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WraithPriest said:
Kasz216 said:
highwaystar101 said:
Wraith priest you are legend in every way, I would love to say that to the random guy in Birmingham city center that keeps telling me I'm a sinner and will burn in hell...

Also, no-one answered this so I shall post again...

OK, for all you believers in god who are intent on asking atheists to back up why they don't believe in god let me ask you a question...


Prove to me, using sound evidence, that your god exists and is the correct one to follow!!!


Now... prove it to me, otherwise the atheists win the thread.

That arguement seems a bit specious.

To a lot of religious faiths the presense of god is in of itself a sense.

As such it would be like trying to explain vision to a blind person... even scientifically it'd be hard to get.

Some people have infact suggested that such a percetion, whether there is a god or not is tied to the temporal lobes.

Whether it is a sense of a higher consiousness, a sense of something else we currently can't understand or simply a hallucinary feeling is unknown.

 

No.

 

Just No.

 

The main difference being that humans have organs to see with, which even if faulty are DEMONSTRATABLY there.

There is no "God Sense" the closest thing theyve found is that certain harmonics such as those produced by church organs can produce "Holy Sensations"

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3087674.stm

So that must mean God is a soundwave!

 

Now please come back with some actual evidence for got. Not Psuedo-Scientific rambling or a claim that "God could BE IN the soundwave".

I respect your post count, but not that post.

One

http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/2003/godonbrain.shtml

Note that in cases of eplipsy it increased the "feeling of not being alone."  Due to increased activation in the temporal lobe.  Note brain damage also causes actual senses to go into "overdrive" or just to cause hallucinations.

Two.  How do you demonstrate sound to someone who can't hear?

The closest you can do is either have a measure of sound waves via a "crowd meter" or some sort... that doesn't really demonstrate sound to the person just "something" since no matter how much someone "understands" sound a deaf person still isn't going to understand it because they aren't going to know what it "sounds" like.