Philosophy time

Recommended Videos

fudgebo

New member
Jun 8, 2009
206
0
0
I'm an atheists and I do not need some dead French guy telling how to think. The reason I do not belive in God is because I do not need to.[/quote]

Need to? thats a bit harsh, disbelief is fine but assuming people need faith rather than have faith is a bit condecending.
 

feather240

New member
Jul 16, 2009
1,921
0
0
Dark Templar said:
wouldyoukindly99 said:
Believing in a diety is only a way to stave off the ever-present fear that exists in all humans: the realization that death is final. Thinking that there is an afterlife comforts those who can't face their own mortality.

Now if the product of a force can never be greater than the initial force itself, what greater force created this 'God'? Did he simply appear from nothingness? (Violates the Law of Conservation of Matter/Energy, mind you) Or are is there a never-ending chain of increasingly powerful dieties creating one another? This is where this theory is flawed.

No one, and I mean no one, will ever know how the universe truly came to be; but that doesn't mean that we should fill in whatever answer makes us feel better.
This side is flawed too.

There is no proof that there is a god.

We have no idea what started the universe.

Both have massive holes in the concept, both equally valid opinions.

Nothing wrong with picking the one that makes the most sense to you.


Human beings are flawed by nature anyway, so nothing we come up with is likely to be correct all the time.
I thought your post was spaced that way because it was a limerick...
 

A Weary Exile

New member
Aug 24, 2009
3,783
0
0
Dark Templar said:
wouldyoukindly99 said:
Believing in a diety is only a way to stave off the ever-present fear that exists in all humans: the realization that death is final. Thinking that there is an afterlife comforts those who can't face their own mortality.

Now if the product of a force can never be greater than the initial force itself, what greater force created this 'God'? Did he simply appear from nothingness? (Violates the Law of Conservation of Matter/Energy, mind you) Or are is there a never-ending chain of increasingly powerful dieties creating one another? This is where this theory is flawed.

No one, and I mean no one, will ever know how the universe truly came to be; but that doesn't mean that we should fill in whatever answer makes us feel better.
This side is flawed too.

There is no proof that there is a god.

We have no idea what started the universe.

Both have massive holes in the concept, both equally valid opinions.

Nothing wrong with picking the one that makes the most sense to you.


Human beings are flawed by nature anyway, so nothing we come up with is likely to be correct all the time.
The only difference is that I'm saying I don't know how the universe was created so I'm leaving that answer blank until an answer can be found. Religion or otherwise believing in some higher power tries to answer all the questions with no evidence.
 

zimtheawesome

New member
Oct 1, 2009
98
0
0
Souplex said:
Many Atheists claim that they don't worship god because there is no argument for or against it. (In reality they all just worship Athe the incarnation of nothingness which seeks to render everything as nothingness) However, some people argue that if the premises are true then the outcome is true. Descartes came up with a fairly simple reasoning for the existence of a perfect being. "A cause cannot create an effect greater than itself therefore somewhere down the line there had to be a perfect being" I ask all you atheists and agnostics to try and find a hole in this logic.
Okay so yeah atheists dont worship anything, or at least that is the definition I go by. I suppose you could use a definition that they worship nothingness which to me is very strange.

Descartes proved god's existence by means of the great chain of being. This was a theory developed in tyrannical states which said that god was the most perfect being, followed by the king, then the clergy etc etc down to plebs and animals at the bottom. I dont know about you but that is not how I see the world. I understand that a small causation cannot create a larger effect, due to conservation of matter. But i do not believe that a god (or at least a man-made god) has created us. Your personal religious ideas are fine and right, but that is not the correct proof of god that one should use, it is hideously outdated and littered with holes.

I do consider myself an atheist, i do not believe in any god and I do not choose to follow a book of moral codes, I dont think that is necessary to lead a full life. But the idea of a being larger than us is not unreasonable, and something creating the universe is also not 100% impossible. But we will never know what it is and i dont think it would be worth worshipping.
 

Amethyst Wind

New member
Apr 1, 2009
3,186
0
0
I would dig up my Dissertation that deals quite heavily with God, but inversely as I count Memory as synonymous with him/her/it/schlit/whatever, but it'd take too long, the thing's like 10,000 words and I haven't looked at it once myself since submitting it.

Essentially it all boils down to what's already been said, there's no evidence for or against God or any way to prove or disprove the existence of an omnipotent omnipresence. I need to be far more awake than I am to properly jump into this conversation, but I will say this:

Everyone should go easy on the OP, yes he pretty much takes the side of the theists, calls all athiests/agnostics liars and fails to provide the reasoning behind his justification of Descartes' words, but he's more than likely a first-year philosophy student all excited from learning about Descartes for the first time (I was fascinated myself) and wanted to come online and express his enthusiasm, albeit it a very poorly worded way. Also since pretty much everything Descartes said has been discredited/refined/retooled by later philosophers he loses a lot of steam, not saying Descartes is wrong, but there are a lot of others who might be more right.
 

SonicKoala

The Night Zombie
Sep 8, 2009
2,266
0
0
Hmm, arguing about the existence of God.... this never goes well. Personally, I do believe in a higher power (so I guess I'm more agnostic in that sense - I do believe in a God, I just don't know if we'll ever be able to comprehend the nature of God), but I think it's important to consider what one gets out of a belief in God before questioning his existence.

For me, my belief in God is something that gives me a sense of comfort in my life. My faith helps me to overcome the various hurdles that life throws my way, as well as giving me the courage to take risks and try new things (in a very broad sense). If one looks at it this way, whether or not God exists is actually irrelevant - it's not his ACTUAL existence that benefits me as a person, it's my BELIEF he exists. In other words, my faith - the only word that SHOULD matter in religion. There is absoloutely no scientific way of proving or disproving God - the only thing that gives him existence is faith, and as long as people continue to believe in God, he will continue to exist.
 

Gladlygoose

New member
Sep 14, 2009
8
0
0
"A cause cannot create an effect greater than itself therefore somewhere down the line there had to be a perfect being"

First: give me proof that a cause cannot create an effect greater than itself.
Second: How did this "perfect being" come to be? Why can't the universe simply have just been? Without a cause or an effect, but simply, was.
Third: How do we get to "Perfect being" from "A cause cannot create an effect greater than itself" could you explain this more clearly because as it is I don't understand why this must be.
 

Souplex

Souplex Killsplosion Awesomegasm
Jul 29, 2008
10,308
0
0
zimtheawesome said:
Your personal religious ideas are fine and right, but that is not the correct proof of god that one should use, it is hideously outdated and littered with holes.
I don't actually have any religious views, I just thought it would make a fun discussion.
 

Alex_P

All I really do is threadcrap
Mar 27, 2008
2,712
0
0
Souplex said:
"A cause cannot create an effect greater than itself therefore somewhere down the line there had to be a perfect being"
This is a completely empty statement. So empty it puts Derrida to shame.

"Greater" in what sense? We could be talking about anything from thermodynamics to aesthetics here.

Why is the first "cause" a "being"?

There's no point in talking about "logic" when the premise is wholly incoherent.

-- Alex
 

Souplex

Souplex Killsplosion Awesomegasm
Jul 29, 2008
10,308
0
0
Gladlygoose said:
How do we get to "Perfect being" from "A cause cannot create an effect greater than itself" could you explain this more clearly because as it is I don't understand why this must be.
The basic idea is that something greater than you had to create you and something greater than it had to create it so if we keep going there has to be a greatest.
 

Zacharine

New member
Apr 17, 2009
2,853
0
0
Souplex said:
Many Atheists claim that they don't worship god because there is no argument for or against it. (In reality they all just worship Athe the incarnation of nothingness which seeks to render everything as nothingness) However, some people argue that if the premises are true then the outcome is true. Descartes came up with a fairly simple reasoning for the existence of a perfect being. "A cause cannot create an effect greater than itself therefore somewhere down the line there had to be a perfect being" I ask all you atheists and agnostics to try and find a hole in this logic.
Since there is so much of flame-baiting going on over your pointless joke (one in bad taste), I'll answer your question:

"A cause cannot create an effect greater than itself" If we accept this as a premise, then the conclusion is still false when applied to the universe. You see, this says nothing of natural causes, they do not create anything and we see nature go from simple the complex by itself all the time.

Descartes was arguing for a God Creator. Certainly, in that sense it is an interesting and an accurate description. Certainly no craftsman can create something that works yet which they do not understand. The 'creator' is by necessity more complex than the 'created'. Yet arguing for a perfect being on a basis of a clearly imperfect universe is a non-sequitur. The answer just might be a lesser degree of imperfection.

Also, this is essentially a First-cause argument (or an Uncaused cause) and thus suffers from all the same loopholes and trappings of such. For example, where did this perfect being come from? If it did not have to be created, why does the universe have to be created?

This can be restated as a reductio ad absurdum:
1. Premise: every event has a cause.
2. Premise: there can be no infinite regress.
3. Premise: there exists some event e0.
4. From (1) and (3), it follows that e0 has a cause e1, which in turn has a cause e2, and so on, in an infinite regress.
5. From (2) we know that there can be no infinite regress, which contradicts (4).
6. Therefore, at least one of the premises must be false.

If we reject premise 1, that every event has a cause, then there must be at least one uncaused cause. Yet this cause might, by the virtue of this argument, be anything from the vacuum of space to quatum fluctuation to Thor swinging his hammer.

So, even if we assume this argument to prove that there must be a first cause, we still have no knowledge of what the actual cause was. To suppose this was a creator of some kind is a logically unfounded leap of faith.

Also, we have zero evidence that anything was in fact created at all.

Now then, as for the premise itself: no evidence is given to support this claim. This is made entirely on pholosophical basis and as such is not perfectly analoguous to the real world in and of itself.

Secondly, we know things happen without cause all the time. In fact, current theories of physics allow for as much as 10^-43 grams worth of energy to come to being ex nihilo. As in, something from nothing. Or not, since no such thing as nothing can exist as far as we know it. Space-time is something, you see. So, no cause leads to an effect. The effect is thus greater than the cause as something is more than nothing.

Thirdly, basic nuclear chemistry shows this to be false. Let us take a speeding neutron as the cause. Let the effect be a nuclear explosion. Effect is greater than the cause. 'Nuff said.

So summa summarum: The analogy made by Descartes fails. There is no evidence for the premise. There is evidence againts the premise. Descartes argument contains a non-sequitur. And there is the underlying unsupported assumption that something was created.
 

Alex_P

All I really do is threadcrap
Mar 27, 2008
2,712
0
0
zimtheawesome said:
Okay so yeah atheists dont worship anything, or at least that is the definition I go by. I suppose you could use a definition that they worship nothingness which to me is very strange.
Rosencrantz: Do you think Death could possibly be a boat?
Guildenstern: No, no, no... death is not. Death isn't. Take my meaning? Death is the ultimate negative. Not-being. You can't not be on a boat.
Rosencrantz: I've frequently not been on boats.
Guildenstern: No, no... what you've been is not on boats.

;-)

-- Alex
 

ironlordthemad

New member
Sep 25, 2009
502
0
0
Souplex said:
Pararaptor said:
Well... Why can't an effect be greater than its cause?
It is a basic concept of physics and programming. If I punch you with one pound of force you are not going to be launched 15 miles. Similarly in programming a system cannot design a system more complicated than itself.

thats assuming that the physics laws as we know them worked before the big bang, we dont know what laws of physics were in place before then, so we dont know if an effect is less than or equal to its cause because simply the same rules dont apply

also i want to point towards chaos theory
butterfly goes too hurricane and all that
the effect is much bigger than the cause it just takes time to build up (and a buck full of chance mixed in)

you may have noticed that I dont have any real knowledge of physics involving the big bang, in all honesty I only just finished my higher in physics (which I crashed and got an A booyah!) and we didn't even touch on this kind of thing. We just focused on lights in a vacuum.
 

Eldarion

New member
Sep 30, 2009
1,887
0
0
wouldyoukindly99 said:
Dark Templar said:
wouldyoukindly99 said:
Believing in a diety is only a way to stave off the ever-present fear that exists in all humans: the realization that death is final. Thinking that there is an afterlife comforts those who can't face their own mortality.

Now if the product of a force can never be greater than the initial force itself, what greater force created this 'God'? Did he simply appear from nothingness? (Violates the Law of Conservation of Matter/Energy, mind you) Or are is there a never-ending chain of increasingly powerful dieties creating one another? This is where this theory is flawed.

No one, and I mean no one, will ever know how the universe truly came to be; but that doesn't mean that we should fill in whatever answer makes us feel better.
This side is flawed too.

There is no proof that there is a god.

We have no idea what started the universe.

Both have massive holes in the concept, both equally valid opinions.

Nothing wrong with picking the one that makes the most sense to you.


Human beings are flawed by nature anyway, so nothing we come up with is likely to be correct all the time.
The only difference is that I'm saying I don't know how the universe was created so I'm leaving that answer blank until an answer can be found. Religion or otherwise believing in some higher power tries to answer all the questions with no evidence.
Oh ok I misunderstood your post then.

You are supposed to believe in god based on faith, not proof anyway.

If here is absolute proof he exists then there is no "faith" right?

I think that whenever a religion tries to "prove" that god exists you lose the whole point of faith. Thus invalidating the argument and your "faith" right there.

At least I think.....I may be wrong there.

Why can't we just agree that everything humans come up with is crap and just believe based on the morals trying to be taught. People take their "faith" as fact and take it much to seriously.

See every holy war or inquisition.
 

Souplex

Souplex Killsplosion Awesomegasm
Jul 29, 2008
10,308
0
0
People are citing nukes however I feel I need to point out the hole in this logic, the energy bound in a uranium atom is as much a cause as the neutron fired into it. It doesn't create energy, it just releases it.
 

zimtheawesome

New member
Oct 1, 2009
98
0
0
Alex_P said:
zimtheawesome said:
Okay so yeah atheists dont worship anything, or at least that is the definition I go by. I suppose you could use a definition that they worship nothingness which to me is very strange.
Rosencrantz: Do you think Death could possibly be a boat?
Guildenstern: No, no, no... death is not. Death isn't. Take my meaning? Death is the ultimate negative. Not-being. You can't not be on a boat.
Rosencrantz: I've frequently not been on boats.
Guildenstern: No, no... what you've been is not on boats.

;-)

-- Alex
lol shakespear was never my forte but I think I know what your getting at.
correct me if im wrong but you say im saying the same thing. I think worshipping nothing and not worshipping anything is very different. The act of worship in itself is to honor a creator. I am not honoring nothingness, I dont revere nothingness and I rarely think about nothingness. That is what I meant by that, I assumed him saying atheists worship nothingness made me think of people performing some act of worship, not necessarily to nothingess but more or less to the lack of a god. Maybe this all makes more sense than my hair splitting statement earlier.
 

Alex_P

All I really do is threadcrap
Mar 27, 2008
2,712
0
0
zimtheawesome said:
lol shakespear was never my forte but I think I know what your getting at.
That wasn't Shakespeare.

And, no, I'm arguing against your reasoning. Just providing an illustrative example.

-- Alex
 

Alex_P

All I really do is threadcrap
Mar 27, 2008
2,712
0
0
Souplex said:
Similarly in programming a system cannot design a system more complicated than itself.
Speaking as an engineer and a computer scientist...
Srsly?

-- Alex
 

Souplex

Souplex Killsplosion Awesomegasm
Jul 29, 2008
10,308
0
0
zimtheawesome said:
I think worshipping nothing and not worshipping anything are very different. The act of worship in itself is to honor a creator. I am not honoring nothingness, I dont revere nothingness and I rarely think about nothingness. That is what I meant by that, I assumed him saying atheists worship nothingness made me think of people performing some act of worship, not necessarily to nothingess but more or less to the lack of a god. Maybe this all makes more sense than my hair splitting statement earlier.
You don't actively worship nothing? Are you one of those reform atheists?
 

zimtheawesome

New member
Oct 1, 2009
98
0
0
Alex_P said:
That wasn't Shakespeare.

And, no, I'm arguing against your reasoning. Just providing an illustrative example.

-- Alex
Oh I saw the names and assumed it was from Hamlet. Fair enough