Federali Aundy
Active LVC Member
hrmwrm said:no. i never said stars appear from nothing. i said particles.
Yes, but ultimately (according to you) the stars that appear come from particles which created themselves. This is illogical. While I'd love to know which particals your are referring to, I believe the "scientific" view of this is that they would come from another universe or other physical realm. No one argues they created themselves from nothing. If they did come from nothing, it would take a God to make them.
hrmwrm said:god's never had a beginning. but yet exists. sounds like he popped out of nowhere to me.
Unlike your illogical and superstitious view of the universe (i.e. that it mades itself from nothing) God does not create Himself - He is the uncreated Creator. In other words, his very essence is sheer existence itself. This cannot be proven through the material sciences, but it is not unreasonable. It would be unreasonable, however, if we claimed that God is a physical thing that is uncreated - because matter by definition cannot be uncreated. Thus God did not pop out of nowhere - He simply is.
hrmwrm said:sounds more like your supernaturalism is contradictory.
In order to make this point, you will actually need to show me how God's existence is self-contradictory. I was taught by a half-dozen atheist philosophy profs, none of whom thought that the idea of God was self-contradictory. Just because you categorically reject God given your poor philosophy it does not follow that God's existence is irrational or illogical.
hrmwrm said:believing in magical things is reasonable?
Well I don't believe in magical things because the definition of magic is that physical things have powers beyond the natural. I do not believe that waving a stick and saying hocus pocus will do something. God is not magical because He brings things into existence through His own power and not through a material thing.
hrmwrm said:i'm not doing your homework. put them up and prove them.
i've seen a man walk through the wall of china and disappear the statue of liberty.
I'm not all that big on researching miracles - since the fact that there even is a universe we're living in (given that the universe cannot create itself) is miraculous enough for me. But here is a video about the Mary appearance in Egypt. There are also miracles related to bleeding Eucharistic hosts which you can find here. Though I do question whether or not you'll even consider these since your philosophy makes no room for miracles.
hrmwrm said:not all philsophy comes to a proveable logical conclusion. some can lead to mythological flights of fancy.
And I take it you get to be the one who decides which arguments lead to "magical flights of fancy" and which are not? So instead of turning deductive arguments into subjective truths, how about you look at a syllogism and point out where the logic is wrong - because if you can't do this then the logic is valid and my argument holds.
hrmwrm said:same to you with your supernatural views.
You would be correct to tell me this if I was a polytheist who thought that each and every act we observe has a god as its principle actor. This would in fact be superstitious and I would be thankful for your correction. Instead what we see here is that I rationally believe in an absolutely simple being Whose essence is sheer existence and can thus logically give rise to a material universe. There is nothing here that is unreasonable or contradictory to what the sciences have told us about material things.
Your materialist views, however, are both unreasonable and unscientific. Materialism is unreasonable because it either (1) gives matter the power of self-creation or (2) gives matter an eternal nature. The first case is folly because not even God can create Himself and the second case is grossly illogical because matter, being composed of parts, cannot exist eternally. Materialism is also unscientific because it makes claims that cannot be verified by the scientific method. Materialism is not science, it is bad philosophy. Indeed, I would call your materialism an example of "mythological flights of fancy".