Invisibility

Where atheists can talk among themselves, and about those pesky Christians.

Moderator: Spamcops

Invisibility

Postby xhacker » Tue Dec 16, 2008 7:37 am

I find it interesting that all the worlds major religions have invisisble gods, I wonder why invisibility seems to be what they all have in common ..
I would never die for my beliefs because I might be wrong. - Bertrand Russell
User avatar
xhacker
recruit
recruit
 
Posts: 35
Joined: Tue Dec 16, 2008 7:22 am
Location: London
Affiliation: Atheist

Re: Invisibility

Postby IBelieveInChrishna » Tue Dec 16, 2008 12:21 pm

Are they invisible, or do they exist outside of the physical world within which we have the capacity to see? :wink:

It has been said that they make themselves seen from time to time, though; Jesus, Krishna, and Buddha to name a few.

Welcome to the forum as well, I'm excited to see more posts from you!
Here to learn.
User avatar
IBelieveInChrishna
recruit
recruit
 
Posts: 70
Joined: Mon Sep 01, 2008 11:17 pm

Re: Invisibility

Postby spongebob » Tue Dec 16, 2008 4:31 pm

IBelieveInChrishna wrote:Are they invisible, or do they exist outside of the physical world within which we have the capacity to see? :wink:


What's the difference?
I don't object to the concept of a deity, but I'm baffled by the notion of one that takes attendance. ~AFF

:spongeb:
User avatar
spongebob
Moderator
 
Posts: 3513
Joined: Tue Mar 14, 2006 5:59 pm
Location: Huntsville, AL
Affiliation: Humanist

Re: Invisibility

Postby IBelieveInChrishna » Tue Dec 16, 2008 5:54 pm

To say that something is invisible implies that this "something" exists within our universe of time and space, but which simply can't be seen. I'm not necessarily stating my own opinion here, but it can be said that God resides on a different ontological level that isn't framed by those two dimensions. While Christian doctrine may or may not agree, it has been said that God is unchanging ("timeless") and immaterial (not occupying space).
Last edited by IBelieveInChrishna on Wed Dec 17, 2008 12:28 am, edited 1 time in total.
Here to learn.
User avatar
IBelieveInChrishna
recruit
recruit
 
Posts: 70
Joined: Mon Sep 01, 2008 11:17 pm

Re: Invisibility

Postby Mr. Sluagh » Tue Dec 16, 2008 11:33 pm

IBelieveInChrishna wrote:To say that something is invisible implies that this "something" exists within our universe of time and space, but which simply can't be seen. I'm not necessarily stating my own opinion here, but it can be said that God resides on a different ontological level that isn't framed by those two dimensions. While Christian doctrine may or may not agree, it has been said that God is unchanging ("timeless") and immaterial (not occupying space).

Does that makes sense or should I try to explain it more clearly?


They're both entirely speculative, ad hoc excuses to explain why the existence of gods is not supported by any meaningful evidence.

"Well, actually, the invisible, incorporeal pink unicorn isn't invisible and incorporeal per se, it just exists on a different reality frequency so you can only perceive it if you adjust your psychic vibrations. Lessons start at $50 an hour..."
"The salvation you have hoped for these past two thousand years is here. You are being told that in this paragraph. And it is true."
--L. Ron Hubbard, quoted in the Eris-damned spam the Church of Scientology keeps sending me.
User avatar
Mr. Sluagh
veteran
veteran
 
Posts: 635
Joined: Thu Jul 20, 2006 3:58 pm
Location: Berkeley, CA
Affiliation: Atheist

Re: Invisibility

Postby IBelieveInChrishna » Wed Dec 17, 2008 12:28 am

Mr. Sluagh wrote:...ad hoc excuses to explain why the existence of gods is not supported by any meaningful evidence.


I guess you could take what I posted as an excuse if you thought that my intent was to subvert some sort of atheistic claim.

I don't think Aristotle was concerned with that when he developed those ideas though.
Here to learn.
User avatar
IBelieveInChrishna
recruit
recruit
 
Posts: 70
Joined: Mon Sep 01, 2008 11:17 pm

Re: Invisibility

Postby spongebob » Wed Dec 17, 2008 6:15 am

IBelieveInChrishna wrote:To say that something is invisible implies that this "something" exists within our universe of time and space, but which simply can't be seen. I'm not necessarily stating my own opinion here, but it can be said that God resides on a different ontological level that isn't framed by those two dimensions. While Christian doctrine may or may not agree, it has been said that God is unchanging ("timeless") and immaterial (not occupying space).


I get all that; it's well known rhetoric. But what's the functional difference between an invisible god that does nothing and a god of another plane that does nothing? The "does nothing" is the only part remotely testable. Seems like a purely philosophical argument.
I don't object to the concept of a deity, but I'm baffled by the notion of one that takes attendance. ~AFF

:spongeb:
User avatar
spongebob
Moderator
 
Posts: 3513
Joined: Tue Mar 14, 2006 5:59 pm
Location: Huntsville, AL
Affiliation: Humanist

Re: Invisibility

Postby IBelieveInChrishna » Wed Dec 17, 2008 12:44 pm

If neither the invisible God nor the ontologically different God do anything, then they would be irrelevant. Just because either isn't visible doesn't mean they have done nothing, however. Aristotle believed that such a God was necessary as an efficient (beginning) and final cause for the universe.
Here to learn.
User avatar
IBelieveInChrishna
recruit
recruit
 
Posts: 70
Joined: Mon Sep 01, 2008 11:17 pm

Re: Invisibility

Postby Mr. Sluagh » Wed Dec 17, 2008 7:36 pm

IBelieveInChrishna wrote:If neither the invisible God nor the ontologically different God do anything, then they would be irrelevant. Just because either isn't visible doesn't mean they have done nothing, however. Aristotle believed that such a God was necessary as an efficient (beginning) and final cause for the universe.


I've made my case against deism in other threads. It's still suspicious that any system of theology must account for and reinforce the elusiveness of gods. Why do gods have to be invisible, or incorporeal, or in another dimension? Why not suppose that they live on the bottom of the ocean or beneath the surface of Mars? At the moment, no one can prove that the gods don't live in either of those places, any more than they can disprove that the gods live in the realm of ideals. But why go for the gap that's hardest to close?
Last edited by Mr. Sluagh on Thu Dec 18, 2008 2:31 am, edited 1 time in total.
"The salvation you have hoped for these past two thousand years is here. You are being told that in this paragraph. And it is true."
--L. Ron Hubbard, quoted in the Eris-damned spam the Church of Scientology keeps sending me.
User avatar
Mr. Sluagh
veteran
veteran
 
Posts: 635
Joined: Thu Jul 20, 2006 3:58 pm
Location: Berkeley, CA
Affiliation: Atheist

Re: Invisibility

Postby Richard » Wed Dec 17, 2008 10:42 pm

xhacker,
An invisible God is infinitly malleable by her followers which gives great survival value to the idea. Seems the best explanation, for me.

IBelieveInChrishna,
I find your argument interesting. I think it's best to split the problem in two:
The evidence based argument: Let's say we agree that beliefs (truth) has to be determined by evidence and we can't find evidence to separate an invisible God from a non-existing God. This is enough to make me an agnostic atheist, and I can leave it at that.
The philosophical argument: Any argument that is based on the contingency of the reality (universe) we live in (i.e. first-cause argument, existence of natural laws, mathematics, logic etc.) seems meaningless in a debate about theism. All the argument proves is that we need something non-contingent for reality to be logically consistent (I call it "the framework of reality"). This is not an argument for theism as it fails to establish that "the framework of reality" equals God.
Evidence is the only way to separate the probable from the possible. We should always strive to limit our beliefs to the probable.
Richard
resident
resident
 
Posts: 390
Joined: Sat Dec 08, 2007 8:30 am
Affiliation: Atheist

Re: Invisibility

Postby IBelieveInChrishna » Thu Dec 18, 2008 6:46 pm

Mr. Sluagh wrote:...Why do gods have to be invisible, or incorporeal, or in another dimension? Why not suppose that they live on the bottom of the ocean or beneath the surface of Mars?


Aristotle's reasoning was that the universe's creator had to be of a superior ontological nature to its creations (i.e. A physical being can't simply create another physical being, whatever creates that being has to be superior to it). It wouldn't make much sense, therefore, for God to be a "material" being in the sense that we know it. That's why, he would say, God wouldn't live on the bottom of the ocean, and why God would have to be incorporeal.

Additionally (and this is me speaking here), if we are to suppose that a creator must exist, and that it has a physical form, that physical form is made subordinate to our perceptions and any illusions we might be under. A human can be dreaming, can be under the influence of an illusion, etc., so if a God is to exist its verifiability can never be subject to anything empirical (of the senses).

Don't take this as me employing any "elusiveness of God" scapegoat tactic. That's where this thread got its sarcastic beginning, but I'm not advocating any side here. ;-)

Richard wrote:The philosophical argument: Any argument that is based on the contingency of the reality (universe) we live in (i.e. first-cause argument, existence of natural laws, mathematics, logic etc.) seems meaningless in a debate about theism. All the argument proves is that we need something non-contingent for reality to be logically consistent (I call it "the framework of reality"). This is not an argument for theism as it fails to establish that "the framework of reality" equals God.


I agree completely. I think that in my case, I simply refer to that "framework" as God. When I refer to it as such, I don't mean to implicitly attach any further traits to that "framework" (i.e. all-loving, living in the sky, bearded).
Here to learn.
User avatar
IBelieveInChrishna
recruit
recruit
 
Posts: 70
Joined: Mon Sep 01, 2008 11:17 pm

Re: Invisibility

Postby Mr. Sluagh » Thu Dec 18, 2008 11:57 pm

IBelieveInChrishna wrote:
Mr. Sluagh wrote:...Why do gods have to be invisible, or incorporeal, or in another dimension? Why not suppose that they live on the bottom of the ocean or beneath the surface of Mars?


Aristotle's reasoning was that the universe's creator had to be of a superior ontological nature to its creations (i.e. A physical being can't simply create another physical being, whatever creates that being has to be superior to it). It wouldn't make much sense, therefore, for God to be a "material" being in the sense that we know it. That's why, he would say, God wouldn't live on the bottom of the ocean, and why God would have to be incorporeal.

Additionally (and this is me speaking here), if we are to suppose that a creator must exist, and that it has a physical form, that physical form is made subordinate to our perceptions and any illusions we might be under. A human can be dreaming, can be under the influence of an illusion, etc., so if a God is to exist its verifiability can never be subject to anything empirical (of the senses).

Don't take this as me employing any "elusiveness of God" scapegoat tactic. That's where this thread got its sarcastic beginning, but I'm not advocating any side here. ;-)

Richard wrote:The philosophical argument: Any argument that is based on the contingency of the reality (universe) we live in (i.e. first-cause argument, existence of natural laws, mathematics, logic etc.) seems meaningless in a debate about theism. All the argument proves is that we need something non-contingent for reality to be logically consistent (I call it "the framework of reality"). This is not an argument for theism as it fails to establish that "the framework of reality" equals God.


I agree completely. I think that in my case, I simply refer to that "framework" as God. When I refer to it as such, I don't mean to implicitly attach any further traits to that "framework" (i.e. all-loving, living in the sky, bearded).


Okay, so we're essentially back to this thread. Do you have any problem my arguments there and the accord that JustJim and I reached?
"The salvation you have hoped for these past two thousand years is here. You are being told that in this paragraph. And it is true."
--L. Ron Hubbard, quoted in the Eris-damned spam the Church of Scientology keeps sending me.
User avatar
Mr. Sluagh
veteran
veteran
 
Posts: 635
Joined: Thu Jul 20, 2006 3:58 pm
Location: Berkeley, CA
Affiliation: Atheist

Re: Invisibility

Postby IBelieveInChrishna » Fri Dec 19, 2008 1:10 am

That was a fantastic thread. I don't think I have any problem with the idea you two introduced there, as you said, the idea arrived at here is nearly identical. I think I just find myself a little more "hopeful" in terms of restoring those fabled traits to God / "the framework". ;-)
Here to learn.
User avatar
IBelieveInChrishna
recruit
recruit
 
Posts: 70
Joined: Mon Sep 01, 2008 11:17 pm


Return to Atheists

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests