I know the arguement may have moved beyond this, but i've been thinking and typings this up for too long, so here ya go:
Originally posted by Liberator
To this I ask you: What about the philosopher's in history that believed that atoms existed when all the available scientific evidence of the time suggested otherwise? Were they morons to be ignored as well?
Except any fool in ancient times could realize he had pathetic amounts of data. "Theories" at the time were, with few exceptions, pure speculation. Democritus had no evidence, and neither did those who disagreed with him. They both guessed and one side ended up being right.
Today, on the other hand, our technology on the other hand is advanced enough for us to observe all except for the very small and the very far away, and through clever tricks we can infer what we cannot directly observe. Based on that information, the existence of a "god" described in the bible is
unnessesary. Let me explain this.
What does it mean, exactly, to understand reality? (I'm using reality because the word encompasses more than just the universe). Basically, it is to become
aware of reality, to know the "nature" of it (I know this sounds quite Buddhist).
But what is it, exactly, that we are becoming aware of? WHat exists? All that we seem to be "aware of" is what we
A. "sense", AKA, physical things, and
B. thoughts, emotions, and other things of the mind (this is what is called Cartesian dualism, though other philosophical theories state that there is no difference between the mental and the physical. I myself am not a dualist).
Now, back to God. From our observations, no God(s) comes up. Furthermore, to have him exist would conflict with what we do observe (physical laws, etc.). Therefore such a thing as a god need not (

must not) exist for us to understand reality, which why I say he is unneccesary.
Christianity states that God is "supernatural", apart from what is physical/mental. If that is true, than he not observable.
How, then, can we become aware of him? We can't. Which leades us to:
1. How can something we cannot be aware of exist?
2. How can something we cannot be aware of influence what we are aware of?
Thus we are forced to accept the conclusion that a supernatural god does not exist.[/u] (According to Kazan, whom I agree with, the God you believe in is actually just a non-supernatural, mental idea you cling to)
I know I kinda repeated myself the last two paragraphs. I'm gonna need to fix this up

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