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On Thu, 19 Dec 2024 17:33:39 +1100, MarkE <me22over7@gmail.com> wrote:No need, we both will get to test this claim soon enough.
On 19/12/2024 5:17 pm, Vincent Maycock wrote:No, humans are quite adept at thinking in the abstract. Most ofOn Thu, 19 Dec 2024 14:10:27 +1100, MarkE <me22over7@gmail.com> wrote:>
>
[...]
>God is eternally preexisting, nonmaterial, above and beyond time,>
matter, energy, but creating and controlling these.
If he's beyond time, on what stage or background does he do anything?
Given we exist in and bound by time, matter, energy, we are by
definition not able to comprehend the stage or background of God's
existence.
modern mathematics is like that.
Do you plan on killing yourself to test the claim?>>God conceived of all created things before they came into being.>
How could we test this claim?
Die.
http://montypython.50webs.com/scripts/Series_3/27.htmHow do you calculate the likelihood that God has always existed?>God spoke and there was...spacetime, matter, energy.>
More likely those things have just always existed, the same as this
supposed god called God that you're talking about.
How did you calculate that likelihood?
What's preferable about that hypothesis?>God created the initial low entropy state of the universe.>
Could it have been the Flying Spaghetti Monster that created this low
entropy start for the universe?
You may prefer that hypothesis.
Usefulness is defined by you right up there -- "capable of being>God designed physics, the periodic table, etc, as building blocks>
capable of being fashioned into all created things.
What about those useless high-mass elements found further on in the
periodic table?
What is your definition of useful, and why is usefulness so defined a
criterion?
fashioned into all created things."
Are you a young earth creationist or an old earth creationist?>God designed all living things and spoke them into being,>
Would it be possible to catch God in the act of speaking things into
being?
Too late. "In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth."
(Genesis 1:1).
Though since then he has been seen change water intoWhy didn't anyone outside the Gospels notice these miracles? And if
wine, and raise the dead.
he's "been seen" performing those miracles, what would prevent him
from using miracles to add to life's diversity here and now?
So you're open to the possibility that all life forms evolved from a>either>
directly, or indirectly through innate capacity for change and adaptation.
How does this indirect creation relate to universal common descent of
all living things?
I don't have a settled opinion on this.
common ancestor?
>>Etc.>
Like what?
Convince me that this is not the equivalent of the Python Argument
Clinic sketch.
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