by Book Mitten » Wed Jan 15, 2020 1:36 pm
> Through our conversation you have yet to identify, as far as I can recall, where the logical or theological inconsistency is with Jesus being God.
I'm not saying it's logically impossible, or theologically impossible. At least not yet. I think such an issue could be discussed and perhaps concluded upon, but I haven't gone there yet, and I'm not doing so here. What I'm saying is that it seems to me plausible that the non-divine interpretation is true. I'm also discussing whether it's more plausible than the Christian interpretation.
> I don't understand. What is it that makes you doubt, and about what are you having doubts?
I doubt that the Christian God has all the attributes his followers say he has. (Omnibenevolence, omnipotence, etc) The aforementioned about vagueness of evidence and the problem of evil are what make me doubt this. I also am I sure over whether he even exists. I'm not an atheist, but not theist either.
> Christian theology teaches that God's nature is consistent, non-contingent, and unchanging (Mal. 3.6). Nothing about God's attributes (righteous, holy, omnipresent, omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent, etc.) are subject to adaptions to a changing universe or of human activity.
Ok, but that needs to be covered in more detail. I know you might point me to theological sources outside this discussion as a means of me doing so, but interpretations vary. My issue is that these qualities you have listed (righteousness, omnipotence, etc) are things we can theoretically understand, but his timelessness you seem to suggest we can't (correct me if I'm wrong). Moreover, I would say that omnipotence and goodness manifest their legitimacy within a changing landscape. Can you point to a conscious experience that doesn't have some element of change? You could depict some experience that is less changing, but that doesn't exclude change altogether.
> About a year ago I proposed to a group of scientists the paradoxical idea that moving backward in time also required simultaneously moving forward in time: I am moving forward in time as I, second by second, observe my moving backward in time.
> With these kinds of "time" conundrums all around us, it's not far-fetched to perceive of God being outside of time but being able to function inside of time with its boundaries and constraints. Time is "fluid" enough, and the nature of God metaphysical enough, for the two to theoretically be able to interaction and mesh.
The idea you described still operates in time and space, just differently to usual. The time traveler is not even going beyond time, let alone operating without there being any time at all. He is simply interacting differently. To expand on this, some might use the example of near death experiences, where some people claim to have experienced time differently, or even experience timelessness, in some sense. This might constitute going "beyond time", but the issue remains that they have still operated in a temporal world prior, before reaching that timeless state. Also, the issue remains unsolved of how a timeless state could go from being timeless to creating a temporal thing (this universe, presumably). Such would require, I think, a space time continuum in order for a being to go from "I exist alone" to "I exist alongside a universe".
> No, because time is a stable enough staple (as far as we know) that it can exist in different forms simultaneously (the bending of time doesn't alter the reliability of time elsewhere). Fascinating stuff. Bending time in one place doesn't change time in another place, which is weird to think about.
Sure, but time in some sense still exists.
> Yeah, it really is fun to toy with all this stuff, but it's all so speculative, theoretical, and philosophical, I wonder if there will ever actually be proposed answers or any kind of resolution on the stuff.
A conclusion like this shows that the very idea of God, let alone the evidence for a fixed idea, is elusive. This kind of elusiveness seems to conflict with a God that would want to make himself known.
> I read an interesting article recently about the general unfalsifiability of science, so if we're going to question God on that basis, maybe we have to question science also.
https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/article/falsifiability/> So I guess I'm not convinced we can consider God to be an unreasonable belief, especially given the logic of the arguments about His existence.
I'm not claiming it's an unreasonable belief, necessarily. I'm disputing whether or not it's completely unreasonable to have doubts.
Regarding the article, it doesn't say science is universally unfalsifiable. It simply lists different opinions on how falsifiability applies, how wide it can be applied, and how much it should cover, particularly in the basis of how people obtain knowledge and do research.
Also, following from what I said previously, even if we were to throw out falsifiability, we would still have to have some clarity on what we were discussing, which becomes difficult (as you said) when talking about which traits God has independent of the universe. Theories Karl Popper considered unfalsifiable, like Marxism, still had a clear description of what it believed to be true, even if it was, in Popper's eyes at least, unfalsifiable.
> Through our conversation you have yet to identify, as far as I can recall, where the logical or theological inconsistency is with Jesus being God.
I'm not saying it's logically impossible, or theologically impossible. At least not yet. I think such an issue could be discussed and perhaps concluded upon, but I haven't gone there yet, and I'm not doing so here. What I'm saying is that it seems to me plausible that the non-divine interpretation is true. I'm also discussing whether it's more plausible than the Christian interpretation.
> I don't understand. What is it that makes you doubt, and about what are you having doubts?
I doubt that the Christian God has all the attributes his followers say he has. (Omnibenevolence, omnipotence, etc) The aforementioned about vagueness of evidence and the problem of evil are what make me doubt this. I also am I sure over whether he even exists. I'm not an atheist, but not theist either.
> Christian theology teaches that God's nature is consistent, non-contingent, and unchanging (Mal. 3.6). Nothing about God's attributes (righteous, holy, omnipresent, omnipotent, omniscient, omnibenevolent, etc.) are subject to adaptions to a changing universe or of human activity.
Ok, but that needs to be covered in more detail. I know you might point me to theological sources outside this discussion as a means of me doing so, but interpretations vary. My issue is that these qualities you have listed (righteousness, omnipotence, etc) are things we can theoretically understand, but his timelessness you seem to suggest we can't (correct me if I'm wrong). Moreover, I would say that omnipotence and goodness manifest their legitimacy within a changing landscape. Can you point to a conscious experience that doesn't have some element of change? You could depict some experience that is less changing, but that doesn't exclude change altogether.
> About a year ago I proposed to a group of scientists the paradoxical idea that moving backward in time also required simultaneously moving forward in time: I am moving forward in time as I, second by second, observe my moving backward in time.
> With these kinds of "time" conundrums all around us, it's not far-fetched to perceive of God being outside of time but being able to function inside of time with its boundaries and constraints. Time is "fluid" enough, and the nature of God metaphysical enough, for the two to theoretically be able to interaction and mesh.
The idea you described still operates in time and space, just differently to usual. The time traveler is not even going beyond time, let alone operating without there being any time at all. He is simply interacting differently. To expand on this, some might use the example of near death experiences, where some people claim to have experienced time differently, or even experience timelessness, in some sense. This might constitute going "beyond time", but the issue remains that they have still operated in a temporal world prior, before reaching that timeless state. Also, the issue remains unsolved of how a timeless state could go from being timeless to creating a temporal thing (this universe, presumably). Such would require, I think, a space time continuum in order for a being to go from "I exist alone" to "I exist alongside a universe".
> No, because time is a stable enough staple (as far as we know) that it can exist in different forms simultaneously (the bending of time doesn't alter the reliability of time elsewhere). Fascinating stuff. Bending time in one place doesn't change time in another place, which is weird to think about.
Sure, but time in some sense still exists.
> Yeah, it really is fun to toy with all this stuff, but it's all so speculative, theoretical, and philosophical, I wonder if there will ever actually be proposed answers or any kind of resolution on the stuff.
A conclusion like this shows that the very idea of God, let alone the evidence for a fixed idea, is elusive. This kind of elusiveness seems to conflict with a God that would want to make himself known.
> I read an interesting article recently about the general unfalsifiability of science, so if we're going to question God on that basis, maybe we have to question science also. [url]https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/article/falsifiability/[/url]
> So I guess I'm not convinced we can consider God to be an unreasonable belief, especially given the logic of the arguments about His existence.
I'm not claiming it's an unreasonable belief, necessarily. I'm disputing whether or not it's completely unreasonable to have doubts.
Regarding the article, it doesn't say science is universally unfalsifiable. It simply lists different opinions on how falsifiability applies, how wide it can be applied, and how much it should cover, particularly in the basis of how people obtain knowledge and do research.
Also, following from what I said previously, even if we were to throw out falsifiability, we would still have to have some clarity on what we were discussing, which becomes difficult (as you said) when talking about which traits God has independent of the universe. Theories Karl Popper considered unfalsifiable, like Marxism, still had a clear description of what it believed to be true, even if it was, in Popper's eyes at least, unfalsifiable.