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Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by UyiIredia(m): 1:32pm On Jun 21, 2015 |
thehomer: If it was physical then how can it be said the natural laws break down at the singularity ? thehomer: No, order can arise naturally and in specific conditions. And nature certainly can't and doesn't prescribe rules to be followed. Only intelligent beings can do that. thehomer: I have said that the physical mediums of codes follow natural laws so you've said nothing new. The genetic code isn't a representation of nucleotides. It's the rule that shows which sequence of nucleobases represent amino acids. Likewise, in ASCII and Morse codes determine which given sequence of electric signals represent a symbol. thehomer: You have failed woefully in that regard. thehomer: I don't have to conclude with humans. And I've told you why one can't use humans. Put simply they are part of life that we seek to account for. Aliens would also need to be accounted for and there are only 2 options, either life was created by God or it arose through natural means. thehomer: It's silly to say hunger is immaterial then say it has a physical nature. Maybe you meant to say it has a physical cause. thehomer: Yes. Consciousness makes sense in (and is the very basis of) an idealistic framework. I don't think you humbly accept limitations, I think you prefer to remain ignorant than admit to being wrong. Materialism fails with regard to science since matter by itself is incapable of knowledge. What opens the door to knowledge is consciousness and that is what idealists have always maintained is truly important. thehomer: Why is God worse ? The question of material activity in the brains causing consciousness as a by-product when in all other contexts it doesn't. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by undercat: 4:50pm On Jun 21, 2015 |
UyiIredia: God created chaos before creating order? Yes. So what is God needed for if a so called random universe can have order all by itself? Again, natural processes treat things as is. If rain falls on a book it won't know what it represents it will only wet it. Yes yes. I'm asking what is unusual about that. Unnecessary. Since the universe we are in follows natural laws. But there cannot be a lawless universe in the first place. No, what I've said is that because mind observes and imagines and matter can do neither, mind is greater. Ignorance belongs to the mind. Your conclusion is tenuous, there is nothing to avoid. Whether mind is greater or lesser than matter can not have any bearing on the mind - matter gap unless you can show that things pack more explanatory power or manage to become real simply because we find them great. People have already claimed that God must exist simply because they find a universe with God greater than one without, but we are where we are. Such a line of argument (ascribing ontological clout to "greatness" won't do much for you here. 1 Like |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by thehomer: 6:02pm On Jun 21, 2015 |
UyiIredia: The same way we say Newton's laws break down at relativistic speeds. UyiIredia: Really? Well according to the rules of nature, you cannot swim in the sun. Go ahead and break that rule. UyiIredia: Can you not see that in your poorly phrased way, you're saying what I've said? The base sequence is something physical, the amino acids are physical. The code is a human symbolization of those physical relationships. The codons A, T, G, C, U represent physical molecules. UyiIredia: No you've failed to understand the basics of elementary biology. UyiIredia: Then you don't know how to make an argument. It would be clearer for you if you put it in a syllogistic format. Go ahead and do that in three or four steps. While you're trying to do that, you'll realize your error. UyiIredia: No I meant to say what I said. What would you say is the nature of hunger? UyiIredia: Please go ahead and explain consciousness. Since I'm ignorant and you have knowledge, I'll await your explanation. UyiIredia: You can maintain whatever you want as being truly important. Please can you give your supernatural explanation of the scientific method? And present examples of scientific discoveries based on that idea? UyiIredia: It is an empty assertion. A form of argument from ignorance and it posits an entity that hasn't been shown to be present. UyiIredia: What other context? Humans have brains and exhibit conscioiusness, other animals with complex neurological systems also seem to have various degrees of consciousness so what context are you talking about? |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by UyiIredia(m): 7:12pm On Jun 21, 2015 |
thehomer: This is a poor answer. Other laws describe what happen in that instance. Again, why do natural laws break down at the singularity if it's physical ? thehomer: Did nature make that rule or did you infer that rule from nature ? thehomer: More ignorance. Of course, the nucleobases and amino acids are physical. What isn't physical is the sequence of the former representing the latter. Natural laws don't describe that relationship, no more than they describe how words represent concepts or objects. thehomer: Wrong again. You confuse codes with their physical medium. thehomer: I'll just leave you to your foolishness here. Let the reader note that I explained that humans are part of living things that need be explained, and so can't be the cause in contention, and that aliens only shifts the puzzle backwards, their existence too will have to be explained. thehomer: You have stated hunger is immaterial. Then you say it has a physical nature, which contradicts what you said earlier. This is stupid. thehomer: The scientific method is a product of the mind. That is more consonant with idealism (which regards mind as fundamental to reality) than materialism (which precludes existence outside the material universe). thehomer: The entity doesn't have to be shown to be known, no more than dark matter is. God is not simply asserted, God is the only valid inference from the facts stated (ie order in the universe, genetic code in lifeforms and consciousness). thehomer:Other chemical reactions outside the brains of various organisms. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by thehomer: 7:32pm On Jun 21, 2015 |
UyiIredia: That is the actual answer. Yes other laws do that but as I said, that is how we can say our current knowledge of natural laws bread down at the singularity. Let me make it clearer. Natural laws are currently used to describe events occurring after the singularity i.e after the universe has expanded to a certain size. UyiIredia: It is a rule of nature whether inferred or not. Go ahead and break it. UyiIredia: The sequence isn't physical? The amino acids are the results of that sequence. Aren't amino acids physical anymore? You seriously need to first take the time to read the Wikipedia article on the genetic code or just read a biology text book. You'll notice that so far, your God hasn't been useful in presenting these explanations. UyiIredia: How have I done this? UyiIredia: This is another stupid response. I've told you why your so-called explanation is fallacious and therefore useless. You can resolve this yourself by properly laying out your argument in a syllogistic form. If you can't do it or are afraid to, simply say so. Doing that will help you resolve your ignorant stupidity. UyiIredia: What is the contradiction you fool? UyiIredia: Please give your supernatural explanation of the scientific method and present examples of scientific discoveries based on that idea. UyiIredia: If the entity isn't known, then you're making a fallacious argument from ignorance. Please make valid arguments for what you're calling the stated facts. i.e make your arguments for order in the universe, genetic code in lifeforms and consciousness. UyiIredia: Why should those chemical reactions be conscious? Are they brains too? Chemical reactions occur in the oceans. Is the ocean a brain such that it should be conscious? These are the sorts of silly and flippant responses that rapidly bore me. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by UyiIredia(m): 7:39pm On Jun 21, 2015 |
undercat: God created an orderly universe with a tendency towards chaos. undercat: It would have order to a far lesser degree than our universe, especially since it's random. undercat: Natural processes can't know that a given material is a symbol. It therefore makes natural origins for the genetic code impossible since genes refer to amino acids other than itself. undercat: I disagree. There could be. undercat: No. Even the mind can know its ignorance. For instance, I know that I don't know what undercat looks like. But matter is absolutely ignorant since it's mindless. undercat: Things can become real because we concieve of them. For example, I can think of a building not existent and make it real when I build it. This is what I'm trying to get across that mind can not only percieve what exists, it can also concieve new things formerly non-existent into existence. I would expect a universe without God to have no conscious beings since consciousness is not a property of matter. However, once we posit a God we can not only explain the existence of matter (since minds can concieve of new forms of matter) but the existence of consciousness is not a problem. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by UyiIredia(m): 8:24pm On Jun 21, 2015 |
thehomer: So you have a physical system, the singularity, and natural laws don't apply to it. That's absurd. thehomer: Nature itself can't change its rules. Intelligent beings can change their rules. thehomer: No, the mapping of a sequence of nucleobases to amino acids isn't physical. thehomer: By referring to, in the case of genetic codes, genes and amino acids which are physical. The amino acids and genes are physical and follow. Genes REPRESENTING amino acids isn't physical, and natural laws can't describe which gene represents an amino acid. Likewise, the electrical signals (representing 0's and 1's) and symbols used for ASCII codes in computers are physical. But the REPRESENTATION of symbols with electrical signals isn't physical and natural laws don't prescribe which electrical signal represents a symbol, humans do. thehomer: You can't see how saying hunger is immaterial and saying it has a physical nature contradicts ! You are being idiotic. thehomer: SMH. By the way, does the scientific method follow natural laws or not ? thehomer: The entity is known though not shown. No one argues from ignorance but what we do know. I don't need to argue about the universe's order, genetic codes and consciousness. Any well-educated person should know about those, an slowpoke would know the last one but then maybe you aren't as smart. thehomer: Good. And if no consciousness results from those chemical reactions why should brains be any different ? Why are brains exceptions to the rule ? |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by undercat: 10:45pm On Jun 21, 2015 |
UyiIredia: Then it is not correct to say that creation of order out of chaos obtains at a universal level, as you claimed. It would have order to a far lesser degree than our universe, especially since it's random. How do you measure the degree of disorder? For example, on a scale of 1 to 10 with one being the least ordered and 10 being the most, where would you place our universe? Natural processes can't know that a given material is a symbol. It therefore makes natural origins for the genetic code impossible since genes refer to amino acids other than itself. This statement is only true if we assume that the genetic code, which we have found in nature, is not natural. I think you are arguing from incredulity. I disagree. There could be. I'd like to know how No. Even the mind can know its ignorance. For instance, I know that I don't know what undercat looks like. But matter is absolutely ignorant since it's mindless. undercat looks like any other cat. Matter cannot be ignorant. To say that it can is to make a category error. I remember you saying that mass and momentum cannot meaningfully be applied to consciousness. The error you imagined is the sort you're making here. Things can become real because we concieve of them. For example, I can think of a building not existent and make it real when I build it. This is what I'm trying to get across that mind can not only percieve what exists, it can also concieve new things formerly non-existent into existence. We have not moved forward. When you say consciousness is not a property of matter, you speak for yourself. A building is merely a reconfiguration of existing matter. What we need is an example of a mind bringing matter itself into existence. Barring this, the existence of matter would be a problem in such a world. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by thehomer: 1:16am On Jun 22, 2015 |
UyiIredia: Who says natural laws don't apply? UyiIredia: Ask your God to break it for you then. Just let us know when that is happening. UyiIredia: Please explain. UyiIredia: You're misusing several terms and therefore creating a word salad. This is why I asked you to first try to read these things up before you continue because you're already in way over your head. Genes transfer heritable traits they don't represent amino acids. Sequences of codons are translated to amino acids in a physical process. I really don't understand why you're so confused about something so clear and simple. ASCII is a form of representation of common characters. What does the sequence of your codon represent? UyiIredia: No I can't see it you fool. Please explain what the contradiction is. UyiIredia: Don't shake your head. The scientific method is based on methodological naturalism. Please give your supernatural explanation of the scientific method and present examples of scientific discoveries based on that idea. UyiIredia: You're making the argument from ignorance. I've already shown you how you're doing that. Oh? You don't need to make an argument because "everyone should know your arguments"? As usual you're trying to hide your ignorance but I won't let you. Assume that I'm an ignorant slowpoke and present your argument since you're so smart. In your stupidity, you'll be unable to make your argument. UyiIredia: Because brains aren't oceans. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by wiegraf: 1:22am On Jun 22, 2015 |
What do machines dream of? New images released by Google give us one potential answer: hypnotic landscapes of buildings, fountains and bridges merging into one. here, image 'dreamed up' by the 'neural' network more here www.theguardian.com/technology/2015/jun/18/google-image-recognition-neural-network-androids-dream-electric-sheep look familiar? mayhap when ai is created our friends will claim the machines have souls... |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by MrAnony1(m): 5:34am On Jun 22, 2015 |
thehomer:God is the ultimate creator of the universe. The fact that the universe shows evidence of design makes it obvious that the universe has a creator. Uyi has done quite a good job highlighting some of them. Then you've not been paying attention. The fact that there's no good reason to believe your God is out there is a very good reason to doubt his existence.This seems to me to be quite a dubious claim since you seem to be basing the existence of God on whether you think the reasons are good enough to your subjective mind which even you have no way of knowing if it is working properly and feeding you correct information. ...or perhaps you really mean to say that there are no objectively good reasons to believe in God. In which case you will have to tell us what you think a good reason will look like. Coming from someone who is unable to present and defend his reasons for believing in the particular God he believes in is just ridiculous. It is also wearisome trying to have a discussion with someone who doesn't know how to speak about whether or not something is obvious.For you to claim even before hearing my case that I am unable to defend my reasons for believing in God shows me that you are already close-minded to whatever it is that I want to say and hence continued conversation with you is futile. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by MrAnony1(m): 5:37am On Jun 22, 2015 |
thehomer:Since to you there is no contradiction when you claim that hunger is immaterial and yet has a physical nature. Can you please tell us some of the physical properties of immaterial hunger. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by MrAnony1(m): 5:43am On Jun 22, 2015 |
@Uyi Iredia. I must say that I have enjoyed your exchange with thehomer so far. I think your points have been made however I doubt thehomer will stop giving incoherent replies. It seems to me that he has acknowledged the points of the argument but he is going to keep pretending not to understand you and trying to retort with answers and questions designed to blunt the argument rather than enhance the discussion. For instance even when faced with an obvious contradiction and corrected severally he keeps repeating "what contradiction?" pretending not to understand in the hope of wearying you and furthermore blunting the force of the initial point by excessive repetition. 1 Like |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by MrAnony1(m): 5:50am On Jun 22, 2015 |
wiegraf:Yes and our point is and has always been that consciousness or intelligence of any sort cannot be created by random undesigned natural events. An intelligent mind must necessarily be involved. The fact that that the creation of AI (if it eventually happens) will be and could only have been a result of the work of an intelligent mind makes the case for a Creator stronger and the case for an origin from random undesigned events much more unlikely. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by UyiIredia(m): 8:28am On Jun 22, 2015 |
thehomer: You said natural laws break down at the singularity, and that singularity is physical. Clearly, its absurd to have a physical thing following no natural laws. thehomer: Once again, I'll leave you to your foolishness here. Let it be noted that I started out making the point here that intelligent beings prescribe rules a material system can follow. thehomer: Within the context of a cell, genes represent amino acids. That representation isn't physical and natural laws are blind to it, hence chemical processes in the cell treat genes and amino acids solely based on their physical properties. thehomer: Given that you asked for an explanation you aren't in a position to state this. thehomer: Genes represent amino acids, this is confirmed in the genetic code table where the amino acids various genes represent are stated. All codes must be translated via a physical process but that hardly makes codes physical or explainable by natural laws. To further bolster my point here's the definition of the genetic code from Wikipedia: The genetic code is the set of rules by which information encoded within genetic material (DNA or mRNA sequences) is translated into proteins by living cells. The rules aren't physical. thehomer: This doesn't answer whether the scientific method follows natural laws. thehomer: Isn't it my arguments that led us to this point ? If I have to make them again or explain how things like consciousness are facts you are an imb€cil€. thehomer: A very good answer. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by UyiIredia(m): 9:20am On Jun 22, 2015 |
undercat: Why ? Insofar God created order were there was none I think I'm still correct. Another way of looking at it would say that the state of nothingness before God created the world was chaos. Classical Greek religion held this belief. undercat: 7 undercat: I think you are being wilfully ignorant at this point. I didn't get any objection from you when I said nature can't recognize symbols and used the example of rain wetting a book (obviously without knowing what its contents are). I extend this argument to the genetic code and this is what I get. The genetic code as a part of nature is natural, but its origins can't be explained by natural processes. To rebut my point you can either deny the fact that genes symbolize something else (amino acids) within a cell OR you can tell me how natural processes can discern when a given material represents something else. undercat: It can exist in a state of flux as I said earlier. Or it could flip from one state to another (say in one instance Earth's gravity is 9.8 ms-2 and in another instance Earths gravity is much higher ceteris paribus). undercat: No, undercat is a human and I don't know how you look. Ignorance is not a property anymore than cold or death are. Like death (lack of life) and cold (lack of heat), ignorance is the LACK OF a property, knowledge. Since matter lacks the ability to know anything, matter is ignorant. That is not a category error. undercat: Then we should just end this debate. Keep in mind though that conscious beings can think and can see, hear, smell, taste and touch. If matter is conscious, it should have those attributes. undercat: That configuration of matter didn't exist before. New elements and compounds are reconfigurations of existing matter, they also didn't exist before. No physical being can bring matter into existence since they themselves are subject to matter and existed after matter. I think you are setting the bar higher to avoid the obvious conclusion. Given the fact that new material forms can be concieved and the fact the mind is absolutely necessary for one to know there is matter, then implicit in mind is the idea of matter and as such idealism doesn't face the same problem as materialism. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by UyiIredia(m): 9:31am On Jun 22, 2015 |
MrAnony1: Good point. It is always both funny and tragic to me when I see such folly. An atheist or evolutionist points to an intelligently designed process to show that exquisite systems arise naturally. In fact, such designed processes, for the most part, don't even bother to simulate natural processes, they are designed from top to bottom. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by UyiIredia(m): 9:46am On Jun 22, 2015 |
MrAnony1: Cool ! I'm not surprised, I've seen thehomer's idiocy played out in various manners, on many threads in this forum. MrAnony1: I agree he's blunting the argument especially as regards to consciousness and the genetic code. I'm not sure he understands the argument, maybe he does, maybe he doesn't. MrAnony1: Yeah. His $tupidity there was mind blowing. Hunger is immaterial and has a physical nature. Lol ! Classic homer $tupidit¥. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by AllNaijaBlogger(m): 9:55am On Jun 22, 2015 |
UyiIredia: Interesting. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by thehomer: 5:00pm On Jun 22, 2015 |
MrAnony1: What evidence are you referring to? MrAnony1: Science and philosophy have given us many ways of knowing whether or not your God is out there. If you wish to make some strange argument, please make the actual argument. MrAnony1: A good reason for not believing in your God is the fact that there is no good reason to believe he is out there. MrAnony1: If you're able to defend your reason, please go ahead and do that rather than moaning before you begin. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by thehomer: 5:01pm On Jun 22, 2015 |
MrAnony1: Hunger pangs. Please point out the contradiction. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by thehomer: 5:18pm On Jun 22, 2015 |
UyiIredia: Please can you show me where I said natural laws break down at the singularity? You're mistaking our limited knowledge for the actual limit of the natural realm. This is the hubris I've come to expect from religious people. UyiIredia: Actually, I simply exposed your stupidity. That is why you're flailing once more. UyiIredia: Wrong again. Genes do not represent amino acids. Genes are different from amino acids. You say chemical process affect genes and affect amino acids so what is the non-physical thing you're talking about? What is its name? UyiIredia: I am because I actually know what the terms mean and you're misusing them. Misusing those terms makes it impossible for you to actually communicate with those terms. UyiIredia: Again, genes are physical structures. Amino acids are other physical structures. Some more physical structures link them together yet you're saying something here isn't physical. What is the name of the thing that isn't physical in this set up? You do realize that the "genetic code table" you're referring to is the human symbolization of physical molecules. UyiIredia: Who says they aren't? UyiIredia: It doesn't because that is a malformed question based on confusion of terms. UyiIredia: This is why I keep pointing out that you're a stupid fool. You made several assertions not arguments. I asked you to express a certain argument as a syllogism. You still failed at that yet you continue moaning. If you like, you can link me to where you made actual arguments not mere assertions. UyiIredia: I know. I presented that answer. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by thehomer: 5:22pm On Jun 22, 2015 |
UyiIredia: Yeah yeah so you assert. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by thehomer: 5:26pm On Jun 22, 2015 |
UyiIredia: Is that so. Please can you present five examples with links and say what you thought was idiotic? UyiIredia: There's no argument yet. If you have any arguments, please make them. UyiIredia: Would you say hunger is material or immaterial? Would you say it has a physical or non-physical nature? Let's see your real stupidity. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by UyiIredia(m): 8:59pm On Jun 22, 2015 |
thehomer: ". . . we can say our current knowledge of natural laws bread down at the singularity. Let me make it clearer. Natural laws are currently used to describe events occurring after the singularity i.e after the universe has expanded to a certain size." Your words. thehomer: "For example, the codon "AAU" [represents the amino acid asparagine, and "UGU" and "UGC" represent cysteine" https://en.m.wikipedia.org/?title=Genetic_code I made a mistake. Genes don't represent amino acids. Codons do. Genes do code for proteins though. thehomer: No. The molecules involved have their names. The genetic code shows the relationship between the molecules. Specifically, which codons represent an amino acid. The relationship as shown in the genetic code table is not physical. Genes aren't linked to proteins. In fact, where genes are read and where proteins are made as a result happen in different regions of a cell. thehomer: I do. In fact, rules aren't physical. They are conceptual. thehomer: I made arguments in the OP. Arguments you responded to that got us to this point. thehomer: It was a silly answer that avoided the question. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by UyiIredia(m): 9:23pm On Jun 22, 2015 |
thehomer: Saved. Another example of your idiocy. Turns out I didn't need to search after all. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by undercat: 10:08pm On Jun 22, 2015 |
UyiIredia: God was chaos then, since God was the only state before creation. 7 In essence, there is a degree of order above which God is required and you have pegged it at 7. how do you measure order and why is 7 the magic number? I think you are being wilfully ignorant at this point. I didn't get any objection from you when I said nature can't recognize symbols and used the example of rain wetting a book (obviously without knowing what its contents are). I extend this argument to the genetic code and this is what I get. I was not satisfied with your criteria for distinguishing between natural and unnatural processes. If you could give your natural explanation for the origin of physical laws I'd definitely take your claim that there is no natural explanation for the origin of genetic code more seriously. It can exist in a state of flux as I said earlier. Or it could flip from one state to another (say in one instance Earth's gravity is 9.8 ms-2 and in another instance Earths gravity is much higher ceteris paribus). Any given universe can't be in flux. The continued existence of any given universe means that it obeys the laws telling it to continue it's existence. No, undercat is a human and I don't know how you look. Is consciousness hot? Then we should just end this debate. Keep in mind though that conscious beings can think and can see, hear, smell, taste and touch. If matter is conscious, it should have those attributes. Perhaps we should. Human beings are matter and they are conscious. That configuration of matter didn't exist before. New elements and compounds are reconfigurations of existing matter, they also didn't exist before. No physical being can bring matter into existence since they themselves are subject to matter and existed after matter. I think you are setting the bar higher to avoid the obvious conclusion. The bar is as high as it should be. Your claim is that the mind created matter. Consciousness, being a non physical thing not subject to matter, should be able to bring matter into existence. Any reconfiguration of matter is based on existing matter. If you claim that matter can be reconfigured to create a totally novel thing then you open the door to matter being reconfigured into your immaterial consciousness, by accident. New material forms are only conceived from earlier material forms. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by AllNaijaBlogger(m): 10:30pm On Jun 22, 2015 |
UyiIredia: Remove the log of wood in your own eyes- UyiIredia: A very contradictory and fallacious statement. If something is part of nature, why wouldn't it have a natural explanation? Why wouldnt it arrive from natural processes? I am on your side (A christian/theist) but please, refrain from insults that do not add to the discussion. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by thehomer: 9:44pm On Jun 23, 2015 |
UyiIredia: Are you this stupid or are you just an illiterate? Couldn't you read the preceding phrase before what you put in bold? The part that goes "our current knowledge of"? UyiIredia: Of course you made a mistake. Codons are physical molecules. the "A" in AAU is a physical molecule. UyiIredia: What is the name of the thing that isn't physical? The table is a human abstraction using symbols to represent physical molecules. That is what you seem to find so difficult to understand and that is why you're not qualified to even begin to try to make an argument based on genes. You're too ignorant about the topic at hand. UyiIredia: Just go to bed. You're confused. UyiIredia: You did not make arguments, you made assertions. If you think you made arguments, please present the premises and conclusions of your so-called arguments. UyiIredia: A very good answer is a silly answer. Your confusion knows no bounds. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by thehomer: 9:45pm On Jun 23, 2015 |
UyiIredia: This is why I say you're a proper ignoramus. If there isn't a good reason to believe there is a dragon in my backyard, isn't that a good reason not to believe there is a dragon in my backyard? Or has English become too difficult for you again? |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by UyiIredia(m): 3:23pm On Jun 24, 2015 |
undercat: I disagree. The state of nothingness is what I said was chaos. undercat: I simply chose it, if you have a reason for disagreeing state it. undercat: My argument doesn't require that I explain the origin of physical laws. Let me query your position. If the genetic code follows natural laws then you should have no problems telling me the natural laws it follows. Could you please state examples. undercat: A random universe can very well be in a state of flux. In fact, existing in a state of flux is known to occur in quantum physics. undercat: No. Consciousness involves knowledge. undercat: Till they become corpses. Then it becomes most clear that matter isn't conscious. undercat: The mind of God, not man. undercat: In humans, consciousness is subject to matter and matter precedes its existence so human consciousness couldn't have made matter. undercat: How can matter be reconfigured to immaterial consciousness ? That doesn't make sense. And natural processes couldn't have made such material forms. I find it funny no one would venture to suppose that artificial constructs like houses, computers or paints can arise naturally; and yet these are far less complex than the tiniest lifeform and moreover aren't conscious. |
Re: Three Arguments For God's Existence by UyiIredia(m): 3:33pm On Jun 24, 2015 |
AllNaijaBlogger: You mean your eyes. I see clearly. AllNaijaBlogger: Because it could have a supernatural causes. Miracles happen within nature, that doesn't make them natural. In fact, one can extend this to artificial products which are ALWAYS made from natural substances. And yet their origins are not due to natural processes. In fact, take nature in its entirety, do you believe natural processes made nature, or God did ? AllNaijaBlogger: Some insults are well-deserved. |
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