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One interesting philosopher I advise all of you to look into is Rene Descartes. His life was lived trying to prove scientifically that there is a higher being. Also, he came up with two unfaltered truthes. The first, "I think." has to be true, because simply by thinking that statement, you prove that it is correct. His second un faltered truth, "I exist." is also true. Then Descartes combined them to the famous phrase we know and love today, "I think, Therefore I am (exist)."
Quote from: jrgp on September 30, 2010, 03:36:50 pmOnly anime shows I've felt any interest in over the years are Pokemon (original TV series) and various hentai.so clearly jgrp is a goddamn anime connoisseur. his opinion might as well be law here.
Only anime shows I've felt any interest in over the years are Pokemon (original TV series) and various hentai.
Best Admin: jrgp, he's like the forum mom and a pet dog rolled into one.
First, he realized that for anything to exist, it has to be perfect. Don't try and argue; everything down to the content of marrow in our bones to the Earth's atmosphere is perfect. And Descartes realized that ONLY a higher being, one above all of us, could create perfection.
it's just luck and coincidence anyway; there's trillions of joules of matter in the universe, some of that has arranged itself in a way which is hospitable to life.
Heh, I feel a little out of place arguing with a guy like that, but let's give it a whirl."I think."There's a pretty strong argument for our behavior being purely deterministic, with our actions being the natural consequences of all the stimuli in our lives. Therefore, since anyone with a big enough knowledge base could say definitely what a given person would do in a given situation, can you really call that thinking? If we don't control our minds, how is life anything more than stimulus-response?
"I exist."As crazy as it sounds, does self-awareness really prove existence? The simplest counter-example would be a video game. No matter how much a virtual environment emulates reality, and how much the characters in it understand that environment and even themselves, the simple flip of a switch eradicates them. Can existence that transient really be called existence at all? And in the same way, might we all be some sort of actors in a virtual world, such as in the Matrix?
Agreed 100%. The problem with the human race is that their selfawareness goes way beyond themselfs. There used to be a time when it was just a matter of survival, where we were no more entitled to this planet than any other animal. But now as we gain increased intelligence, we start to realise what a rarity life is and how fragile it really is. Therefor, it must be out of this world in terms of the supernatural.
But tell me, as much as you are convinced of creational theory, or at least some kind of divine intervention along the way, why isn't it possible or even likely that we are nothing more than a lucky setup?
Did you know that around the time of Jesus, there were about THREE other people in Europe, all claiming to be the son of God, all having folowers, and ALL being crucified?
To this day, I don't count the Bible as a credible source, because first of, it was written a long time ago and has gone under so many translations that I'm sure today the Bible we read was nothing like the way Moses or David intended it to be. Secondly, the people back then were obviously more primitive and probably thought that everything was done by God's help, not the way that we see things today.
The odds are like this: I believe in God, I'm saved, there turns out to not be one, I die and nothing happens to me.(or I'm reincarnated, whatever) I believe in God, I'm saved, there turns out to be one, I go to some afterlife, presumably good, maybe it's heaven, but I'm not sure I don't believe in God, I'm not saved, there turns out to not be one, I die and nothing happens to me.(or I'm reincarnated, whatever) I don't believe in God, I'm not saved, There turns out to one, I die and go to some afterlife, good or bad, for eternity. Why, in all honesty, would you take that chance? There's only one bad outcome, and the chance is that you could go to some bad afterlife for ETERNITY, simply because you didn't get that holy water poured on your head. The effort put in to be saved is so little, and the chance of the WORST PUNISHMENT in history is so HUGE, why would you take the chance? Wow, that's a lot of typing. Btw, all my opinion, just in case I forgot to put it somewhere.
I would not think of it that way Mangled. The earlier the age, the less people knew about the world around them. The lack of scriptures and information left pretty much everything open to be explained by the first guy with a divine theory.
Even if the world was a simulation, like the matrix, even if our thoughts equaled nothing and that we're really balls of goo inside of some alien's mouth, we still have to exist. To not exist is a pretty absolute idea. We could not do anything if we didn't exist, regardless if our existence wasn't what we thought it was.
The odds are like this:
Would you not agree that the earliest religion in human culture has the most chance of being correct being the closest to the origin of our species?
One problem that is created is that God is undefinable. God does not suit a universal definition and it is hard to solve a problem if one does not know the source of the problem itself. Not only do philosophers have to try and prove if God exists, but also prove if God is all-powerful. Today, God is usually looked upon as a perfect monotheistic being with supreme power. However, something that is all-powerful and all-knowing would never permit something evil to come to existence. Believers in God could state the idea of free will and that we as humans have the ability to choose good or evil and thus evil exists. Others against the idea of God would suggest that if God was really all-goodness, he would make humans be able to choose good every time. But instead of restricting free will and limiting humans to righteousness, this God of pure goodness would decide to accept the possibilities of evil. Well, a possible resolution that someone would come up with is that what humans perceive as evil is not really evil and that God has a divine plan that will ultimately end in omni benevolence(pure goodness). Again, a counter argument would probably state if God is pure in goodness, then God can not make pure evil. However, if pure goodness can exist, then so can pure evil. And if pure evil did exist, then this pure evil could be as powerful as God and puts God's superiority into question. Even after all that debating, there was virtually no progress in proving if God is all-powerful or if he even exist.
"I think."There's a pretty strong argument for our behavior being purely deterministic, with our actions being the natural consequences of all the stimuli in our lives. Therefore, since anyone with a big enough knowledge base could say definitely what a given person would do in a given situation, can you really call that thinking? If we don't control our minds, how is life anything more than stimulus-response?
Would you agree, Smegma, that the ability to be experienced is not required in order for something to exist, yet existence is required in order for that something to be experienced?
It is true that the way we view our existence is a contingency, but I believe that our existence in itself is a necessary truth.
If we can be experienced by others, does it not imply our existence?
Since we are experienced, we must exist in one sense or another.
QuoteIf we can be experienced by others, does it not imply our existence? If we stick with your initial proposition, no, because you said that the ability to be experienced is not a quality of existence, or not necessary for existence.