jonesthecurl wrote:The "god supporters" say this:
Everything that exists has a cause/maker.
The universe exists
Therefore the universe has a cause or maker.
Then add this:
Nothing can be its own cause
Therefore the universe is not its own cause
therefore the universe was caused by somethign outside itself.
They name this cause "god", then somehow decide that it's their particular version of the Christian God (that bit gets a bit fuzzy).
However if we go back over this, and substiture "god" for "the universe" theen the logic is as sound as it ever was.
In the first part, the opposite is also true : anything that did not have a cause or maker cannot exist.
This shows that either (a) god had a maker or (b) god does not exist.
Except God is
defined as the supreme creator. If we don't have God, we've got no end in sight for our analogy. Either that, or we define the Universe as being simply there, without a creator. Even then, you can't rule out a Pantheistic God (although Occam's Razor might well do away with that).
Balsiefen wrote:The problem is that the chances of the wager working out is dismal. Pick the wrong religion and your screwed. And there are so many religions that the chances of it being a single one are tiny. Why should it even be a god that mankind knows of? or one that even cares? Our galaxy contains 400 billion stars, there being around a billion known galaxies. Better to accept the possibility of all things and live by your own standards and wait and see than to channel your efforts into a single religions demands.
Many religions are similar. It might well be that God rewards those who show their ability to open their mind to the possibility of the divine. I also have a hard time believing that all who are not Christian are going to Hell, but something is better than nothing.
Balsiefen wrote:What do you mean atheists (and by atheists I assume you mean science) have no hypothesis? There are hundreds. the point of science is not to build cathedrals to their hypothesis until they are reliably proven, and to base them on some kind of known fact in the first place. Besides, give science a chance, it has been making discoveries at a heck of a speed lately but unlike religion where everything is solved with a simple goddidit, so far every discovery leads to a new and deeper question. A scientific "Theory of everything" is not something that happens overnight.
Just because religions answer questions that science has not yet achieved to its own satisfaction doesn't mean that they are more likely to be right or that science never will answer it's question.
That's just your personal estimation of the power of science, though. Here's a problem I see: where do you go to find these answers? Will the Higgs boson tell us how the Universe is created? How about going through a black hole intact? But who created the Higgs boson and the black hole?
Besides, it's easy enough to believe in God and still make discoveries about the Universe. It's annoying trying to talk to an atheist if they think religion is inherently detrimental to scientific progress. It's not.
AAFitz wrote:very well explained, and let me add to it although its slightly redundant, that science presents is findings in the form of a theory, until it is proven. It does not brigde the gap with blind faith, and keeps an open mind to other possibilities. And certainly suggesting atheists dont have a hypothesis, is absolutely ridiculous. And certainly there many atheists concede that there actually could be a supernatural being in charge of everything, they simply do not believe in one.
Except a theory is blind faith! If you're a scientist, you think, "maybe this is how the Universe was created", and hope that science will someday prove you right.
If you're a theist, you say "maybe the Universe was created by an eternal being", and hope that science will someday prove you right.
If you're an atheist, you say "maybe the Universe was created by something besides an eternal being" or "maybe the Universe wasn't created at all", and hope that science will someday prove you right.
I for one am not very impressed by the negativity and vagueness of the atheists' two theories. Unless I'm unaware of some of the latest theories and someone would like to bring me up to date?
AAFitz wrote:I am constantly amazed that so many people cant understand the fact that atheists only share one thing in common and that is they do not believe in a supernatural being or force in charge of everything. Beyond that, the theories, and beliefs may range as widely as those in the relgious sector.
Lol... I concur. I have noticed that many atheists have long hair...
AAFitz wrote:What you probably will find more often, and this is speculation, is that an atheist is more open to different ideas and possibities, than almost any religious person. A religious person, typically believes in a paticular god, a paticular history, and accounting of what that god requires and has done. An atheist is not necessarily bound by any such faith. They may simply not believe in a supernatural force...but accept that nearly any explaination is possible, and form their beliefs from the information around them, and not just from what theyve been told by others that already have made up their minds as to how everything works.
Well, geez, man, practice what you preach. The only common link between theists is that we believe in a deity. Even though we have beliefs, many of us recognize that just about anything's possible. Maybe someday Odin, Thor, and Freyr will come back and punish us. I dunno.
You've got the creation question, where theists and atheists differ. Then, you've got just about everything else, where science rules and it doesn't mean squat whether you believe in God or not (unless you hold a question to fall under the same category as the creation question, in accordance with your religion). If science proves you wrong, then you modify your beliefs. If it is proven that God doesn't exist, then you can bet that I'll stop believing in Him. But for you to say that the religious ignore the information around them and only know what others tell them is ignorant and unfair.
And, for what it's worth, I'm largely disregarding what others have told me for this argument and am going by my own thoughts on the matter.
