Jacob10 wrote: ↑June 10th, 2022, 8:58 am
Proof is a “red herring” and so all anyone has is hope.You can’t definitively prove that there is or isn’t a God,no more than I can prove that there is or isn’t.There is no burden of proof therefore on either party so why are you claiming that there is?
You can either believe that there is or isn’t a God and exercise your faith in that belief.The same for me.Why are you claiming otherwise?
Are you trying to invent a new philosophy? Your philosophy is flawed.
My philosophy is sound.
Jacob!
In some way, if one is forced to use logic (other than the ontological argument) one can use Apophatic Theology to make their case, hence:
1. In Christianity, God is an impossibility just like the concept of resurrection is an impossibility.
2. Consciousness itself is an impossibility because it transcends formal logic (bivalence, LEM, etc.).
3. The nature of all existence is an impossibility (improbability is better said but you get the idea) because there exists no ToE (and even if there was, it's still only a theory).
The way to think about a concept of God is that it's appropriate for God, in many ways, to be 'logically impossible' to exist. The concept of God itself, would have no meaning (nor would there be a need to have such a concept) otherwise. Just like feelings, it' okay to consider metaphysical things, in some ways, to be logically impossible. One could even think of it another way: who really knows how you see your own self, much less the mind of some one else (the mind of God). Impossible? It's impossible for me to be you.
Accordingly, one could view that sense of knowing or the logic associated with knowing (epistemology) as the distinctions between objective and subjective truth's. For instance, if I assert I saw God, who can convince me otherwise? Or if I had a 'religious experience', etc. etc.. Just another thought experiment... .
“Concerning matter, we have been all wrong. What we have called matter is energy, whose vibration has been so lowered as to be perceptible to the senses. There is no matter.” "Spooky Action at a Distance"
― Albert Einstein