myxomatosis
New Member
- Messages
- 2
- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 0
Hi! I am just curious to know if there are any scientific or any logical arguments establishing the existence of God?
I said:There are no scientific arguments for or against the existence of God - because, ultimately, God is unquantifiable. Science can only work with concepts that can be quanitifed.
As for logical arguments - well, that depends on your point of view.
There are various arguments for and against the existence of God, but each of them has their limitations.
Ultimately, accepting the existence or no of God becomes an issue of personal experience and faith only.
myxomatosis said:Hi! I am just curious to know if there are any scientific or any logical arguments establishing the existence of God?
I said:There are no scientific arguments for or against the existence of God - because, ultimately, God is unquantifiable. Science can only work with concepts that can be quanitifed.
As for logical arguments - well, that depends on your point of view.
There are various arguments for and against the existence of God, but each of them has their limitations.
Ultimately, accepting the existence or no of God becomes an issue of personal experience and faith only.
I said:There are no scientific arguments for or against the existence of God - because, ultimately, God is unquantifiable. Science can only work with concepts that can be quanitifed.
As for logical arguments - well, that depends on your point of view.
There are various arguments for and against the existence of God, but each of them has their limitations.
Ultimately, accepting the existence or no of God becomes an issue of personal experience and faith only.
louis said:Hi, I'm Louis...
Many people have asked me : "Do you believe in God ?"
I learned that I can only answer that question in 2 parts :
Yes to "God" - No to "believe".
Although we can't observe the cause itself, we can indulge
in some guesswork about it by examining its product.
For example, it would have had to exist when there was absolutely nothing else - nothing to sustain it - nothing
to act upon it - which means it had to act of it's own
volition. Only something ALIVE could do that.
I suppose that means I don't qualify as an "atheist"
even though everything I say is just a personal opinion -
a product reason having nothing to do with "faith".
Louis...
lunamoth said:Gluadys said: "Do you believe in God's love for you? Are you willing to commit yourself to God in the confidence that God always loves you and seeks your good. Are you willing to trust in that love, even when God asks you to do something difficult and painful?
To believe in God is to make a commitment of trust in God based on God's perceived character of goodness, truth, wisdom, justice and love.
For if God exists (and I agree there is and can be no scientific evidence one way or the other), if God exists and is who and what God is claimed to be---how we enter into relationship with God is a matter of utmost importance. For such a God is "the ground of our being", that to which we owe our "ultimate commitment". "
Thank you for this nice summation, Gluadys. Seeing it put succinctly like this clarifies the position of believer vs. agnostic for me.
lunamoth said:I don't know that you are an agnostic. Perhaps you are still just looking for your home or path.
lunamoth: Yes, so you, like me, are human. This level of trust is an ideal to strive toward, and a comfort when we catch glimmers of it. The question is do you believe in the ideal. Will we fall short? Yes. We all do. That is what forgiveness is for.