 Sponsor | rune | Oct 11, 2006 11:08pm | | how can it be impossible for God to exist? considering something such as time having never started, it's possible that he does, isn't it? |
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| | italian-scallion | Oct 12, 2006 6:51am | | Why is god any more plausible than Zeus or Thor or the Flying Spaghetti Monster? |
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 Sponsor | Vortexfugue | Oct 12, 2006 8:51am | | 1. Who says time never started? Big Bang theory posits a start, along with space. |
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 Sponsor | rune | Oct 12, 2006 3:13pm | 2: if you look at nature, it's not really plausible to imagine a flying spaghetti monster having had anything to do with the creation of the planet. if the world was created by a God, you would imagine it would have been created by something equally beautiful and fitting in harmony with it. if you were to think of a God not like the Christian God, but one that fits the nature of the universe - more like a spirit. isn't that more plausible than zeus and thor as well?
3: but what was before that? |
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 Sponsor | Vortexfugue | Oct 12, 2006 8:14pm | 3: but what was before that?
Without time how can there be a before? |
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 Sponsor | rune | Oct 12, 2006 8:23pm | | well that makes about as much sense as the existence of a God |
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 Sponsor | Vortexfugue | Oct 12, 2006 8:32pm | | More, there is exactly zero evidence for a god. |
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 Sponsor | rune | Oct 12, 2006 8:43pm | | does that mean there's no way he can exist? |
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 Sponsor | rune | Oct 12, 2006 8:45pm | | does that mean there's no way God can exist? |
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