Proof that God Exists (615, permasaged)

1 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-07 11:17 ID:0ZwzC8Bk

Have a look at this here website:

http://proofthatgodexists.org/

Step through the 'quiz', see what happens. I'd be interested in seeing the 4-ch'ers responses.

2 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-07 11:22 ID:XA6Qz4ER

they forgot the "maybe" button.

3 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-07 14:38 ID:Heaven

"Absolute truth"? What the hell is that supposed to be?

4 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-08 13:05 ID:QNTuD3A7

>>3
Objective correspondence with reality. Not just opinion.

5 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-08 14:21 ID:78Ch0vOo

omg.. my math-teacher would SOO beat the author of this website until he doesn't know anything..
people really seem not to know what a "proof" is

6 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-08 16:49 ID:IxoJouJO

>>4

I don't usually send letters to reality. Please explain.

7 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-09 04:55 ID:Vl0/oApK

I got http://proofthatgodexists.org/no-morality.php

>You have denied that absolute moral laws exist but you appeal to them all the time.

Just because I appeal to them doesn't make them absolute. They're just popular opinion.

8 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-09 14:59 ID:mXdwnYrk

> If someone with enough power happened to like rape and molestation, what right would we have to impose our morality on him?

The right to withhold our contributions to his power base. That's perhaps the only right we have ever had. Natural rights are a nice dream, but a fallacious one; all 'rights' which attempt to restrict the actions of other people can only exist with their cooperation, as social constructs.

> Why do we condemn the Nazi society for following their self-imposed morals? Why did the Nazi society not have the right to break from the tradition of morality in western civilizations?

Because they felt the need to also impose their morality on other countries such as Austria and Czechoslovakia.

> "The majority of the people in our society participated in that evil deed." If morality was up to society, that sentence would never make sense, but we know that morality is beyond societies and such a propositon is possible.

No, because the average human is not a saint, and has other concerns they hold before morality. To borrow the Nazi example, many citizens cooperated with the effort to eliminate undesirables because they were terrified of the potential repercussions for themselves and their families should they have refused on moral grounds. Others, less respectably, simply found it easier to conform and to do what they were told then to protest against the perceived injustice.

Also, I found the site's assertion that 'rape is wrong' is a moral law rather amusing. Many historical societies (admittantly, often with mitigating factors such as social class) did not object to rape, and odds are that some of them worshipped the same god as this site owner does.

9 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-11 00:20 ID:IxsyOXRw

If you believe that laws of logic, mathematics, science, and absolute morality are changing, then living with the expectation that they do not change would be inconsistent with your belief. No doubt, you wake up every morning expecting these laws to be the same as they were the day before. You don't think twice about drinking pure water because you know that the properties of water that nourished you yesterday will not kill you today. You don't wonder whether it will still be right to love your children tomorrow.

You see, you deny that the universal, immaterial laws of logic, mathematics, science and absolute morality are unchanging yet you base your life on their unchanging nature. Unless you reconsider your stand on this matter, your road to this site's proof that God exists ends here. It is my prayer that you give up on this irrational thinking and return to seek the truth.


They're changing slowly, numbnuts, or perhaps they didn't realize that scientists were recording different values for constants

And I don't take kindly to pity prayers.

10 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-11 12:44 ID:IxoJouJO

>>9

Uh, right.

> As Brian Petley has pointed out, it is conceivable that:
>
> (i) the velocity of light might change with time, or (ii) have a directional dependence in space, or (iii) be affected by the motion of the Earth about the Sun, or motion within our galaxy or some other reference frame.

Conceivable, if you have no idea whatsoever of scientific history, maybe. What the hell do they think Michelson and Morley were measuring, anyway?

11 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-13 01:36 ID:77SvNjma

>>1
So, this "test" basically asks a few questions and if you don't agree you are obviously wrong. Fine test that is.

The first screen has an obvious flaw, too: There is no way to say, for example

"The only absolute truth is that there is no abolute truth besides this."

or

"The only absolute truth is that we cannot know what the absolute truth is." (Bla bla only thing you cannot doubt are your doubts etc)

(And I'm not even really into philosophy, people who know a bit more about this topic could probably point out a few more things that are wrong here)

Generally, this test oversimplifies stuff which is really too complex to pack into multiple choice questions.

12 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-15 08:09 ID:gbL5yuog

They're playing with semantics, especially with the words "law" and "rules". Then they assume that the universe conforms to common sense and causality.
I have no patience for this obfuscation.

13 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-15 14:16 ID:Heaven

>>12
you assume that the universe conforms to common sense and causality, too. if you didn't you would have no reason to post here.

14 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-15 17:00 ID:gbL5yuog

>>13

What? The universe is counterintuitive, and causality stops being of any use when dealing with the Big Bang, for instance (it's built on thinking derived from language, which presupposes an inherently flawed model of the world).
I'll use common sense for the purpose it evolved: to help humans cope with eveyday events, on a human timescale. For everything beyond that, it's more trouble than it's worth.

15 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-15 22:26 ID:Heaven

If you click on "I don't care" you get redirected to Disney!

16 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-15 22:52 ID:Heaven

Anybody who studies physics knows that common sense is only common under certain, very limited, circumstances - namely, our everyday experiences. The world as a whole works significantly different to what common sense dictates.

17 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-15 23:19 ID:wfW8bl2e

>>16
I mean, seriously. Just take Chewbacca. Chewbacca is a wookie, but he lives on the planet Endor. Think about it! That doesn't make any sense!

18 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-16 04:16 ID:Heaven

>>14
the whole idea of the big bang is built on thinking derived from language. you claim that thinking derived from language "presupposes an inherently flawed model of the world". have fun untangling that mess. my theory of how the universe came to be the way it is may not be as popular as yours, but at least mine is internally consistent.

19 Name: Proofthatgodexists : 2007-01-16 10:16 ID:/8TApbcR

Hey a fellow presupper (Heaven)! Thanks for getting my back. I don't find many people that 'get' the site when I lurk these forums. Drop me an email via the site.

20 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-16 17:00 ID:IxoJouJO

>>18

What is that theory, that some god made it? That's the least internally consistent of them all! You're just shuffling the problem under the carpet by never addressing the origin of your god.

>>19

We get perfectly how you use faulty assumptions and invalid subdivisions to make invalid claims.

21 Name: Satan : 2007-01-16 17:01 ID:Heaven

PS: lol heaven.

22 Name: Proofthatgodexists : 2007-01-16 17:40 ID:nkW6Ne55

>>20

State your case, rather than make baseless assertions.

(You might want to let me know how you know that your human reasoning is valid while you are at it).

23 Name: OP : 2007-01-16 17:44 ID:Heaven

A slow start... but this is getting good. Yay.

Hey, it's you, the sitemaker! I'm the same guy who posted the link on IIDB some time back :)

24 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-16 19:16 ID:pR2UNtbO

>>22
Your "proof" is based on the assumption that you can actually prove things. Fun fact: The only thing you can prove without a doubt is that you cannot prove anything besides this without a doubt.

Think about it:

  1. You obviously cannot trust your senses, they fool you all the time (Optical illusions etc...).
  2. Because of 1), any proof that is based on observation can be doubted.
  3. The only thing you can prove without observation, only using logic, is that you can doubt everything besides your doubt.

Side thoughts:
Logic does not help you here at all. Logic needs observations to prove anything besides 3)

Laws of mathematics are a definition. Nothing. More. If I wanted to make new laws of mathematics, I would just have to get enough people to believe me.

Laws of physics are all models based on observation. Basically, someone guessed that something might behave in a certain way, and since things actually behaved that way, people called it a Law.

Fucking little boys was generally considered to be ok in ancient rome (In most asian countries 100-1000 years ago too, I think). Modern western "Laws" of morality are something that developed out of christian religion sometime in the last 2000 years.

And yes, I do base my actions on math and physics, but this doesn't change anything. You still can't prove those. You can only hope that they are indeed correct.

25 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-16 23:35 ID:5nQkvT9+

> Laws of mathematics are a definition. Nothing. More. If I wanted to make new laws of mathematics, I would just have to get enough people to believe me.

Not even that. "Laws of mathematics" are just the laws of logic applied to an arbitary set of axioms. If you choose appropriate axioms, you end up with "everyday maths". However, you are free to choose any other set. No set of axioms is any more or less valid than any other - they are completely arbitary (with the caveat that they should not be contradictory, of course).

26 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-16 23:41 ID:5nQkvT9+

Also, those little word games with "absolute truth" are just childish, especially when you never define what "absolute truth" is even supposed to mean.

Your choice of morals there is also completely invalid. You ask if absolute morals exist, and then if somebody answers no, you ask question based on the presumption that absolute morals exist, just is marginally weaker sense. It's not a valid question, and thus meaningless.

27 Name: Proofthatgodexists : 2007-01-17 05:31 ID:nkW6Ne55

>>23 Hey. I remember you, good to 'see' you again.

>>24 All you are saying is that according to your worldview, you can't know anything. Hey, I agree with you. If you wanna believe that 2 + 2 could equal 'penguin' if enough people agreed to it, that is up to you.

>>25 So, are the laws of logic, universal, immaterial, and invariant?

>>26 "Universally, objectively true."

Asking the further question just exposes the depravity of your position. So, could molesting children for fun be right according to your worldview?

28 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-17 12:16 ID:IxoJouJO

> Asking the further question just exposes the depravity of your position. So, could molesting children for fun be right according to your worldview?

Please learn some moral philosophy, and stop going around making idiotic statements like this. If you do not believe that there are universal, absolute morals, that question is compeltely meaningless, because "right" does not mean anything.

Instead, it is replaced by:

I think that molesting children is bad, under pretty much all ciurcumstances (I'll grant that there might exist some highly pathological case where it would be for the greater good, but such a situation is not likely to ever occur in real life). I do not need to invoke any higher authority on this. My own opinion suffices.

However, I can easily see that another person would consider it to be right. That does not affect my own position that it is bad.

See, just because universal morals do not exist does not automatically mean you accept everything. This is not hard to understand. Using your own ignorance of the opposing side's worldview to insult others and paint yourself suprior just makes you look like a huge asshole.

29 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-17 12:20 ID:IxoJouJO

Also,

> All you are saying is that according to your worldview, you can't know anything.

How can anyone know anything according to your worldview? If your god is omnipotent, he can deceive everyone all the time. You have no way of knowing that he doesn't.

> So, are the laws of logic, universal, immaterial, and invariant?

They may very well be. It is somewhat hard to tell. However, it is probably safe to proceed on that assumption.

> "Universally, objectively true."

Give an example.

30 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-17 14:45 ID:M6m7sssC

>>27

>Hey, I agree with you.

Which makes your proof invalid unless people, you know, believe in stuff, which religion is kind of all about anyways. Belief, not "Knowledge".

Last time I checked, God wanted people to believe in him, not to make up strange arguments to decieve themselves into thinking that all other world views cannot be logically right, which actually seems very un-christian to me. Are you so weak in your beliefs you need your God proven to you?

31 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-17 14:58 ID:Heaven

>>27
Tell me, what makes you so sure that there is no world in which 2 + 2 is 'penguin'? It makes no sense to you or me, but the only reason for this is that we have been taught so. It might make sense to beeings who are wildly different from us, who have been taught that 2 + 2 does equal penguin, and these beeings might live without any problems, too. Just because you do not understand them would not mean that they are wrong.

32 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-17 15:05 ID:Heaven

God cannot be proven using logic anyways. If you actually think God is a beeing that can be explained and proven by logic, then tell me:

If God is omnipotent, can he create a Stone so heavy that he cannot lift it?
If God is omnipotent and caring like a father, then why does evil exist?
And if God is not omnipotent, how is he God?

God can only exist outside of all human logic.

33 Name: Proofthatgodexists : 2007-01-17 18:04 ID:nkW6Ne55

>>28

> Please learn some moral philosophy, and stop going around making idiotic statements like this. If you do not believe that there are universal, absolute morals, that question is compeltely meaningless, because "right" does not mean anything.

Um, then neither does 'bad.' What is 'bad' or 'good' in a morally relative society?

34 Name: Proofthatgodexists : 2007-01-17 18:12 ID:nkW6Ne55

>>29

> How can anyone know anything according to your worldview? If your god is omnipotent, he can deceive everyone all the time. You have no way of knowing that he doesn't.

Sure I do, I know His character as revealed in His Word. You can argue against my presupposition, but it is internally consistent.

> They may very well be. It is somewhat hard to tell. However, it is probably safe to proceed on that assumption.

Why?

> Give an example.

In base 10 mathematics it is absolutely true that 2 + 2 = 4

35 Name: Proofthatgodexists : 2007-01-17 18:20 ID:nkW6Ne55

>>30

> Which makes your proof invalid unless people, you know, believe in stuff, which religion is kind of all about anyways. Belief, not "Knowledge".

All knowledge is faith based. However not all faith can be justified. Your blind faith in human reason has zero justification. Feel free to argue that point if you like.

> Last time I checked, God wanted people to believe in him,

God wants people to <i>know</i> him. The Bible teaches that everyone already 'believes' in Him. (Romans 1:18-20)

> not to make up strange arguments to decieve themselves into thinking that all other world views cannot be logically right,

Surely you do not believe that 2 opposites can both be right in the same way?!?

> which actually seems very un-christian to me. Are you so weak in your beliefs you need your God proven to you?

Nope, no one needs God proven to them. Check the website again.

36 Name: Proofthatgodexists : 2007-01-17 18:26 ID:nkW6Ne55

>>31

> Tell me, what makes you so sure that there is no world in which 2 + 2 is 'penguin'? It makes no sense to you or me, but the only reason for this is that we have been taught so. It might make sense to beeings who are wildly different from us, who have been taught that 2 + 2 does equal penguin, and these beeings might live without any problems, too. Just because you do not understand them would not mean that they are wrong.

If you want to believe that somewhere in the universe there are 'beings' that say if you take 2 things and add 2 things to them the correct result is 'penguin,' that is totally up to you.
Lets see how sure YOU are about the universality of math the next time the bank teller hands you 25 penguins when you ask for change for a hundred dollars.

37 Name: Proofthatgodexists : 2007-01-17 18:32 ID:nkW6Ne55

>>32

> God cannot be proven using logic anyways.

Prove this please.

> If you actually think God is a beeing that can be explained and proven by logic, then tell me:
> If God is omnipotent, can he create a Stone so heavy that he cannot lift it?

No. Omnipotence does not mean the ability to contradict yourself. If I was omnipotent I could walk through walls, I could not, however, walk through a wall and not walk through a wall at the same time in the same way.

> If God is omnipotent and caring like a father, then why does evil exist?

For a reason which is perfectly sufficient for God. Please show that God cannot have a morally sufficient reason for ordaining evil.

> God can only exist outside of all human logic.

Prove this please.

38 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-17 18:58 ID:Heaven

>>34

>In base 10 mathematics it is absolutely true that 2 + 2 = 4

You're still assuming things, like the english language.

>All knowledge is faith based.

That was about my point. Your "proof" is based pureley on faith. You might as well say "God exists because I told you so", which makes about as much sense.

>Lets see how sure YOU are about the universality of math the next time the bank teller hands you 25 penguins when you ask for change for a hundred dollars.

Are you dense? >>24 and >>25 said it already: Something makeing sense to a lot of people does not make it true, this is a logical fallacy. Cool people with Latin dictionaries call this "argumentum ad populum", appeal to majority. Next time, read posts before responding. Again, everyday math is an agreement between people to make life easier.
Another example for this is the value of money. People decided at some point in time to agree that paper with certain things printed on it is worth something.

>For a reason which is perfectly sufficient for God. Please show that God cannot have a morally sufficient reason for ordaining evil.

This is kind of cool. I quote:

>Rape, and child molestation, are two examples of absolute moral wrongs.

You're contradicting yourself.

39 Name: 38 cont : 2007-01-17 19:53 ID:Heaven

Oh by the way, please do tell me why >>28 was wrong when he said:

>I think that molesting children is bad, under pretty much all ciurcumstances (I'll grant that there might exist some highly pathological case where it would be for the greater good, but such a situation is not likely to ever occur in real life). I do not need to invoke any higher authority on this. My own opinion suffices.
>However, I can easily see that another person would consider it to be right. That does not affect my own position that it is bad.

I get the feeling that you can't, so you chose to only respond to a little out-of-context part of his post and hoped no one would notice. Remember, you are trying to proove something. You can not only respond to the things you want to.

Same goes for >>24:

>Fucking little boys was generally considered to be ok in ancient rome (In most asian countries 100-1000 years ago too, I think). Modern western "Laws" of morality are something that developed out of christian religion sometime in the last 2000 years.

40 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-17 23:10 ID:Heaven

> In base 10 mathematics it is absolutely true that 2 + 2 = 4
$ bc
bc 1.06
Copyright 1991-1994, 1997, 1998, 2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY.
For details type `warranty'.
ibase=3
obase=3
ibase=10
obase=10
2+2
11

41 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-18 06:55 ID:HOnWNZHX

God can fit the whole world in a ping pong ball without making the world smaller or making the ping pong ball bigger.
answer: its your fucking eyes.

of course i don't believe in god...

42 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-18 12:58 ID:IxoJouJO

> Um, then neither does 'bad.' What is 'bad' or 'good' in a morally relative society?

The terms do not exist as absolutes. That is the whole point. There is nothing magical about morals that say they have to be defined by some absolute outside authority. Humans can define their own morals just fine.

Also, moral relativism is a group term including many different views. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moral_relativism

> Sure I do, I know His character as revealed in His Word. You can argue against my presupposition, but it is internally consistent.

The how is your position any more tenable than that of a raving lunatic who bases his worldview on voices in his head? How is it any more tenable than believing in the Flying Spaghetti Monster?

>> Give an example.
> In base 10 mathematics it is absolutely true that 2 + 2 = 4

Maths is based on completely arbitary axioms. It is just as true that 2+2 equals something else entirely, if I just pick another set of axioms. The only thing that is special about the 2+2=4 case is that it has use in everday life, and thus those axioms are often used. They are no more true or false than any other, however.

An example: 2+2=1 in the S3 group. Group theory is also useful in everyday life in certain circumstances, and it is just as true.

43 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-18 13:00 ID:IYn+Nrc4

(We need a /Religion/ board, it seems...)

44 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-18 13:13 ID:IxoJouJO

> No. Omnipotence does not mean the ability to contradict yourself.

Ok. So we assume god cannot create such a rock, is that correct? Because such a rock would be a logical contradiction.

This means that there are principles God cannot break. Which ones are they, exactly? The laws of logic, it would seem. If the laws of mathematics are based on the laws of logic and the laws of physics on the laws of mathematics, does that mean that God cannot break the laws of physics, either?

45 Name: 44 : 2007-01-18 13:21 ID:Heaven

Furhtermore: If God can break the laws of physics, can he transmit information faster than the speed of light? It is well known to any student of relativity that doing so would create a violation of causality. In other words, a contradiction.

Does this mean that God is limited to the speed of light? If so, how can he be omniscient? That would include gathering information from the entire universe, and that takes billions of years at light speed. If he is omnipresent, how can he retain an identity as a single being when information can take billions of years to permeate throughout him?

46 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-18 17:28 ID:Heaven

>>44-45
unless god is the one who first came up with the idea of causality in the first place and this whole universe only exists in god's imagination...

47 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-18 21:11 ID:Heaven

>>46

Then you are pretty much denying the laws of logic.

48 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-19 04:29 ID:Heaven

>>47
your "laws of logic" are baseless assumptions.

49 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-19 11:59 ID:Heaven

>>48

Don't argue with me, argue with creator of the site. He's presupposing that they are valid, and I am just arguing under those assumptions.

50 Name: Anonymous Scientist : 2007-01-19 15:12 ID:Heaven

>>45
you humans... you think in such 3-dimensional terms...

>>49
i doubt he's ever heard of 4-ch.

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