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In Search of God

Jacob-B April 02, 2019 at 19:59 10300 views 38 comments
My doubts about Theism. aa

Some time ago I read a well-argued article against atheism. The author pointed out that one cannot disprove the physical existence of God. To do that one would need to search throughout the whole fabric of spacetime, past, present, and future to establish the absence of God. That argument can, of course, extend to any mythical creature; gryphons, unicorns .., but let's ignore that for the moment. Such search is only meaningful if one assumes the existence of God as some sort physical entity and I am ready to accept that the argument demolishes the certainty about the non-existence of God. One could, of course, argue about the relevance to mankind of a God whose existence requires such a search but lets ignore that too.

I think that many theists would dismiss the purpose of the search for God as a physical entity, pointing out to his existence in a realm beyond the physical. However, such a search cannot be dismissed by the Abrahamic faiths. All three of them ask us op believe in miracles. Miracles require the use of some physical mechanism to impact on the physical world. Parting the sea, Resurrection, curing of diseases and . of course, Creation itself requires God to step into the physical world and use physical processes. By implication, whenever a miracle happened God is present in the physical realm and has to acts in accordance with the laws of nature.

In summary: miracles require physical acts by a physical entity. The alternative is God the Conjurer. Consequently, the search for God in the physical realm might not be as absurd as it sounds.

Comments (38)

Mariner April 02, 2019 at 20:19 #271923
Quoting Jacob-B
the search for God in the physical realm might not be as absurd as it sounds.


It would be better phrased as, "the search for God's influence [or, effects] in the physical realm might not be as absurd as it sounds." Since the God of the Abrahamic faiths is, by definition, spirit (i.e., not a body), hence, not to be found in the physical realm.

It is important to note that the Abrahamic advance (over polytheism) is the principle that God is not to be confused with any physical manifestation (the Sun, warlust, sex, etc. were typical examples of divine manifestations). The Elijah sequence (1 Kings 19:11-13) is the most succinct presentation of that principle. And the epistemological result of that principle is that God is to be found within the soul of the seeker, rather than elsewhere.

The common arguments about "physical evidence for God" assume a model of the human being that is neatly divided between subject and object, between observation/inference and creativity. But the issue is not so simple -- and that is the most cogent answer to any argument about physical evidence. Concepts such as "evidence", "information", "data", "meaning", are not as simple as they sound.
Frank Apisa April 02, 2019 at 20:39 #271931
Quoting Mariner


It is important to note that the Abrahamic advance (over polytheism) is the principle that...


Two questions, if I may:

One...why do you consider the Abrahamic tradition (which you apparently see to be monotheism) to be an "advance" over polytheism...

...and two...why do you consider the "Abrahamic" tradition to be monotheistic.

For the record, I see no reason to suppose monotheism to be an advancement over polytheism...and I cannot see any reason to suppose the "Abrahamic" tradition is monotheistic.



Louco April 03, 2019 at 00:11 #272021
Quoting Jacob-B
One could, of course, argue about the relevance to mankind of a God whose existence requires such a search but lets ignore that too.


I think you threw the baby with the bath water here. Perhaps more important than knowing the truth about the existence of god, we should ask ourselves what is the right way of living.

If there is nothing beyond materialism, we should live according to the material limits of our existence. In other words, religion would be a waste of our time.

If there is a spirit, and it doesn't miraculously manifest itself regularly (so that we may deduce its existance whenever we doubt), then it wants us to work things out as if it didn't exist. What better way to do such a thing then to simply not waste time with religion?

If there is a spirit, and it doesn't manifest, and it wants us live religiously despite the lack of evidence, then such a spirit has created a prison of the mind. One would have to imagine the spirit and believe in one's imagination. In such case we should rebel against the warden, and what better way than ignoring religion?

However I see it, not having religion seems to me the right way to live.
Gnostic Christian Bishop April 03, 2019 at 17:49 #272272
Quoting Jacob-B
the search for God in the physical realm might not be as absurd as it sounds.


When one does seek god in the physical realm, --- the verdict must be against god's existence, if we view all the evidence for and against.

God id said to be Omni-present. I am looking about and he or she is not here and thus that is a small piece of evidence against god's existence and that small evidence for non-existence is more than what theists have come up with for their side.

Regards
DL
Gnostic Christian Bishop April 03, 2019 at 18:15 #272281
Quoting Louco
However I see it, not having religion seems to me the right way to live.


I cannot agree due to the fact that I see religions as tribal groups that take advantage of our tribal instincts that crave fellowship.

Even atheists are recognizing this fact and are opening atheist churches so as to appease this instinct in their children and give their children an alternative to the supernatural idiotic thinking of the mainstream religions.

Statism is all many need for their tribal thinking but many want the fellowship of local churches for the more direct fellowship and basically, a place to be buried in the traditional family plots.

Regards
DL
Louco April 03, 2019 at 19:50 #272305
Quoting Gnostic Christian Bishop
I cannot agree


Yeah, you are right. I should have written that having no religion is the right way for a man of knowledge, but of course there are the unwashed masses who need shiny trinkets.

I stand corrected. Thank you!
Gnostic Christian Bishop April 03, 2019 at 20:47 #272314
Quoting Louco
Yeah, you are right. I should have written that having no religion is the right way for a man of knowledge, but of course there are the unwashed masses who need shiny trinkets.


Oops.
What I put on tribalism fellowship and our instincts went right over your head.

Perhaps my favorite social scientist can educate you where I failed.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T64_El2s7FU

Regards
DL

Louco April 03, 2019 at 21:06 #272316
Quoting Gnostic Christian Bishop
Perhaps my favorite social scientist can educate you where I failed.


Sorry, I couldn't get past the halfway mark on that video, because it is very constructive in its style, and I am uninterested on its theme.

Genes and natural selection are relevant for the evolution of the species, sure, but I don't think they are relevant for the pursuits of the man of knowledge.

The man of knowledge searches for wisdom relentlessly, and language and its memes are just another layer upon which he reflects on the nature of being.

So I get it that memes (and even more basally, instincts) might enslave the masses, but we men of knowledge are above that in the sense that we know about and consider questions about such constraints.
Gnostic Christian Bishop April 03, 2019 at 21:37 #272320
Wisdom is based on knowledge, and one cannot reach his height of wisdom if he ignore verifiable knowledge.

Instincts guide us from birth on. They create our love and hate biases.

To not consider instincts, especially the tribal instincts that religions use to enslave the gullible, when dithering things out about religions, is not a good idea. You would be ignoring a key piece of the puzzle.

A piece that has good people idol worshiping vile and immoral gods.

Regards
DL

Louco April 03, 2019 at 21:52 #272324
Quoting Gnostic Christian Bishop
Wisdom is based on knowledge, and one cannot reach his height of wisdom if he ignore verifiable knowledge.


One century ago, people didn't know about a ton of verifiable knowledge we now know, and that did not impede them to attain wisdom.

Quoting Gnostic Christian Bishop
Instincts guide us from birth on. They create our love and hate biases.


You are creating a psychology there. Would you say that thought is a substrate upon which instincts are built, or the other way around?

Gnostic Christian Bishop April 04, 2019 at 13:41 #272558


Quoting Louco
You are creating a psychology there.


No sir. Just reporting the facts, as described in this link.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8LIb22-5Lwg

Quoting Louco
Would you say that thought is a substrate upon which instincts are built, or the other way around?


I think that our instincts are (written) in our genes. I guess that our thinking is involves as situations and our responses, positive or negative, must be evaluated before our minds tell our bodies what to do.

Regards
DL
Louco April 04, 2019 at 14:41 #272582
Quoting Gnostic Christian Bishop
I think that our instincts are (written) in our genes. I guess that our thinking is involves as situations and our responses, positive or negative, must be evaluated before our minds tell our bodies what to do.


Your writing is incomprehensible. Perhaps you meant "our thinking is involved, as situations and our responses, positive or negative, must be evaluated before our minds tell our bodies what to do."

So would it be fair to say that you think the mind is a instinct interpretation machine? If so, what is the role of imagination in your psychology?
leo April 04, 2019 at 14:49 #272583
Quoting Louco
Your writing is incomprehensible. Perhaps you meant "our thinking is involved, as situations and our responses, positive or negative, must be evaluated before our minds tell our bodies what to do."


To be fair to him, you only changed one letter and added a comma.
S April 04, 2019 at 14:51 #272584
My atheist church is known colloquially as the pub. Instead of the body and blood of Christ, they have beer and crisps. Actually, come to think of it, they have the blood of Christ, too. Bottles and bottles of the stuff.
S April 04, 2019 at 14:53 #272586
Quoting leo
To be fair to him, you only changed one letter and added a comma.


:rofl:
Gnostic Christian Bishop April 04, 2019 at 15:02 #272597
Quoting Louco
If so, what is the role of imagination in your psychology?


I guess that it's role is to try to dither out, before choosing a love or hate bias, what the various options are so as to select the one most likely to give the best possible end.

As that link posits, our selfish gene's map is just a rough sketch and our imaginations seem to try to fill in more accurate paths.

I have yet to see any study of a child's imagination so take the above as pure speculation.

Regards
DL
Gnostic Christian Bishop April 04, 2019 at 15:03 #272598
Quoting leo
To be fair to him, you only changed one letter and added a comma.


I noticed that.

I am French and am not surprised when criticised for my English.

Regards
DL
Louco April 04, 2019 at 15:12 #272605
Quoting Gnostic Christian Bishop
I guess that it's role is to try to dither out, before choosing a love or hate bias, what the various options are so as to select the one most likely to give the best possible end.


That makes sense for a set of activities: decisions. But the intellectual life is full of thoughts, images, desires, inopportune thoughts, beliefs, memories, half-remembered faces, in summary, the mind is a tornado of mental things and the imagination is the stem through which many of these things go through.

To relegate imagination to a "filler of options" role is to lack imagination.
Gnostic Christian Bishop April 04, 2019 at 15:20 #272608
Quoting Louco
Louco


I see it as showing a lot of imagination. Selecting the best scenario out of what is imagined.

You do not like my reply or answer yet do not posit anything better.

Have you heard of Freud and Jung's Father complex?

I think that that is where our basic instincts are stored and evaluated by our minds.

Regards
DL
S April 04, 2019 at 15:41 #272613
How's the search going?

Nothing yet? That's what I thought. But keep searching. Maybe if you search hard enough you'll deceive yourself into thinking you've discovered God, the angels, and the heavens above. I discovered that I was in fact a billionaire with looks that would put Brad Pitt to shame at his peak that way.
Gnostic Christian Bishop April 04, 2019 at 19:42 #272671
Quoting S
Nothing yet?


That is not correct.

We do not define god the same way.

Stevan Davies. The savior is not a celestial being brought to earth; the savior is a capacity of the mind, and the savior’s journey from above is actually one’s own journey from within.

John Lennon. It seems to me that the only true Christians were the Gnostics, who believed in self-knowledge, I.E. becoming Gods themselves, reaching the Christ within, the light is the truth. Turn on the light. All the better to see you my dear.

Regards
DL


whollyrolling April 06, 2019 at 16:39 #273214
Okay, two things. The first is that God has in every case been described, either as a physical thing or series of physical things or as something that exists in all things, and God has yet to describe itself. The second is that something that has no physical manifestation doesn't need to be evidenced until it has manifested--until then, it's a puff of "aether" with no impact on reality.
Banno April 07, 2019 at 01:30 #273413
If God existed, its existence would presumably be omnipresent - apparent and undeniable.

And yet, its existence is denied.

Jacob-B April 07, 2019 at 13:42 #273570
Reply to Mariner
What you described is the enlightened vision of God. But, it is not the established view of the monotheistic religions (not to mention their folkloristic versions) Think of the plethora of angles, the Host, demons, saints, and miracles. That makes God look like a commander in chief, taking an active part in the fortunes of individuals and humankind as a whole, actually; micromanaging our planet. If God exists in that capacity he has to be found somewhere in the physical realm.


Jacob-B April 07, 2019 at 13:44 #273571
What you described is the enlightened vision of God. But, it is not the established view of the monotheistic religions (not to mention their folkloristic versions) Think of the plethora of angles, the Host, demons, saints, and miracles. That makes God look like a commander in chief, taking an active part in the fortunes of individuals and humankind as a whole, actually; micromanaging our planet. If God exists in that capacity he has to be found somewhere in the physical realm.


Louco April 07, 2019 at 14:36 #273601
Reply to Jacob-B What if god micromanages only irrelevant stuff, like the number of folds a curtain has when being softly blown by the wind, how many pigeons coo at a specific time near your window, the shape of clouds, the pixelization of your screen when the tv transmissions bugs out, in summary, only idiotic things. Then even though there is a layer of divine controlling everything, it strives to remain hidden. Like if the secular world was a masquerade, and guessing out the divine behind the mask was the first significative step towards a religious awakening.
Well then it would be the case that there is a hyperactive god but it won't be found in the physical realm: it covers its tracks.
Also, reality may be like a TiVo to the deities: they pause and rewind and replay at will, and can tinker with the frames when they think its cool. Since they keep their miracles to the times while reality is not running, we don't experience them.
Mariner April 07, 2019 at 14:48 #273616
Reply to Jacob-B No, I described the established Christian view. If you disagree, you should give some sources.

Note, the "plethora of angels, demons, the Host (?), saints, miracles" does not contradict what I presented. And if you believe they do, elaborate on the reasons why you think that.

Finally, your objection is unrelated to the original concern of the OP (whether God can be discerned through examinations of the physical realm). The question is independent of the reality of angels, demons, saints, or miracles.
S April 07, 2019 at 16:32 #273669
Quoting Gnostic Christian Bishop
That is not correct.

We do not define god the same way.

Stevan Davies. The savior is not a celestial being brought to earth; the savior is a capacity of the mind, and the savior’s journey from above is actually one’s own journey from within.

John Lennon. It seems to me that the only true Christians were the Gnostics, who believed in self-knowledge, I.E. becoming Gods themselves, reaching the Christ within, the light is the truth. Turn on the light. All the better to see you my dear.

Regards
DL


Where did my "toaster" comment go? There was nothing wrong with it.

The point was that my only objection to that would be that it misses the point. The point is what people argue over, and they don't argue over the capacity of the mind, they argue over the celestial being. You're just redefining religious terms from the way that they're more commonly understood to a way that's agreeable to an atheist, so as to cling on to them, whereas I reject that.

The toaster comment was just a way of making that clear. It's not good to declare that you've discovered God, and then have small print saying that, "Oh, by the way, by 'God', I don't mean what you think I mean, but rather something uncontroversial you'll readily accept, in spite of your atheism".
Gnostic Christian Bishop April 08, 2019 at 12:15 #274163
Quoting S
It's not good to declare that you've discovered God,


So say the unenlightened.

Regards
DL
Gnostic Christian Bishop April 08, 2019 at 12:18 #274164
Quoting whollyrolling
it's a puff of "aether" with no impact on reality.


If only that were true. Unfortunately, the sheeple insure an impact on reality by preaching their homophobic and misogynous ways and creating a lot of harm for women and gays in the real world.

Regards
DL

Gnostic Christian Bishop April 08, 2019 at 12:19 #274166
Quoting Banno
And yet, its existence is denied.


As it should be as well as anything else that is unable to show itself.

Regards
DL
S April 08, 2019 at 14:32 #274206
Quoting Gnostic Christian Bishop
So say the unenlightened.


If that's what you're calling enlightenment, given the full context of what I said (you quoted out of context), then I would much rather be unenlightened. Although a more accurate term than "enlightenment" would be "sophism".
Jacob-B April 08, 2019 at 15:53 #274231
Reply to Mariner Heavenly host (Hebrew: ?????? sabaoth or tzva'ot, "armies") refers to the army (Luke 2:13) of angels mentioned both in the Hebrew and Christian Bibles, as well as other Jewish and Christian texts.

The Bible gives several descriptions of angels in military terms, such as their encampment (Genesis 32:1-2), command structure (Psalms 91:11-12; Matt.13:41; Rev.7:2), and combat (Jdg.5:20; Job 19:12; Rev.12:7). The heavenly host participated in the War in Heaven.

Another aspect of God. God the General!
whollyrolling April 08, 2019 at 17:15 #274263
Reply to Gnostic Christian Bishop

That's a matter of people having an impact on other people and has no bearing on whether or not gods have been evidenced. That modern humans repeat or act out the insane and oppressive ramblings of iron age misogynists has nothing to do with whether or not the ideology originated with messages from gods.
Gnostic Christian Bishop April 08, 2019 at 17:40 #274277
Quoting whollyrolling
with messages from gods.


Messages from god. How droll.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8YB4J-keW3A

Regards
DL
whollyrolling April 08, 2019 at 17:49 #274284
Reply to Gnostic Christian Bishop

Are you ever going to participate in a discussion?
Gnostic Christian Bishop April 08, 2019 at 17:56 #274287
Quoting whollyrolling
Are you ever going to participate in a discussion?


I do, in my own way, just as you do.
I like to stick to reality and find little to no value in the supernatural or other fantasies.

Regards
DL
Mariner April 08, 2019 at 20:05 #274354
Reply to Jacob-B "The Host" also refers to the Holy Eucharist, which is why that question mark was placed in my last post.

Apparently you are no longer willing to discuss whether God is subject to experimental proof.