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Forums - General - Why do we exist,GOD or BIG BANG theory?

 

Who created everything?

GOD 184 41.82%
 
BIG BANG 251 57.05%
 
Total:435
Sri Lumpa said:

I was trying to explain why your assertion that  "You have to believe to see, not see to believe" looks stupid and I was not comparing snow to a higher power as much as comparing the belief in two unobserved phenomena, one of which happens to be a higher power and the oher happens not to be.

Snow can be seen and felt on Earth, it has been witnessed by millions of people with thier eyes in this physical world, God cant, thats why your explnation fails. And kid from Sahara is likley to learn or at least hear about snow, so thats annotherreason why your debunking failed.

Also, when I wrote it I took it you meant it literally but reading another post by padib where he said "even though the bible is clear that without faith one cannot see God" made me realise that you probably meant see the spiritual world, not see physical things. It still look stupid when taken at face value given that it is unqualified but I understand where you come from if that restating is what you meant: "You have to believe to see spiritual things, not see to believe".

Well, I thought that was abvoius. I said it 2 posts back, that I dont present this as some divine evidence of God so you shouldnt take it that way. Im am just arguing that faith is very important to realizing and seeing God when you beleive in Him and its far from irrational.

Assuming that I now correctly understand your assertion, my rebuttal would be that if it is your faith itself that causes you to see spiritual things then a muslim's faith or an hinduist's faith is sufficient for each to see spiritual things which leads to the logical conclusion (based on your premise) that every religious faith's spiritual world must exist as they all see it through their respective faith.

Faith that shows loving God that promotes peace love, equality and respect? Than yes, they can see it too, as both of those religions promote the same things that God of Christianity and Christ does. Thats not a rebuttal, you almost confirmed my point.

On the other hand, if their faith is not enough to conclude that these religion's spiritual worlds exist then their faith only gives them the illusion of seeing the spiritual world, in which case so does your faith gives you an illusion of seeing a spiritual world.

Depends on the individual and his/hers faith. Spiritual world can bee seen trough faith.

Player1x3 said:

One person can hardly make up dozens of millions who thought otherwise, and dozens of other, more famous and noteble philisophers who were at least deists.

Your assertion was:

I dont see how it was possible not to beleive in higher power back than when people knew very little about the world around them

I only needed to mention one to disprove it.

Fine, I guess you did, lol. But the bigger picture still stands.

Your argument sounds like blame the victim to me.

Its true, I speak from experience. Just look at this web site for an example.

Regardless, the fact is that atheism was frowned upon in those time (and still is in America nowadays, I believe* that it would be easier to get elected whilst being gay than whilst being an open atheist).

But its not punishable by law, its only not welcome in some societies ( I already mentioned reasons for this), so they had no reason not to come out

*yes, it is an irrational belief because I can't prove it, though an educated one. If I were to guess I would say that your religious belief, while irrational by definition, is also quite educated.

Not knowing the exact details of your religious beliefs I was generally talking about religion in the abstract and getting more concrete in specific cases.

But you need to look at the main point and purpose of Christianity if you want to fully understand it. Dont focus on small unimportant stories that were given to Christianity by other pagan religions.

Religions in general do include statements about the world, and that is why they tend to clash with science if/when science sees the world differently. If your religious belief does not include such things then your religious belief cannot clash with science.

Yes, but the nature of the world isnt the religion's main purpose. For the long time religious institiutions were the only source of science and knowledge, and thats why church manipullated religion and used it to explain the world.

Also, within christianity your belief seems to be erroneous as Jesus said "Don't misunderstand why I have come. I did not come to abolish the law of Moses or the writings of the prophets. No, I came to accomplish their purpose." (Matthew 5:17)

And the old testament says "Do not add to what I command you and do not subtract from it, but keep the commands of the LORD your God that I give you" Deuteronomy 4:2

Yes, God commanded 10 commandments and Moses wrote it. Jesus however, coverd all 10 commandments by saying ''Love and accept your God as a saviour and never do anything to others that you dont wish to be done upon yourself'', hence why he accomplished law of Moses and promoted God's comands. But stuff like ''Book of Leviticus (part of the old testament)'' and similar hold no historical nor spirital place in Christianity.

So while Christians may not need to obey the old testament laws because they are fulfilled in Jesus (supposedly, I don't see how as they are quite contradictory with the new testament but what do I know) they are still relevant and their edicts are still considered moral (even the ones we would find immoral today).

They are contradictionary because they teach different things. Heck, go read the first 3 sentences of this article:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish-Christian_relations

Judaism primarily places emphasis on correct actions (or orthopraxy), focusing primarily on how to respond to the Mosaic Covenant God made with the Israelites, as recorded in the Torah and Talmud.[1] Christianity places emphasis on correct belief (or orthodoxy), focusing on response to the New Covenant that God made through Jesus, with some denominations believing that salvation comes not by any human action, but by faith alone (sola fide) and God's action. <---- Hence why ''faith'' is so important in Christianity

Incidentally, while I am agnostic technically speaking (I hold no belief as to whether any god exist) and atheist practically speaking (I live my life by and large like if no god exist) I am philosophically neither because I consider such religious labels (as well as christian, muslim...) to answer the wrong question and to have a wrong assumption.

The wrong question answered is "Does god x exist". My answer for all value of x is not yes, it is not know, it is "who cares". The truth value of a particular god's existence is irrelevant, what is relevant is whether the moral code expounded in its name is actually moral. If it is not and said god was proved to exist I still would not follow it (that would be like following lucifer if he had created the world and would thus be god instead of following yahweh if he had not created the world but had been created by lucifer and had rebelled and thus wasn't god). And if the religious code of a non-existant god is good then the lack of his existence should not prevent one from following it. 

Do you disagree with the morals God and Jesus Christ teached people upon?

I guess you could say that I view the idea of "it is moral because god said it was" as the epitome of the fallacy of argument from authority.

I beleive all morals given by God are good, not because they are from God, but because I agree with them

Player1x3 said:

Again, believe to see. There really is no point in arguing about this, because a person without faith couldnt possibly realize what am I talking about. Not that I blame you, I just think that we'll never reach common ground due to our different beliefs on the matter. As for the actual response to your replay, its the same as before. In theism, faith CAN LEAD TO KNOWLEDGE, where you no longer believe in God, but know that he exists.

I do understand what you mean because believe it or not I used to have faith back when I was a kid and before I started questioning it. My argument is not that you can't feel like you know god's existence. My argument is that it is an illusion. If it is not then every religion's gods must exist for in all of them you can find people with enough faith that they just know that their god exist, or so they (and you) think.

Read what I replied to your 2nd, 3rd and 4h paragraph.

Somebody having hallucination without knowing that they are hallucination (like a paranoid schizophrene as opposed to someone knowingly taking LSD) won't believe in the hallucination because for him they are not hallucinations; he will know that they are real. But his knowledge of their realness does not make it so.

Not at all. person that is still sane knows that hes having hallucinations, in fact most people realize the things they see during hallucinations are not there.

Now I am not making the argument that religion is akin to paranoid schizophrenia (though I am not making the argument that it isn't either; I am simply silent on the subject) but the same principle apply.

No, they dont. Schizophrenia is mental illness, just because you can see things that arent there due to mental sickness doesnt mean its anything like seeing God trough true faith, and by ''seeing'#  dont mean seeing with your own eyes like hallucinations, but rather know that He is there, feel his presence.

Player1x3 said:

In theism, faith alwas leads to realization (maybe thats a better word than knowledge)

Do you mean self-realisation? Or, to use a christian term, epiphany?

I mean when a person is convinced that a higher power (God) exists due to his spiritual experince in life and faith.

If so, not only do you not even need faith for it as you can also gain it through meditation and even sleep can suffice (hence the old advice to sleep on things) but I would argue that it is not so much the gaining of new knowledge as it is our brain analysing what we already know without our conscious input (which can often get in the way).

it really depends on what exactly are you trying to realise or discover trough meditation. Now, I've personally never done anything like meditation myself, so I dont know weather or not you can discover the existance of higher being with meditation . I am not very educated on that stuff

If such epiphany is about the material world or philosophy then you can test such newfound understanding to check if it is correct.

If such epiphany is about knowledge of supernatural things then it is derived from your former belief and is nothing more than a rearranging of same into a coherent whole. As it still has its foundation in beliefs it cannot be termed rational (whereas the case in the preceding  sentence can be verified or disproved and if verified is rational).

Player1x3 said:

Like I said before, theism is different than science, in theism, true faith can lead to discovery and realization, and later, to the point, where you no longer beleive in God, but know he exists. For this, true and righteous faith is necessary. As for you last sentence, yes you are correct. And I think you'll find that all religions deliver the same message, only they use different symbolics and worshiping methods, regardless how many fanatics choose to interpret it for thier own purposes, because religion has been greatly abused by men in higher power.

I agree that theism and science are different, but it does not follow that theism's axioms are necessarily true. As for true and righteous faith to be necessary, many (including me incidentally) go through the same process with similar results through mediation which does not necessarily require faith (just ask an ardent atheist like Sam Harris).

Read what I said above

Such things help us organise our thought and can lead to new thoughts but it is not so much the gaining of new knowledge as much as the revelation into our consciousness of things we already knew inconsciously (whether on their own or as a synthesis of unconscious thoughts).

To reprise my example of the boy in the desert (sorry), he could imagine the concept of snow without seeing any or being told about it (no need of faith or meditation for that, just imagination) and could through such a meditative process convince himself that there has to be such a thing as snow somewhere in the universe but that perception of knowledge would not be actual knowledge until he travels to a place where there is snow.

But the snow would still exist, and thats the main point. Its not important how you ''imagine'' God on his visual appereance,  what matters is that you have faith in him and that faith is later on proven

Of course he would believe that he know that there is snow just like you believe that you know there is a god because from his subjective view it is knowledge even though it objectively isn't.

As for all religions delivering the same message I would say that a lot of them deliver the same core principles (peace, love...) but they often contradict them; which is why you can have a situation where some christians (not all) believe that it is logical and moral that unbelievers be sent to hell by a loving god to be tortured for eternity for failing to believe in a religion's subjective beliefs (like the deity of Jesus).

Except that those Christians are wrong and your view on Hell is very wrong as well. Hell isnt a place , its a state of soul where a person PUT HIMSELF INTO. Its a state of soul in after life where soul is without god, but the soul putted it self there not God, for Gods love towards man is too big for Him to torture and burn his people.Stuff like fire, demons and torture are used as symbolics to present the afterlife without God. You example fails, God would never hurt a person. And Jesus really did exist, its a historical proven fact.

If god was so just and loving he would at worst send to hell those humans who have an evil heart and send to heaven those that have a good heart regardless of whether they believed in Jesus, maybe with a purgatory period before acceptance where he would correct them in their incorrect beliefs about the world and morality.

And God does that, except he doesnt send people to Hell. You dont have to beleive Jesus Christ was son of God, just beleive in his teachings.

Player1x3 said:

Like I said above, religion isnt here to explain this world, thats what science does. Religion has totally different purpose and aim than science, regardless if some misguided and misinformed fanatics told and tricked people into thinking otherwise. To answer your question, I would choose the first plane, as I would always choose science over religion when it comes to explaining this world and life from biological standpoint.

Yeah, I retract that as I did not understand that you are claiming that it could lead to spiritual knowledge but that you are not claiming that it can lead to physical knowledge.

Player1x3 said:

I dont know, I was always under the impression that evolution was fully proven fact, seeing as how many evolutionists are active and liud about their beliefs all over the internet and media.

It is a scientific theory which means that it will never be proven. It is however highly unlikely to be disproven because of the huge amount of evidence supporting it. I think the loudness of scientists on this subject is simply a reflection of many religious people's attempts to replace it with their beliefs. You would not see such vehemence with respect to the theory of gravity or to insist that the earth is an oblate spheroid because hardly anyone would bother to claim that there is no such thing as gravity and those few who claim that the earth is flat are not taken seriously.

The strong defense of evolution is because it is under an attack that may succeed, not scientifically because it can't, but politically; and such a political defeat would not be a defeat of evolution as much as a defeat of the scientific principle, the corruption and perversion of science for religious ends and the start of a new dark age.

If it has huge amount of evidence supporting it why dont you beleive in it and why is it still considerd a theory?


Sorry for the late reply, for some reason I have totally forgotten about this thread



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I don't believe in either the big bang or the Biblical creationist theory. In fact, I see the Big Bang as creationism in disguise.

I don't see the Big Bang as a scientific theory because it is not fallible or testable in an experiment. It exists only as a weak interpretation of evidence, and makes up unobservable phenomena (Dark Energy and Dark Matter which account for 96% of the matter and energy in the Universe) to make the Big Bang theory work; these are as likely as a Christian God, because they were made-up by humans, but never observed by humans.

I also don't see the Abrahamic God as likely because even among the Abrahamic faiths and sub-faiths there are large disagreements. The holy scriptures were written for political reasons, and violate observed history if examined as a history. The God of the Jews resembles the God of the Christians even less than it does the God of the Muslims. The God of the Catholics does not resemble the God of the Bible. Even the Messiah of John's passages does not resemble the Jesus of others, even though they have a similar history. I think that allowing one single regime (Constantine I) to determine the Bible for all time is not something to put your faith in; those men were not good people, Constantine was a usurper and demagogue, a ruthless warmonger who raised armies which dwarfed those of Augustus and Julius Caesar, and conquered the known western world; who burned plundered from England to Asia. Over 270 Holy Christian books were rejected by him and his council, simply because they didn't agree with them; only 30 were accepted... Even though some are from different lines of thought. Christians generally accept John's Messiah and Jesus to be the same being - and Satan, Lucifer, and the Devil to all be the same being - but I find I can't even accept that. I don't think Satan as the prosecutor of humanity was evil, just an adversary who will show why people are not worthy of God. Lucifer (the morning star), the fallen angel, on the other hand, seems to be more the very concept of greed and hate which Satan obviously sees as bad traits - it should also be mentioned that Lucifer himself is a Roman-Christ Cult myth based on planet Venus.


On Jesus - I think that he is a personification deity, and that he exists to show love and empathy in the form of a human, to relate to humans. I do not think that he was meant to be a historical figure by the authors. If Jesus is love, then I can accept statements in the bible that essentially say that only through Jesus can one find true peace. As a simple historical deity for worship, that makes no sense to me.  Many christians love Jesus and hate Satan... If that is the case, then why do they accept a Jesus in the Book of Revelation who takes on the role of Satan as the prosecutor of humanity?

If Jehova (or Yaweh) of the old testament resembles any god, he is more like a member of the Roman pantheon; a god who is more like a mythical character than a philosophical concept.

 

As for what to worship? Why not the Sun, the Earth, and their children? Afterall, the air that we breath, the food that we eat, the clear liquid water we drink, it is all because of those two objects. The sun is like a father who gives light and heat to the Earth who in turn gives birth to all the life on the planet. If you look at it this way: some of the Greek and Roman cults seem to be much more accurate than any religion we have today. In fact, many traditions in Christianity are owed to the Cult of Sol Invictus and Magna Mater which are just that concept, the Sun and the Earth.



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Jumpin said:

I don't believe in either the big bang or the Biblical creationist theory. In fact, I see the Big Bang as creationism in disguise.

I don't see the Big Bang as a scientific theory because it is not fallible or testable in an experiment. It exists only as a weak interpretation of evidence, and makes up unobservable phenomena (Dark Energy and Dark Matter which account for 96% of the matter and energy in the Universe) to make the Big Bang theory work; these are as likely as a Christian God, because they were made-up by humans, but never observed by humans.

I also don't see the Abrahamic God as likely because even among the Abrahamic faiths and sub-faiths there are large disagreements. The holy scriptures were written for political reasons, and violate observed history if examined as a history. The God of the Jews resembles the God of the Christians even less than it does the God of the Muslims. The God of the Catholics does not resemble the God of the Bible. Even the Messiah of John's passages does not resemble the Jesus of others, even though they have a similar history. I think that allowing one single regime (Constantine I) to determine the Bible for all time is not something to put your faith in; those men were not good people, Constantine was a usurper and demagogue, a ruthless warmonger who raised armies which dwarfed those of Augustus and Julius Caesar, and conquered the known western world; who burned plundered from England to Asia. Over 270 Holy Christian books were rejected by him and his council, simply because they didn't agree with them; only 30 were accepted... Even though some are from different lines of thought. Christians generally accept John's Messiah and Jesus to be the same being - and Satan, Lucifer, and the Devil to all be the same being - but I find I can't even accept that. I don't think Satan as the prosecutor of humanity was evil, just an adversary who will show why people are not worthy of God. Lucifer (the morning star), the fallen angel, on the other hand, seems to be more the very concept of greed and hate which Satan obviously sees as bad traits - it should also be mentioned that Lucifer himself is a Roman-Christ Cult myth based on planet Venus.


On Jesus - I think that he is a personification deity, and that he exists to show love and empathy in the form of a human, to relate to humans. I do not think that he was meant to be a historical figure by the authors. If Jesus is love, then I can accept statements in the bible that essentially say that only through Jesus can one find true peace. As a simple historical deity for worship, that makes no sense to me.  Many christians love Jesus and hate Satan... If that is the case, then why do they accept a Jesus in the Book of Revelation who takes on the role of Satan as the prosecutor of humanity?

If Jehova (or Yaweh) of the old testament resembles any god, he is more like a member of the Roman pantheon; a god who is more like a mythical character than a philosophical concept.

 

As for what to worship? Why not the Sun, the Earth, and their children? Afterall, the air that we breath, the food that we eat, the clear liquid water we drink, it is all because of those two objects. The sun is like a father who gives light and heat to the Earth who in turn gives birth to all the life on the planet. If you look at it this way: some of the Greek and Roman cults seem to be much more accurate than any religion we have today. In fact, many traditions in Christianity are owed to the Cult of Sol Invictus and Magna Mater which are just that concept, the Sun and the Earth.

Jesus was observed by humans in His day. Jesus and Mary have appeared through the centuries to people to warn them and guide them.

Jesus in the end of times will only judge you by your actions. He and Satan (=devil, prince of lies, etc.) are different: the devil tempted Jesus to follow him and not God; to be ruler of the earth and not king in Heaven.

For jews, christians and muslims it is the same God. The difference is that only Christians accept Jesus as the son of God. It`s a question of faith.
Why does God appear to be different before and after Jesus, here`s something for your consideration - if i read you correctly:

"And some Pharisees came up to him, testing him, and began to question him whether it was lawful for a man to divorce a wife, saying, “Is it awful for a man to divorce his wife for any cause at all?

And he answered and said to them, “What did Moses command you?”

And they said. “Moses permitted a man to write a certificate of divorce and send Her away.”

And he answered and said, “Have you not read, that he who created them [but] from the beginning of creation made them male and female, and said, ‘for this cause a man shall leave his father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh’? Consequently they are no longer two, but one flesh. What therefore God has joined together, let no man separate.”

They said to him, “Why then did Moses command to give her a certificate and send her away?” [But]

Jesus said to them, “Because of your hardness of heart, he wrote you this commandment Moses permitted you to divorce your wives; but from the beginning it has not been this way. And I say to you, whoever divorces his wife, except for immorality, and marries another woman commits adultery “"

 

From what i have read it was a Catholic priest who gave birth to the Big Bang theory. And it seems to be supported by waves of radiation found in space. Can`t explain better than this since i don`t know more than that.



has this REALLY turned into a debate about whether science is as reliable as Religion? what has this world come to?



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Player1x3 said:

Sorry for the late reply, for some reason I have totally forgotten about this thread

No problem.

Snow can be seen and felt on Earth, it has been witnessed by millions of people with thier eyes in this physical world, God cant, thats why your explnation fails. And kid from Sahara is likley to learn or at least hear about snow, so thats annotherreason why your debunking failed.

My analogy includes him not being told about snow by people who have experienced it. He is not told and has never seen snow so while he can imagine snow he can't know through faith that snow exist. The same with us and god. The kid can know through experience that snow exists by traveling to a snowy place but until he does he can't know, just believe in it. Similarly we can know through experience if god exist, by dying, but before we do so we can't know that god exist, only believe it.

Well, I thought that was abvoius. I said it 2 posts back, that I dont present this as some divine evidence of God so you shouldnt take it that way. Im am just arguing that faith is very important to realizing and seeing God when you beleive in Him and its far from irrational.

Ok my bad, but I think you understand why I misinterpreted it and why another poster thought it stupid. We also probably have a different definition of rational and irrational as for me faith, not being based on evidence, cannot be rational. Now it doesn't mean that faith cannot use reason as once you take the bible's veracity on faith you can apply reason on its claim to construct religious arguments, but the foundation, being based on faith is irrational.

Faith that shows loving God that promotes peace love, equality and respect? Than yes, they can see it too, as both of those religions promote the same things that God of Christianity and Christ does. Thats not a rebuttal, you almost confirmed my point.

No because I am not restricting it to faiths that are compatible with yours but also those that are not, so that the faith of a muslim jihaddist in a warloving god would be just as valid a path to him knowing such a warlike god exists as your faith of a loving god is a valid path to you knowing that a loving god exists.

To go to the extreme, as you cannot disprove god being an atheist is an act of faith in the absence of a spiritual world so that according to you their faith leads atheists to know that there is no god and no spiritual world. How is it compatible with your faith letting you know that there is a god and a spiritual world?

On a related note are you aware of the Baha'i's faith teaching of the unity of religion?

Depends on the individual and his/hers faith. Spiritual world can bee seen trough faith.

I do not deny that they can be seen through faith. But seeing them through faith does not make them real and given that you will not know if they are real until you die then your faith cannot give you knowledge of them, only a stronger faith in them.

Its true, I speak from experience. Just look at this web site for an example.

And a lot of women dress in teasing ways but it does not provide an excuse if one cannot temper their lust.

We should make a new reality TV show: one insensitive atheist/antitheist (Hitchens?) and one hypersensitive theist in a room for a month. That would be fun (you might want to have bouncers available to separate them before they kill each other).

But its not punishable by law, its only not welcome in some societies ( I already mentioned reasons for this), so they had no reason not to come out

Homosexuality has not been punishable by law either for years yet there still are plenty of people in the closet because they are afraid to be rejected by their family. Legal pressure is not the only thing in play, peer pressure can be even more powerful as it can lead people to break the law.

But you need to look at the main point and purpose of Christianity if you want to fully understand it. Dont focus on small unimportant stories that were given to Christianity by other pagan religions.

I realise that you can perfectly consider christianity as a moral philosophy free from the baggage of its description of this world or of the spiritual world (see atheists for Jesus) and you seem to consider it free of its description of this world but with its description of the spiritual world. Not every christian agrees with you though (like padib who think that if the account of genesis is false then the whole edifice of biblical claims come crashing down) and they tend to be the most vocal minority.

Yes, but the nature of the world isnt the religion's main purpose. For the long time religious institiutions were the only source of science and knowledge, and thats why church manipullated religion and used it to explain the world.

Yes, God commanded 10 commandments and Moses wrote it. Jesus however, coverd all 10 commandments by saying ''Love and accept your God as a saviour and never do anything to others that you dont wish to be done upon yourself''hence why he accomplished law of Moses and promoted God's comands. But stuff like ''Book of Leviticus (part of the old testament)'' and similar hold no historical nor spirital place in Christianity.

I disagree with your interpretation of the bible as I simply see it as a contradiction in the bible but since I have no intention of trying to convert you to a literal interpretation of the bible I think we will have to agree to disagree.

They are contradictionary because they teach different things. Heck, go read the first 3 sentences of this article

The reason why they are contradictory does not mean they are not. When the old testament holds some action as moral like stoning people to death for various infractions but Jesus says not to resist evil they are both teaching actions and those actions are contradictory (resist evil by stoning people to death vs do not resist evil).

Do you disagree with the morals God and Jesus Christ teached people upon?

No tentirely. I agree with some of them like the golden rule (the spirit of it as read literally it would mean a masochist should inflict pain on others to follow it) but I find the dogma that you cannot enter heaven but through belief in Jesus as a savior to be repugnant as it means that a person doing their best to be as moral as possible but not believing in the supernatural claims of the bible would not be accepted in heaven. In other word you do not go to heaven because you are a good person but because of the arbitrary criteria of faith in a particular person.

This also mean that I find the whole concept of hell (which not all christians believe in though) immoral as being a moral person is not enough to spare you an eternity of torture (and since when is torture moral anyway?).

As for the old testament, I find most of it to be more an account of immorality than I find it to be a moral guide.

I beleive all morals given by God are good, not because they are from God, but because I agree with them

Is there any teaching about moral in the bible (both testaments as they both come from god) with which you do not agree then?

Do you see Leviticus as moral? I certainly don't. Note that seeing Leviticus as not applying to christians does not mean it is not moral as it is part of a moral code given by god.

Not at all. person that is still sane knows that hes having hallucinations, in fact most people realize the things they see during hallucinations are not there.

So are you claiming that you are not sane as you do not realise the hallucinatory nature of your faith derived "knowledge"?

No, they dont. Schizophrenia is mental illnessjust because you can see things that arent there due to mental sickness doesnt mean its anything like seeing God trough true faith, and by ''seeing'#  dont mean seeing with your own eyes like hallucinations, but rather know that He is there, feel his presence.

Your argument was faith based. The origin of the faith (religious text or hallucination) is irrelevant; as long as they believe (i.e. have faith) in their hallucination your argument apply.

I mean when a person is convinced that a higher power (God) exists due to his spiritual experince in life and faith.


it really depends on what exactly are you trying to realise or discover trough meditation. Now, I've personally never done anything like meditation myself, so I dont know weather or not you can discover the existance of higher being with meditation . I am not very educated on that stuff

Then I will go back to my example of the atheist's faith. Can an atheist know through his faith that god does not exist? 

But the snow would still exist, and thats the main point. Its not important how you ''imagine'' God on his visual appereance,  what matters is that you have faith in him and that faith is later on proven

But the snow's existence would be totally independent from the boy's faith in it. If I had replaced snow with chasira, a completely fictional substance that i just made up, your argument is that the boy would know through his faith that chasira exists.

His faith in snow or chasira does not mean they exist and does not cause them to exist so it cannot allow him to have the knowledge of their existence. 

Except that those Christians are wrong and your view on Hell is very wrong as well. Hell isnt a place , its a state of soul where a person PUT HIMSELF INTO. Its a state of soul in after life where soul is without god, but the soul putted it self there not God, for Gods love towards man is too big for Him to torture and burn his people.Stuff like fire, demons and torture are used as symbolics to present the afterlife without God.  

It may be wrong but it seems to be the view of hell offered by most of christianity. for reference my christian parents do not believe in an everlasting hell where people are tortured but believe in what they call gehenna, where souls not accepted by god are destroyed (i.e. a one time event instead of everlasting torture).

You example fails, God would never hurt a person.

Then why all the laws punishable by death in the old testament?

And Jesus really did exist, its a historical proven fact.

As far as I know the only eyewitness accounts are found in the bible which cannot be used as a source of its own historicity and there is no Roman record of his crucifixion. While it doesn't disprove his existence it certainly mean that it is not historically proven.

However I was not claiming that he did not exist, I said "like the deity of Jesus". Are you saying that Jesus's status as a deity is an historically proven fact and not a subjective belief?

You dont have to beleive Jesus Christ was son of God, just beleive in his teachings.

That's not what the bible says:

He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him. John 3:36

Believes in him, not believe in his teachings.

If you interpret the bible differently that is your right but I do not find it supported by the bible itself.

If it has huge amount of evidence supporting it why dont you beleive in it and why is it still considerd a theory?

Newton's theory of Universal Gravitation is still a theory. So is Einstein's theory of General Relativity that proved Newton's theory incorrect because of its incompleteness.

You do not seem to understand that scientific theories are not proven, merely supported by facts.

And I do not believe in it because it is not an act of faith. I don't believe in gravity either but I accept Newton's theory as a very good explanation and Einstein's theory as an even better one though less practical as it is more complicated (for example NASA uses Newton's theory to launch rockets as the relativistic effects are monimal enough to ignore them for that purpose).

I don't believe in evolution but I do believe that it represents the best scientific explanation of the multitude of facts that supports it.

It is a subtle distinction but it means that if somebody came up with a theory that better explained those facts I would not have difficulty accepting that theory as the best explanation.



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FaRmLaNd said:
The big bang isn't a who. With that minor quibble aside, I certainly think the big bang is the most credible explanation that currently exists. Its actually supported by data!


There are too many people spewing their hateful comments here to reply to them all so I'll just comment on your rather neutral and common viewpoint...

As possibly the ONLY real physicist/mathematician on this site I have to tell you that:

1) The big-bang theory arose out of necessety, NOT BECAUSE IT WAS SUPPORTED BY DATA. The red-shift observed in light is NOT fully understood.

2) There are unsolvable problems in the model including; Singularity, origin of "Lumpiness", high-energy interactions etc.

3) THERE IS NO THEORY OF THE NUCLEUS. Read those words. There exists NO theory for the interaction between sub-nuclear particles. Models are built with data. We know next to nothing.

4) Modern Cosmology has WAY more assumptions and approximations than any of you seem to believe. The current model of the universe is certainly on shaky ground, and while it may prove to represent reality to some extent, it is not taken very seriously by many of the world's biggest brains.

So in short, STOP believing everything you see on BBC just because its made by someone with a PhD, and for heaven's sake LEAVE people alone who believe in a divine creator - ESPECIALLY if they aren't fanatic.



I always see the same thing only 2 side, no one ever think that could be both and the one is the how of the question



Now I'm not totally mad enough to even try catch up with this thread, as the last page would have taken me a few hours to read. But as someone studying a masters in Physics next year I feel I can try weigh in with a few things, that from what I briefly read, seem to not be mentioned (Albeit I'm sure they have been).

The main one being, the big bang theory and idea of a creator arn't necessary in direct conflict. The Big Bang theory is a study of what we believe to have happened when time began, we observe what we can and from that infer and predict what happened back then. The singularity at which time began could have had events previous to it - just that we cannot ever hope to see them due to the nature of what happens in a singularity.

It is much like if I were to throw a rock into a pond. The Big Bang Theory explains what happens when the rock hits the pond, why the ripples go outwards, what happens as they traverse further - it tells us nothing of who threw the rock or why he chose to throw the rock in that way.

Of course the fact that the Big Bang Theory has a hard time explaining why it's initial conditions are just such that they are is probably it's biggest downfall - and Hawking et all are dreaming up other possible theories that get rid of the need for this beginning singularity. Not that this is really worth bringing up in this sort of debate or anything, it's more a very complex mathematical model then anything, albeit a somewhat incredible piece of work.

I might actually try weigh in with more if I can get around to reading some more pages... if anyone needs any clarification on actual theory behind the Big Bang and stuff though I should be able to help... I get the most of it up until we start talking 7 dimensions and curved Euclidian space time :(.