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[personal profile] sobrique
Sometimes there are theological discussions down the pub.
Provoked by that we sometimes come to the question:
Does lack of proof, imply proof of lack.

Sometimes the discussion will stray onto whether you can prove unicorns don't exist.

That always seemed somehow unsatisfactory, and I think I've managed to piece together why.

The problem is with the definition of God. Put simply, if you could prove, definitively that God did or did not exist, then it wouldn't be God.

It's like asking if you can see something invisible - the answer is clearly 'no' because if you could, it wouldn't be invisible.

So you end up with a circular argument of belief - both on the parts of the theists, and the atheists alike, as they make their assertion about something that is by it's very nature impossible to prove - if you could prove, one way or another, that God exists, then you'd be the God.

But that leads on to an interesting train of thought - if you cannot prove it one way or another, it's a matter of faith. But ... it's largely an irrelevant question - debate all you like, but the point is none the less moot.

But from there... well, what then? If you can't prove it, then you have to accept someone elses assertion. Someone who ... we have no way of knowing whether they're telling the truth or not - all the tales in holy books are from people reporting their account of what happened. Why is that intrinsically more credible than any other written source?

To accept the assertion that 'There is a God' is one thing. You choose to, or not. Problem is in what daisy-chains off that assertion - I mean if you accept the notion that there _is_ a God, then you also accept the definition - which is that God is powerful enough that he could completely deceive you, if he so chose. I mean, that's why it's impossible to prove (true or false) in the first place, right?

That's where I start to get to a point of picking at the question - given that, how do we connect the spiritual teachings of a religion, to it's source? I mean, there's been all sorts of well meaning spiritual people over time. Some of them have even had some really neat and/or radical ideas about how people could live together. I don't see how it follows that that's any more the will of God than the idea I had the other day, of 'going down the Pub' - because without the possibility of proof, we lack the ability to differentiate the ideas that someone had - I can make an assertion, and say 'because God Said So', but why would you believe me, any more than ... well, the Pope say? Barring the education that the Pope has had, perhaps? I'd assume he's better read in scriptures than I am. But I bet I've read more Sci-Fi than he has.

Whatever. I'm not quite sure where this train of thought was going any more. Perhaps I'll complete it once I finish my musings.

Date: 2009-07-10 12:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sobrique.livejournal.com
I think that's kind of the point I was getting at - you cannot prove or disprove God, any more than you can prove or disprove reality, because order to do sou you would have had to transcend it.

The definition of a miracle is something unexplainable - and therefore if you can, it isn't any mnore.

None the less, you get "does God exist" in the same bin as "is reality real" fundamentally impossible to ever conclude and so something that you have to treat as one of the underlying assumptions in your worldview.

Date: 2009-07-10 12:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mister-jack.livejournal.com
No, I don't agree. "Reality is real" is a prerequisite for saying anything about, well, anything. If reality is not real I am not talking to you, I'm not typing at my computer nor am I listening to the cricket. "God exists" doesn't have any of that kind of prerequisite nature; "God exists" deserves to be treated with the same kind of approach as "Did we evolve?", "What is the Moon made of?" and other questions about reality.

Date: 2009-07-10 01:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ash1977law.livejournal.com
Agreed. Once we accept that reality is real then any other question we ask is a question about what is real and it's nature if it is real. If we state that we can not be sure that reality is real then any other question we ask about anything else becomes meaningless. In order to ask questions we must accept that reality is real. We do not need to accept the existance of 'god' in order to as questions about other things.

Date: 2009-07-10 03:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] queex.livejournal.com
Isn't that kind of a restatement of the anthropic principle?

Date: 2009-07-10 08:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ash1977law.livejournal.com
Yes, but I am doing it, thus it is sexier. Rawr!

Date: 2009-07-10 06:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sobrique.livejournal.com
But they're questions you'll be able to debate and reach conclusion. "Is there a God" is a question you can't, because of the definition of what makes a God. You will never reach a point of 'reasonable doubt' when you have a point where it's entirely possible that something more powerful than you is changing the premises of your experiment behind your back.

Date: 2009-07-11 08:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mister-jack.livejournal.com
If you define something in such a way that there is never any reason not to believe in it, then there is never any reason to believe in it.

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