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  • D David Wulff

    Just wanted to know what ur definition of God is? God is a mythical entity, loosely based on our own consciousness, that we can use to give security, control, comfort and meaning to our lives. That is my description, but according to The Little Oxford Dictionary, god is a superhuman being worshipped as possessing divine power. True story: as I was looking that up, I mistakenly read the definition of “goby” as that of “god”: A small fish with ventral [abdominal] fins joined into a disk or sucker Luckily though I thought “this doesn’t sound right” before blindly copying it out. ;) Do you think God created You or did You create God? I think my definition above will answer this from me, but this question really has no meaning. Surrounding my reply you will have people stating both, some as beliefs, some as facts, but each person will justify their own interpretations, so not really giving you an answer you can use. God you’ve gotta love religion. ________________ David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk "I loathe people who keep dogs. They are cowards who haven't got the guts to bite people themselves" - August Strindberg

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    John McIlroy
    wrote on last edited by
    #4

    Interesting... but the whole argument that people invented God to give "security, comfort and meaning to our lives" has always seemed exactly backward to me. I've never figured out why creatures--supposedly the product of random evolutive power--would ever have a need for meaning or security. I doubt goldfish or gophers spend much time pondering existential truths. JM

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    • D David Wulff

      Just wanted to know what ur definition of God is? God is a mythical entity, loosely based on our own consciousness, that we can use to give security, control, comfort and meaning to our lives. That is my description, but according to The Little Oxford Dictionary, god is a superhuman being worshipped as possessing divine power. True story: as I was looking that up, I mistakenly read the definition of “goby” as that of “god”: A small fish with ventral [abdominal] fins joined into a disk or sucker Luckily though I thought “this doesn’t sound right” before blindly copying it out. ;) Do you think God created You or did You create God? I think my definition above will answer this from me, but this question really has no meaning. Surrounding my reply you will have people stating both, some as beliefs, some as facts, but each person will justify their own interpretations, so not really giving you an answer you can use. God you’ve gotta love religion. ________________ David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk "I loathe people who keep dogs. They are cowards who haven't got the guts to bite people themselves" - August Strindberg

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      Sijin
      wrote on last edited by
      #5

      God is a mythical entity, loosely based on our own consciousness, that we can use to give security, comfort and meaning to our lives. Couldn't have put it better..

      Warning: Do not execute #include "stdio.h" int main(void) { printf("12\t\b\b"); printf("12\t\b\b"); return 0; } Sonork ID 100.9997 sijinjoseph

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      • S Sijin

        I was initially going to post this in the Christian Thread but i guess it deserves a thread of it's own. Just wanted to know what ur definition of God is? and Do you think God created You or did You create God?

        Warning: Do not execute #include "stdio.h" int main(void) { printf("12\t\b\b"); printf("12\t\b\b"); return 0; } Sonork ID 100.9997 sijinjoseph

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        Stan Shannon
        wrote on last edited by
        #6

        God is that which is responsible for what is. "But, daddy, that was back in the hippie ages..." My twelve year old son - winning the argument. "Stan, you are an intelligent guy who responds in meaningful ways" Paul Watson 16/10/01

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        • J John McIlroy

          Interesting... but the whole argument that people invented God to give "security, comfort and meaning to our lives" has always seemed exactly backward to me. I've never figured out why creatures--supposedly the product of random evolutive power--would ever have a need for meaning or security. I doubt goldfish or gophers spend much time pondering existential truths. JM

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          David Wulff
          wrote on last edited by
          #7

          "Intellect seeks answers. Answers are not what intellect likes. Intellect invents answers." E.g. What happens after we die? Why is there so much suffering in the world. Are we alone? Why is life so unfair? ... The list is infinite. Humans are intelligent creatures. That's not to say that Gophers and Aardvarks aren't, but they are intelligent in their own way which is more concerned with survival. I suspect that a million years or so of [up till now] increased use of our brains*, have meant we have more brain to use, and it is quite possible that "free thinking" is a side effect of that. * i.e. we have a physical need to learn more than a gopher does. ________________ David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk "I loathe people who keep dogs. They are cowards who haven't got the guts to bite people themselves" - August Strindberg

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          • D David Wulff

            "Intellect seeks answers. Answers are not what intellect likes. Intellect invents answers." E.g. What happens after we die? Why is there so much suffering in the world. Are we alone? Why is life so unfair? ... The list is infinite. Humans are intelligent creatures. That's not to say that Gophers and Aardvarks aren't, but they are intelligent in their own way which is more concerned with survival. I suspect that a million years or so of [up till now] increased use of our brains*, have meant we have more brain to use, and it is quite possible that "free thinking" is a side effect of that. * i.e. we have a physical need to learn more than a gopher does. ________________ David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk "I loathe people who keep dogs. They are cowards who haven't got the guts to bite people themselves" - August Strindberg

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            John McIlroy
            wrote on last edited by
            #8

            Again, interesting. People have roughly known where we come from for thousands of years. In the last 50 biology has told us exactly how it works. So why isn't the intellect satisfied? Why does the intellect even begin to think there is something corresponding to "ultimate reality"? There is no utilitarian reason to think there is an ultimate reality or that we would garner any immediate, tangible benefit from knowing what is was. The drive isn't "intellectual" it is spiritual. JM

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            • J John McIlroy

              Interesting... but the whole argument that people invented God to give "security, comfort and meaning to our lives" has always seemed exactly backward to me. I've never figured out why creatures--supposedly the product of random evolutive power--would ever have a need for meaning or security. I doubt goldfish or gophers spend much time pondering existential truths. JM

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              Sijin
              wrote on last edited by
              #9

              I doubt goldfish or gophers spend much time pondering existential truths. Are they self-aware??.. You didn't say what ur defn. of God was?

              Warning: Do not execute #include "stdio.h" int main(void) { printf("12\t\b\b"); printf("12\t\b\b"); return 0; } Sonork ID 100.9997 sijinjoseph

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              • J John McIlroy

                Again, interesting. People have roughly known where we come from for thousands of years. In the last 50 biology has told us exactly how it works. So why isn't the intellect satisfied? Why does the intellect even begin to think there is something corresponding to "ultimate reality"? There is no utilitarian reason to think there is an ultimate reality or that we would garner any immediate, tangible benefit from knowing what is was. The drive isn't "intellectual" it is spiritual. JM

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                David Wulff
                wrote on last edited by
                #10

                John McIlroy wrote: People have roughly known where we come from for thousands of years For the past few thousands of years people believed their local equivalent of the Christian's Genesis creation story to the letter. More recently (in the grand scale of things) we have began to find more and more evidence to the contrary. But, this was not my point. The intellect wasn't satisified because, as I stated, "Intellect seeks answers. Answers are not what intellect likes. Intellect invents answers." Intellect's answer is a supreme divine being. Intellect likes the sound of that... Which would you prefer: A crappy life where afterwards youm get to live in ecstasy for eternity, or a crappy life where you die and are remembered for maybe two generations. I know which i'd choose if I didn't know better. However, I suspect that "path" was not what you meant, and you actually meant more along the lines of "why would we develop the need to seek answers in the first place"? In which case, I have already answered you in my previous reply. Or was your question "none of the above"? ________________ David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk "I loathe people who keep dogs. They are cowards who haven't got the guts to bite people themselves" - August Strindberg

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                • S Stan Shannon

                  God is that which is responsible for what is. "But, daddy, that was back in the hippie ages..." My twelve year old son - winning the argument. "Stan, you are an intelligent guy who responds in meaningful ways" Paul Watson 16/10/01

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                  Tim Deveaux
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #11

                  God is that which is responsible for what is. I prefer Spinoza's concept of 'that which is its own efficient cause' - 'caus essui' if I recall the Latin phrase. The difference, I think, is that your statement doesn't necessarily make you a panthiest. Right. I'll stop telling you what you think and go tape some knobs on a couple of hockey sticks. :)

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                  • S Sijin

                    I doubt goldfish or gophers spend much time pondering existential truths. Are they self-aware??.. You didn't say what ur defn. of God was?

                    Warning: Do not execute #include "stdio.h" int main(void) { printf("12\t\b\b"); printf("12\t\b\b"); return 0; } Sonork ID 100.9997 sijinjoseph

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                    John McIlroy
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #12

                    Well this is really the kind of conversation you need to have after a few drinks in warm pub on a cold winter night. So I'm not really in a position to trot out an entire apologia... but I just always thought the "people invented God" argument was totally illogical. Our lives and language are full on non-physical ideas and concepts that directly point to a non-physical dimension of our experience here on earth. But I don't have the time or energy to develop the whole thesis here.

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                    • J John McIlroy

                      Again, interesting. People have roughly known where we come from for thousands of years. In the last 50 biology has told us exactly how it works. So why isn't the intellect satisfied? Why does the intellect even begin to think there is something corresponding to "ultimate reality"? There is no utilitarian reason to think there is an ultimate reality or that we would garner any immediate, tangible benefit from knowing what is was. The drive isn't "intellectual" it is spiritual. JM

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                      Sijin
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #13

                      So basically God wants us to think about him?.. There is no utilitarian reason to think there is an ultimate reality or that we would garner any immediate, tangible benefit from knowing what is was. Why not?..That is one of the biggest mysteries..if we can get such a rush squashing bugs(software ones) why wouldn't we want an answet to such a big question?.."Why do we exist?"

                      Warning: Do not execute #include "stdio.h" int main(void) { printf("12\t\b\b"); printf("12\t\b\b"); return 0; } Sonork ID 100.9997 sijinjoseph

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                      • J John McIlroy

                        Well this is really the kind of conversation you need to have after a few drinks in warm pub on a cold winter night. So I'm not really in a position to trot out an entire apologia... but I just always thought the "people invented God" argument was totally illogical. Our lives and language are full on non-physical ideas and concepts that directly point to a non-physical dimension of our experience here on earth. But I don't have the time or energy to develop the whole thesis here.

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                        David Wulff
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #14

                        You buy the first round and i'll come. Deal? ;) ________________ David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk "I loathe people who keep dogs. They are cowards who haven't got the guts to bite people themselves" - August Strindberg

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                        • J John McIlroy

                          Well this is really the kind of conversation you need to have after a few drinks in warm pub on a cold winter night. So I'm not really in a position to trot out an entire apologia... but I just always thought the "people invented God" argument was totally illogical. Our lives and language are full on non-physical ideas and concepts that directly point to a non-physical dimension of our experience here on earth. But I don't have the time or energy to develop the whole thesis here.

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                          Sijin
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #15

                          Our lives and language are full on non-physical ideas and concepts that directly point to a non-physical dimension of our experience here on earth Well John you say a lot of deep stuff but you don't support anything with examples or proof.. Ok Let me ask you this...why did God create us?..

                          Warning: Do not execute #include "stdio.h" int main(void) { printf("12\t\b\b"); printf("12\t\b\b"); return 0; } Sonork ID 100.9997 sijinjoseph

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                          • D David Wulff

                            John McIlroy wrote: People have roughly known where we come from for thousands of years For the past few thousands of years people believed their local equivalent of the Christian's Genesis creation story to the letter. More recently (in the grand scale of things) we have began to find more and more evidence to the contrary. But, this was not my point. The intellect wasn't satisified because, as I stated, "Intellect seeks answers. Answers are not what intellect likes. Intellect invents answers." Intellect's answer is a supreme divine being. Intellect likes the sound of that... Which would you prefer: A crappy life where afterwards youm get to live in ecstasy for eternity, or a crappy life where you die and are remembered for maybe two generations. I know which i'd choose if I didn't know better. However, I suspect that "path" was not what you meant, and you actually meant more along the lines of "why would we develop the need to seek answers in the first place"? In which case, I have already answered you in my previous reply. Or was your question "none of the above"? ________________ David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk "I loathe people who keep dogs. They are cowards who haven't got the guts to bite people themselves" - August Strindberg

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                            John McIlroy
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #16

                            Well... what can I say. Now you've invented intellect as the arbiter in determining "good" answers and "bad" answers. Ones it likes and ones it doesn't like. Let's first leave out the obvious limitation that intellect itself is a completely non-physical concept to begin with. If we are only going to deal with the physical and not the spiritual... intellect is one of the first things that we must leave behind. If intellect were really the faculty in question wouldn't it embrace that which is true and verifiable, and abandon that which is untrue and non-verifiable? Where would "like" enter the picture? But in reality, spirituality is only secondarily a function of the intellect, and even that is the junior partner. It is primarily a function of the will... to love. But like I said to fully develop these concepts would take a lot of effort and time... which are in short supply. But it seems foolhardy and spurious to use a non-physical, spiritual faculty like intellect as the rationale for the human invention of spiritual ideas like God.

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                            • S Sijin

                              Our lives and language are full on non-physical ideas and concepts that directly point to a non-physical dimension of our experience here on earth Well John you say a lot of deep stuff but you don't support anything with examples or proof.. Ok Let me ask you this...why did God create us?..

                              Warning: Do not execute #include "stdio.h" int main(void) { printf("12\t\b\b"); printf("12\t\b\b"); return 0; } Sonork ID 100.9997 sijinjoseph

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                              John McIlroy
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #17

                              Sijin As long as you are only going to ask the easy questions... Ok Let me ask you this...why did God create us?.. The long answer might take a few years on a mountaintop to fully understand... but the Baltimore Catechism short answer would be: "To know Him and serve Him in this life... and live with Him for eternity in the next life." JM

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                              • J John McIlroy

                                Well... what can I say. Now you've invented intellect as the arbiter in determining "good" answers and "bad" answers. Ones it likes and ones it doesn't like. Let's first leave out the obvious limitation that intellect itself is a completely non-physical concept to begin with. If we are only going to deal with the physical and not the spiritual... intellect is one of the first things that we must leave behind. If intellect were really the faculty in question wouldn't it embrace that which is true and verifiable, and abandon that which is untrue and non-verifiable? Where would "like" enter the picture? But in reality, spirituality is only secondarily a function of the intellect, and even that is the junior partner. It is primarily a function of the will... to love. But like I said to fully develop these concepts would take a lot of effort and time... which are in short supply. But it seems foolhardy and spurious to use a non-physical, spiritual faculty like intellect as the rationale for the human invention of spiritual ideas like God.

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                                David Wulff
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #18

                                Okay, so maybe intellect was a bad choice of word. Maybe "intellectual being" would have been more appropriate. If intellect were really the faculty in question wouldn't it embrace that which is true and verifiable, and abandon that which is untrue and non-verifiable? If you ask a religion man if he believes his faith is based on the truth, what will he answer? Where would "like" enter the picture? Once upon a time, when man knew no better, he was asked by hid child "Daddy, why did Grandaddy die?". The man thought long and hard about this question, then as he had no idea, answered that the child's grandfather had gone to a place so wonderful that it couldn't be described; so brilliant that it couldn't be imagined. So convienient that the child could find no more questions to ask. In other words, the belief in a superhuman divine being will answer any question that you want. But it seems foolhardy and spurious to use a non-physical, spiritual faculty like intellect as the rationale for the human invention of spiritual ideas like God. Whoa - I never said this was where religion came from, only why religion is so easy for an intellectual being to adopt and embrace. I believe religion as we know it today was based on many things, primarily the need to answer basic questions such as why did grandaddy die, and why are we starving (thus heaven was formed); and also from rulers to put the fear of god into people and get them to obey their masters and not revolt ("and then there was hell"). Taking the Bible as an example, it was written over hundreds of years, no doubt based on countless different stories told through hundreds of generations. ________________ David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk All things are possible except skiing through a revolving door. — Murphy's Laws of Technology

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                                • T Tim Deveaux

                                  God is that which is responsible for what is. I prefer Spinoza's concept of 'that which is its own efficient cause' - 'caus essui' if I recall the Latin phrase. The difference, I think, is that your statement doesn't necessarily make you a panthiest. Right. I'll stop telling you what you think and go tape some knobs on a couple of hockey sticks. :)

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                                  John McIlroy
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #19

                                  Tim, You're not a Thomist? I thought it was "esse principi." But God himself told us His name to Moses in Exodus. I believe He called himself.... "I AM who AM." That about sums it up! JM

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                                  • J John McIlroy

                                    Sijin As long as you are only going to ask the easy questions... Ok Let me ask you this...why did God create us?.. The long answer might take a few years on a mountaintop to fully understand... but the Baltimore Catechism short answer would be: "To know Him and serve Him in this life... and live with Him for eternity in the next life." JM

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                                    David Wulff
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #20

                                    So basically he created some friends so he wouldn't be lonely, that would look after him and care for him. I couldn't have put it better myself, only I would make one small change (switch "god" with "man"). ________________ David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk "I loathe people who keep dogs. They are cowards who haven't got the guts to bite people themselves" - August Strindberg

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                                    • D David Wulff

                                      Okay, so maybe intellect was a bad choice of word. Maybe "intellectual being" would have been more appropriate. If intellect were really the faculty in question wouldn't it embrace that which is true and verifiable, and abandon that which is untrue and non-verifiable? If you ask a religion man if he believes his faith is based on the truth, what will he answer? Where would "like" enter the picture? Once upon a time, when man knew no better, he was asked by hid child "Daddy, why did Grandaddy die?". The man thought long and hard about this question, then as he had no idea, answered that the child's grandfather had gone to a place so wonderful that it couldn't be described; so brilliant that it couldn't be imagined. So convienient that the child could find no more questions to ask. In other words, the belief in a superhuman divine being will answer any question that you want. But it seems foolhardy and spurious to use a non-physical, spiritual faculty like intellect as the rationale for the human invention of spiritual ideas like God. Whoa - I never said this was where religion came from, only why religion is so easy for an intellectual being to adopt and embrace. I believe religion as we know it today was based on many things, primarily the need to answer basic questions such as why did grandaddy die, and why are we starving (thus heaven was formed); and also from rulers to put the fear of god into people and get them to obey their masters and not revolt ("and then there was hell"). Taking the Bible as an example, it was written over hundreds of years, no doubt based on countless different stories told through hundreds of generations. ________________ David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk All things are possible except skiing through a revolving door. — Murphy's Laws of Technology

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                                      John McIlroy
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #21

                                      David... The thing I find so fascinating is the insistence that death and separation would be in any way frightening, unnatural or in need of an explanation if we lived in a world limited to the physical. If everything eventually died, and if death was as natural as eating and breathing... why would it raise any questions or fears at all. Why would an explanation be necessary? Who would ever think to ask the question? To a fish... breathing in water is no mystery. It is completely and totally "natural." It is a very basic question... why would anyone fear death, or require mysterious explanations for life and its meaning or ultimate reality if all any human being had ever known was a life that ended in death. If the physical is the only reality that there ever was... why would we have such a panic and unease at something that is such an integral part of that natural physical milieu? To me... the fear of death and separation... and the need for understanding ultimate realities is an indication that in fact "death" is very unnatural to us, not what we were created for, and very much against the way we were "spiritually" wired. For a spiritual creature created in God's image and destined to live forever... death is a wholly unnatural event that breeds fear and unease... and is all wrong... and therfore is demanding of explanations and rationals. If our exstince was completely and totally limited to the physical I doubt we would give death a second thought. Not that we wouldn't instinctually try and avoid death (although that is another interesting topic)... but it wouldn't be in any way "surprising" or "fearful" or in need of any fancy explanations of God to make more palpable. We would live and die and not give either the slightest consideration. JM

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                                      • D David Wulff

                                        So basically he created some friends so he wouldn't be lonely, that would look after him and care for him. I couldn't have put it better myself, only I would make one small change (switch "god" with "man"). ________________ David Wulff http://www.davidwulff.co.uk "I loathe people who keep dogs. They are cowards who haven't got the guts to bite people themselves" - August Strindberg

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                                        John McIlroy
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #22

                                        I don't remember saying anything about lonely, but I guess three messages is about the limit in terms of refraining from juvenile ridicule.

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                                        • J John McIlroy

                                          Tim, You're not a Thomist? I thought it was "esse principi." But God himself told us His name to Moses in Exodus. I believe He called himself.... "I AM who AM." That about sums it up! JM

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                                          Tim Deveaux
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #23

                                          No - More's supreme being still implies a dichotomy between the creator and her creation. Check this link for more on what I was getting at: http://frank.mtsu.edu/~rbombard/RB/Spinoza/arg.html

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