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    1. #1
      Consciousness Itself Universal Mind's Avatar
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      Quote Originally Posted by LuxAeterna View Post
      The real question is: Why does something exist instead of nothing? And science, for all of its usefulness and all of its ability to explain what we see empirically, cannot answer that question.[/b]
      Neither can religion. It just creates an even more difficult question-- Where did God (far more complex than the universe) come from?
      You are dreaming right now.

    2. #2
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      Quote Originally Posted by Universal View Post
      Neither can religion. It just creates an even more difficult question-- Where did God (far more complex than the universe) come from?[/b]
      First, I disagree that God is far more complex than the universe. I don't know where that notion got started, but I think that it is wrong.

      But the beauty of the notion of an infinite and eternal God is that he does not have to come from somewhere. The universe has to come from somewhere because it is a thing of cause and effect. Each effect following from a cause in a chain of causation that is bound by both time and space.

      Logically, this chain of cause and effect has to have a beginning. Why? Because you cannot have an infinite chain of causation. If you did, then you would never get anywhere. If there were an infinite number of steps to get to point B, then there would always be an infinite number of steps to make before reaching point B. Therefore, you would never reach it. Thus, our universe has to have an ultimate beginning. The chain of causation has to stop somewhere, or else existence would never be able to arrive at this point.

      Therefore, it is logically the most sound answer to bring in God. God, being infinite and eternal, is the cause that is uncaused. He doesn't need a cause, because he is outside of the reality of effect follows cause. Thus the infinite chain of causation ceases, and we have our Unmoved Mover, our First Cause.

      God explains his own existence, unlike the universe (both finite and temporal), which logically requires an explanation outside itself.

      -LUX

    3. #3
      Consciousness Itself Universal Mind's Avatar
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      Quote Originally Posted by LuxAeterna View Post
      First, I disagree that God is far more complex than the universe. I don't know where that notion got started, but I think that it is wrong.

      But the beauty of the notion of an infinite and eternal God is that he does not have to come from somewhere. The universe has to come from somewhere because it is a thing of cause and effect. Each effect following from a cause in a chain of causation that is bound by both time and space.

      Logically, this chain of cause and effect has to have a beginning. Why? Because you cannot have an infinite chain of causation. If you did, then you would never get anywhere. If there were an infinite number of steps to get to point B, then there would always be an infinite number of steps to make before reaching point B. Therefore, you would never reach it. Thus, our universe has to have an ultimate beginning. The chain of causation has to stop somewhere, or else existence would never be able to arrive at this point.

      Therefore, it is logically the most sound answer to bring in God. God, being infinite and eternal, is the cause that is uncaused. He doesn't need a cause, because he is outside of the reality of effect follows cause. Thus the infinite chain of causation ceases, and we have our Unmoved Mover, our First Cause.

      God explains his own existence, unlike the universe (both finite and temporal), which logically requires an explanation outside itself.

      -LUX[/b]
      Why can't the universe have an explanation outside of itself that does not have consciousness? I believe in the argument about existence external to the universe, but I don't see why it has to be something with a mind and a personality.
      You are dreaming right now.

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      Quote Originally Posted by Universal View Post
      Why can't the universe have an explanation outside of itself that does not have consciousness? I believe in the argument about existence external to the universe, but I don't see why it has to be something with a mind and a personality.[/b]
      Well, it doesn't have to be explained with God. But I think that it makes the most sense and is the most reasonable. It would explain why we happened to have all the precisely right conditions to bring about a coherent universe with sentient, volitional beings. It also, I think, fulfills the deepest human hungers: the hunger for meaning, purpose, for a reason for everything to be here. Only with God can we have meaning, because otherwise everything is just a random, senseless blip in the nothingness.

      -LUX

    5. #5
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      Hi,

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    6. #6
      I Drink Universe Juice Adanac's Avatar
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      Okay, so we've established that we are comparing ourselves, and the things we know, to judge how complex the universe is. Again, I think this is faulty. The universe is so unimaginably huge, that this is worse than comparing ourselves to a single-celled organism. Note I said unimaginably huge. By that, I mean huge compared to anything we know. At the same time, to use your ball analogy, the universe is just one ball. We can't pull out another ball and compare. So this "designer" ( ) would have to be able to understand said complex universe and all inhabitants, in order to construct it. He would have to base this on something. I encourage you to create a new colour. Difficult eh?

      We look at ourselves for example. Birth was not well understood a long time ago, despite being a major process. Now we know how that baby develops, what cells do what, ect. Now we no longer say some mis-understood force made the baby. Now we say the baby grew in the uterus, but that we were designed with that ability. the point i'm trying to make here, is that whenever something is explained, the ID explination just steps back a bit. To new, further unexplained things.




      Quote Originally Posted by LuxAeterna View Post
      If you did, then you would never get anywhere. If there were an infinite number of steps to get to point B, then there would always be an infinite number of steps to make before reaching point B. Therefore, you would never reach it. Thus, our universe has to have an ultimate beginning. The chain of causation has to stop somewhere, or else existence would never be able to arrive at this point.[/b]
      I did not know that the universe had a point B, so to speak, to reach. Now you imply that the universe was created for a purpose, (assuming it was created). However, if all that exists is either, the universe, or, God/Designer, what purpose might that be? Nothing we, or anything else for that matter, do, would have any meaning at all except to the designer. So lets assume for the sake of the point I'm making that "he" created the universe to learn something. He would then have a need or want to learn that lesson. Where would he apply this lesson. His universe? If so then he must have created our universe from his universe, thus making our universe less complex than his. Now if this new universe exists as well, how complex is it? Was it designed as well.

      I guess my final question for you's guys is if there is a designer, where is he? As in, how can he exist outside our universe, or does he exist inside it. In which case it would've existed before him.
      I had a strange dream last night...

    7. #7
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      Quote Originally Posted by Adanac View Post
      Okay, so we've established that we are comparing ourselves, and the things we know, to judge how complex the universe is. Again, I think this is faulty. The universe is so unimaginably huge, that this is worse than comparing ourselves to a single-celled organism. Note I said unimaginably huge. By that, I mean huge compared to anything we know. At the same time, to use your ball analogy, the universe is just one ball. We can't pull out another ball and compare. So this "designer" ( ) would have to be able to understand said complex universe and all inhabitants, in order to construct it. He would have to base this on something. I encourage you to create a new colour. Difficult eh?[/b]
      First of all, human beings are ridiculously finite. We are painfully limited in both space and time. So it makes sense that most of what we do has to be based on something else. We are dependent beings in a universe made up of dependent things. Everything we see is dependent on something else for the way it is.

      For example: A vase falling off a table is dependent on a person knocking it off. That is dependent on the person being clumsy, which is dependent on him having drunk to much, which is dependent on him existing, which is dependent on his parents having sex, etc. etc. on down until we get to the big bang 14 or 15 billion years ago when this universe of dependent reality suddenly came into existence.

      So it makes perfect sense that temporal, finite beings are dependent in their imagination on the universe around them. God, on the other hand, is infinite, eternal, and utterly self-sufficient. God does not depend on anything in any way whatsoever. That is part of his nature. So if he were to imagine a universe, there is no need for him to base it on anything.

      Besides, humans can come up with things that don't exists. For example: a cube in four dimension. Impossible to imagine, but still we thought it up even though such a thing does not exist.

      We look at ourselves for example. Birth was not well understood a long time ago, despite being a major process. Now we know how that baby develops, what cells do what, ect. Now we no longer say some mis-understood force made the baby. Now we say the baby grew in the uterus, but that we were designed with that ability. the point i'm trying to make here, is that whenever something is explained, the ID explination just steps back a bit. To new, further unexplained things.[/b]
      Well, of course. But there is something that can never be explained. How the universe got here. Science will never, ever, ever, be able to explain it. Why? Because science is making observations and drawing conclusions based on those observations. But we cannot see past the beginning of our own existence. Therefore, science will never be able to say one way or the other how we got here. Period.

      I did not know that the universe had a point B, so to speak, to reach.[/b]
      "Point B" is any point. Take for example our present point in time. If the universe has no causeless cause (a cause outside the rules of cause and effect), but rather was an infinite chain of cause and effect, we would never be able to get to our present point in time, because there would alway be an infinite number of steps before reaching this point.

      Now you imply that the universe was created for a purpose, (assuming it was created). However, if all that exists is either, the universe, or, God/Designer, what purpose might that be? Nothing we, or anything else for that matter, do, would have any meaning at all except to the designer. So lets assume for the sake of the point I'm making that "he" created the universe to learn something. He would then have a need or want to learn that lesson. Where would he apply this lesson. His universe? If so then he must have created our universe from his universe, thus making our universe less complex than his. Now if this new universe exists as well, how complex is it? Was it designed as well.[/b]
      Of all reasons for God choosing to create the universe, why would you pick "to learn something"? Assuming we are talking of the traditional God, that is, the all-knowing God, then there would be nothing for him to learn. Furthermore, God does not have his own universe. How can there exist a space that can contain the infinite?

      Now, I will tell you why I think that God created the universe. For love. God is love, and so, out of a desire to share his love, he created autonomous beings, separate from himself and free to love or reject him. The universe exists so that we can share in the love of our Creator and give that love back to him in an eternal exchange.

      I can think of no greater reason for what is to be than that.

      I guess my final question for you's guys is if there is a designer, where is he? As in, how can he exist outside our universe, or does he exist inside it. In which case it would've existed before him.[/b]
      God exists outside the bounds of space and time, yet he is also present at every point in space and every point in time. He exists outside of his creation, and yet he makes himself omnipresent within his creation. It's a bit of a mystery.

      -LUX

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