[b]Scribbler60[/b] wrote: There are actually two questions here:Good points but I differ on the above "probably."The answer to 1 is "probably not" because there's no evidence for one. I say "probably" because evidence might very well arise tomorrow, but in the thousands of years of trying, the success rate in proving the existence of a divine superintelligence has been zero. In a world or universe where the was a god, the existence of said god should be plainly obvious. Just the very fact that there is some dispute should put to bed the notion of an omnipotent divine superintelligence that answers prayers, is interested in humanity and cares what you do - especially when you're naked, apparently.
- Is there a god?
- Is believing in a god somehow useful?
If anyone were to claim their god has anthropomorphic qualities and imperfect, then, yes, it is probably empirically possible to exists as real, subject to the production of empirical evidence. In reality the probability is more realistically zero but in principle [because of the empirical-rational elements] we cannot eliminate its possibility totally.
I am arguing, like a squared-circle, it is impossible for a god which must be absolutely perfect to exist as real.
The point is God as an idea [philosophically and psychologically] must be absolutely perfect, else that God will be kissing the ass of another more perfect, or absolutely perfect God.
Any normal theist when faced with such a dilemma will adopt an absolutely perfect God, i.e. an ontological God. This was what St. Anselm and Descartes did for Christianity. The God in the Quran claim itself to be the ONLY absolutely perfect God and no other gods exist.