Member
Joined
Feb 15, 2007
Messages
137
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
not.addie said:
God and religion can be considered in two different view points. Personally I do not believe in a religion: I set my own values that I believe reflect me more personally. And yet I do believe in God- but I will never know what They are truly like.
Meaning that you do not believe in religion, does not mean that you don't believe in God- thats a misconception.
would you happen to know what that is called? cause i tend no to like religion too much but the idea of a being out there watching over us like a watered down big brother sounds not as bad. i dont like the teachings of catholics, etc they are too constricting and petty differences such as whether a priest can or cannot get married separates two different classes of religion is ridiculous. oh and then theres Scientology what a piece of crap that is. (wtf aliens from outer space coming to rescue us?? note i got that information from south park so i dont completely trust it but i wouldnt really care if its false sounds about right)

i used to think that i was aethist but then it really turned out that i just really hated religion, god was not as bad. i had the hardest time learning creation, goes against all my knowledge. oh and the other stuff they had in there... especially the first testimony (or atleast that what i think its call, im refering to the first book of the bible). i would rather not comment of the second half as i would probly start getting threats and stuff.

RELIGION=bad
god is cool.
 

TacoTerrorist

Member
Joined
Mar 16, 2008
Messages
692
Location
Melbourne
Gender
Male
HSC
2007
Yes and such a belief is equal to claiming the 'nature of such a thing' is the flying spaghetti monster. There is no acceptable epistemology imo that could lead you to accept the existence of 'god' (idk what you mean by that, it may just be white noise) as the nature of such a creator over any other possibility...

If you can provide one I am truly interested as I would love to believe.
The atheist demands that the Deist, or theist, provide evidence for the existence of God. They continually resort to logical fallacies of their own, for example, a common one is the Petitio principii (begging the question) fallacy; it goes something like this: there is no God because we find no evidence of God in nature. But is this true? No. We presently do not know enough about nature to make such a conclusion, eventually, the possibility that there is a God could be proven. The atheist has no evidence that the universe is eternal or accidental; they are assuming that scientific speculation somehow equals scientific fact. Obviously there is a great gap between speculation and fact to the rational mind.


- http://www.deism.com/atheism.htm

That expressed it better than I can. The nature of the creator cannot be truly known, only assumed based on what we know of the universe.



Yeah it's like 3am, I'm off to bed. Shit I have no life.
 

Enteebee

Keepers of the flames
Joined
Jun 25, 2007
Messages
3,091
Location
/
Gender
Male
HSC
2004
TacoTerrorist said:
The atheist demands that the Deist, or theist, provide evidence for the existence of God. They continually resort to logical fallacies of their own, for example, a common one is the Petitio principii (begging the question) fallacy; it goes something like this: there is no God because we find no evidence of God in nature. But is this true? No. We presently do not know enough about nature to make such a conclusion, eventually, the possibility that there is a God could be proven. The atheist has no evidence that the universe is eternal or accidental; they are assuming that scientific speculation somehow equals scientific fact. Obviously there is a great gap between speculation and fact to the rational mind.


- http://www.deism.com/atheism.htm

That expressed it better than I can. The nature of the creator cannot be truly known, only assumed based on what we know of the universe.



Yeah it's like 3am, I'm off to bed. Shit I have no life.
I don't make that mistake tbh. I accept that we do not 'know enough about nature' to make final conclusions about the nature of objective truth, but I do think we have provisional truths which work as well as anything and actually tell us something meaningful about our reality as best we know. This is all I think we have as far as knowledge about reality is concerned and this leads me to conclude God is not a part of my reality.

He may exist, he may not... it doesn't really matter. A being existing in our 'provisional reality' and talking about something beyond it, which we cannot know anything about the nature of (obviously making many mistakes as they apply the rules, their experiences of this reality to that outside of what we know) seems an utterly meaningless pursuit.
 

HNAKXR

Wooooooo...OOOoOOOOoOOoP!
Joined
May 18, 2007
Messages
296
Location
safe
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
I believe in an omnipotent omnipresent God, not confined to form or our perceptions of good and evil. A god that operates on logic.

I also believe that i may be completely wrong.
 

KFunk

Psychic refugee
Joined
Sep 19, 2004
Messages
3,323
Location
Sydney
Gender
Male
HSC
2005
TacoTerrorist said:
The atheist demands that the Deist, or theist, provide evidence for the existence of God. They continually resort to logical fallacies of their own, for example, a common one is the Petitio principii (begging the question) fallacy; it goes something like this: there is no God because we find no evidence of God in nature. But is this true? No. We presently do not know enough about nature to make such a conclusion, eventually, the possibility that there is a God could be proven. The atheist has no evidence that the universe is eternal or accidental; they are assuming that scientific speculation somehow equals scientific fact. Obviously there is a great gap between speculation and fact to the rational mind.
This is another strawman attack. An unrefined atheist may argue that there is no apparent evidence in nature, therefore god does not exist (period). I disagree with this argument myself. What is reasonable, I feel, is to say that given the present lack of evidence any belief in god is unjustified. This leads to an agnostic rejection of belief in god. Beliefs can be wrong and beliefs can be revised, but you have to go with the best current evidence. Wishful thinking simply doesn't cut the mustard.
 

nikolas

Member
Joined
Apr 26, 2008
Messages
541
Gender
Male
HSC
2009
3unitz said:
spaghetti monster or russell's teapot is just a way to describe the logic behind the negative proof fallacy. ie. "X is true because you cant prove X is not true". either you miss this point, or youre calling logic, stupid. calling people fuckwits doesnt make you smart either. :lol:



i am sure most reasonable atheists are open to the possibility of god potentially being proven, and do not take the stance "god does not exist" but rather "there is no logical reason to believe god exists, or what god even is" (for example). it just depends on how one arbitrarily defines "atheist" and "god". i think this text does nothing but make generalisations and construct straw man arguments on a subjective definition of an atheist.

i would consider myself atheist and i do not hold the opinion that "there is no god because we find no evidence of god in nature". in fact that statement seems to be implying the very existence of the "supernatural". if you're assuming god potentially does not exist within the natural (where we exist?) then how is one to know what god even is? hence, you've done nothing but call the spaghetti monster argument back on yourself.



nice sweeping generalisation.



im sure you will find that there are atheists (depending on ones definition), myself included, along with a vast majority of scientists, which simply do not know the early processes for the beginning of the universe, nor do they confuse speculation with facts. to say anything more than "dont know" in this area is to speculate, which is why i find this quote highly hypocritical coming from a self-proclaimed deist. once again it depends how one defines "god" and the motivations behind ones definition. to quote bertrand russell:





this is because the claims of a theist generally invoke a burden of proof:



in other words it is logical that one cannot assume true the existence of a potentially disprovable god if it cannot be disproved (negative proof fallacy).
This pretty much sums up my beliefs.
 

Garygaz

Active Member
Joined
Oct 25, 2007
Messages
1,827
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
Thread summary:

You either believe the Universe was created from nothing or that some guy created the universe from nothing in about a week.
 

Captain Hero

Banned
Joined
Jul 21, 2008
Messages
659
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
Garygaz said:
Thread summary:

You either believe the Universe was created from nothing or that some guy created the universe from nothing in about a week.
That's not entirely correct.
 

TacoTerrorist

Member
Joined
Mar 16, 2008
Messages
692
Location
Melbourne
Gender
Male
HSC
2007
3unitz said:
spaghetti monster or russell's teapot is just a way to describe the logic behind the negative proof fallacy. ie. "X is true because you cant prove X is not true". either you miss this point, or youre calling logic, stupid. calling people fuckwits doesnt make you smart either. :lol:
I understand that, but people are using the spaghetti monster analogy to try and disprove or discredit a deity. It is fine to use it when someone says that they believe God exists because he can't be disproven, but it is not fine to use it when something of that sort is not mentioned.

I don't call people fuckwits to try and look smart. I call people fuckwits because they can't think for themselves. I generally don't mind atheists, but I hate those people who are jumping on the bandwagon without considered thought.

3unitz said:
i am sure most reasonable atheists are open to the possibility of god potentially being proven, and do not take the stance "god does not exist" but rather "there is no logical reason to believe god exists, or what god even is" (for example). it just depends on how one arbitrarily defines "atheist" and "god". i think this text does nothing but make generalisations and construct straw man arguments on a subjective definition of an atheist.
Well I disagree. The text outlines a common argument.

i would consider myself atheist and i do not hold the opinion that "there is no god because we find no evidence of god in nature".
The text described one argument often used or at least implied by the typical atheist. In this instance I assume you have other reasons to support your beliefs.

3unitz said:
in fact that statement seems to be implying the very existence of the "supernatural".
?

3unitz said:
if you're assuming god potentially does not exist within the natural (where we exist?) then how is one to know what god even is? hence, you've done nothing but call the spaghetti monster argument back on yourself.
There may be an error of communication here. 'Natural' in the context of the paragraph meant the physical nature of the earth and universe itself. Of course we cannot possibly 'know what god even is', and I don't understand what you mean here. The physical nature of a god? Is that even relevant?


3unitz said:
nice sweeping generalisation.
The text I quoted stated that, not me.

3unitz said:
im sure you will find that there are atheists (depending on ones definition), myself included, along with a vast majority of scientists, which simply do not know the early processes for the beginning of the universe, nor do they confuse speculation with facts. to say anything more than "dont know" in this area is to speculate, which is why i find this quote highly hypocritical coming from a self-proclaimed deist. once again it depends how one defines "god" and the motivations behind ones definition. to quote bertrand russell:

If these scientists don't believe in anything supernatural, which clearly they don't, then they will not infer that the universe was created by or the result of a deity. Therefore, it would have to be attributed (by them) to something natural and known. Essentially this means that the universe was formed by parts that already exist. Something cannot come from nothing. This is infant level common sense and scientific fact. However, the presence of a deity could explain this by erasing these rules.

3unitz said:
this is because the claims of a theist generally invoke a burden of proof:
I know, it was from the article.

3unitz said:
in other words it is logical that one cannot assume true the existence of a potentially disprovable god if it cannot be disproved (negative proof fallacy).
I know.

KFunk said:
This is another strawman attack. An unrefined atheist may argue that there is no apparent evidence in nature, therefore god does not exist (period). I disagree with this argument myself. What is reasonable, I feel, is to say that given the present lack of evidence any belief in god is unjustified. This leads to an agnostic rejection of belief in god. Beliefs can be wrong and beliefs can be revised, but you have to go with the best current evidence. Wishful thinking simply doesn't cut the mustard.
This really is the roots of where opinion and mindset is apparent. You say that there is a 'present lack of evidence' and I disagree, because people have different definitions of what constitutes as evidence. You (and other atheists) accept only proven scientific evidence, which I feel is heavily constrictive.


Thread summary:
You either believe the Universe was created from nothing or that some unknown deity created the universe from nothing.
 

Kwayera

Passive-aggressive Mod
Joined
May 10, 2004
Messages
5,959
Location
Antarctica
Gender
Female
HSC
2005
TacoTerrorist said:
If these scientists don't believe in anything supernatural, which clearly they don't, then they will not infer that the universe was created by or the result of a deity. Therefore, it would have to be attributed (by them) to something natural and known. Essentially this means that the universe was formed by parts that already exist. Something cannot come from nothing. This is infant level common sense and scientific fact. However, the presence of a deity could explain this by erasing these rules.
Wrong.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_particle

(etc)
 

Shadose

Enjoy Life
Joined
Sep 21, 2007
Messages
255
Gender
Male
HSC
2008
If you believe in him, he exists.

If you don't, he doesn't exist.

As simple as that.
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 5)

Top