Here on this site, one often hears from non-believers statements and questions doubting the existence of "gods", plural. Not sure why that is. Why not just question God, singular? In Western culture, that would be a more relevant question.
Hardy anyone believes in "gods" anymore. Hindus and Pagans maybe. But most folks here in in the West are either Jewish, Christian of Muslim. Monotheism is predominant.
(Whether or not Trinitarians are actual Monotheists is another debate).
But this leads to an important question. Why philosohically, (excluding reasons of upbringing or cultural conditioning) do SO many in the West believe in God, singular, as opposed to "gods" plural?
What IS the case for Monotheism, as opposed to Polytheism?
(please, this is not intended to become a "prove God or gods exists", thread)
God vs gods
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Elijah John
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God vs gods
Post #1 My theological positions:
-God created us in His image, not the other way around.
-The Bible is redeemed by it's good parts.
-Pure monotheism, simple repentance.
-YHVH is LORD
-The real Jesus is not God, the real YHVH is not a monster.
-Eternal life is a gift from the Living God.
-Keep the Commandments, keep your salvation.
-I have accepted YHVH as my Heavenly Father, LORD and Savior.
I am inspired by Jesus to worship none but YHVH, and to serve only Him.
-God created us in His image, not the other way around.
-The Bible is redeemed by it's good parts.
-Pure monotheism, simple repentance.
-YHVH is LORD
-The real Jesus is not God, the real YHVH is not a monster.
-Eternal life is a gift from the Living God.
-Keep the Commandments, keep your salvation.
-I have accepted YHVH as my Heavenly Father, LORD and Savior.
I am inspired by Jesus to worship none but YHVH, and to serve only Him.
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Zzyzx
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Post #121
;.
Perhaps that is convincing to some.
It is not uncommon to encounter this line of thinking when some Theists attempt to defend belief in invisible, undetectable, proposed, supernatural "gods." It is summarized with "Nothing can be shown to be real so it is reasonable to believe in gods that cannot be shown to be real."bishblaize wrote:Its easy to assume that the chair I'm sat on has an inherent realness. That it exists separate from myself. But that doesn't really stand up to logical scrutiny.Zzyzx wrote: However, it is difficult for me (and I trust, others) to accept your suggestion that my chair is an illusion.
The thing I am sat on is made of wooden panels with a few screws in it. Suppose I move the screws and lay the wooden panels flat on the floor. Where's the chair now? Gone! With nothing more than a swish of a screwdriver I make an inherent 'thing' with a definite 'reality' disappear entirely from the universe!
Snip
You believe that seeing a god is no more than a trick of the mind. I believe that the same can be said for all thoughts.
Perhaps that is convincing to some.
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Non-Theist
ANY of the thousands of "gods" proposed, imagined, worshiped, loved, feared, and/or fought over by humans MAY exist -- awaiting verifiable evidence
Non-Theist
ANY of the thousands of "gods" proposed, imagined, worshiped, loved, feared, and/or fought over by humans MAY exist -- awaiting verifiable evidence
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bishblaize
Post #122
[Replying to post 121 by Zzyzx]
For one Im an atheist. For two, I've literally never heard a theist say such a thing (though I've never met them all of course). And for three, that reply is little more than saying 'well its wrong' without really explaining why you think that.
For one Im an atheist. For two, I've literally never heard a theist say such a thing (though I've never met them all of course). And for three, that reply is little more than saying 'well its wrong' without really explaining why you think that.
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Zzyzx
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Post #123
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It suffices for me that readers can decide for themselves if chairs being an illusion makes sense or makes a sound argument.
Someone's theological position makes no difference in my response. I respond to what is written, not to my impression of their theology.
If you stay around the Forum a while you will see such posts.bishblaize wrote: For two, I've literally never heard a theist say such a thing (though I've never met them all of course).
I am not inclined to discuss anything serious with a person who has difficulty accepting that their chair is more than an illusion (and/or asks others to prove to them that the chair is not just an illusion).bishblaize wrote: And for three, that reply is little more than saying 'well its wrong' without really explaining why you think that.
It suffices for me that readers can decide for themselves if chairs being an illusion makes sense or makes a sound argument.
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Non-Theist
ANY of the thousands of "gods" proposed, imagined, worshiped, loved, feared, and/or fought over by humans MAY exist -- awaiting verifiable evidence
Non-Theist
ANY of the thousands of "gods" proposed, imagined, worshiped, loved, feared, and/or fought over by humans MAY exist -- awaiting verifiable evidence
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bishblaize
Post #124
[Replying to post 123 by Zzyzx]
I can't help but give a wry smile when I read your replies. By way of an experiement, consider some of the statements from your last few posts, but replacing the word 'chair' with 'God'.
What difference is there? Because the chair obviously exists? Because most readers would agree with you?
How many billions of people have believed that God(s) obviously exists? And if you had made those statements about God rather than a chair, those readers would agree with you. I don't think that counts for anything, not least on a forum where the whole point is to debate the issues at hand.
If you prefer your view on the concept of the chair to be an expression of faith and your faith to be more convincing to you than a simple 'If A Then B' style argument, then that's fine. But I don't see how you can consider such a viewpoint to be materially different from perceiving something to be the act of a god.
I can't help but give a wry smile when I read your replies. By way of an experiement, consider some of the statements from your last few posts, but replacing the word 'chair' with 'God'.
In the absence of any reasoning, are you making anything more than a statement of faith? Is that different from ignoring a logical argument and relying on a pre-existing belief of God?'You are certainly entitled to consider yourself and God to be illusions. However I am not bound to accept that reasoning.'
'However, it is difficult for me (and I trust, others) to accept your suggestion that God is an illusion.'
"I am not inclined to discuss anything serious with a person who has difficulty accepting that God is more than an illusion. (and/or asks others to prove to them that God is not just an illusion)."
What difference is there? Because the chair obviously exists? Because most readers would agree with you?
How many billions of people have believed that God(s) obviously exists? And if you had made those statements about God rather than a chair, those readers would agree with you. I don't think that counts for anything, not least on a forum where the whole point is to debate the issues at hand.
If you prefer your view on the concept of the chair to be an expression of faith and your faith to be more convincing to you than a simple 'If A Then B' style argument, then that's fine. But I don't see how you can consider such a viewpoint to be materially different from perceiving something to be the act of a god.
- Danmark
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Post #125
Your deliberate misquote experiment means little. The difference between a chair and God goes far beyond your invitation to rely on an ad populum fallacy. We can directly observe a chair. We can see it, we can feel it, it has mass. It bears our weight. We can make one and others of vastly differing belief systems will agree "That is chair." The amount of 'faith' it takes to believe in a chair is virtually non existent. None of this applies to God.bishblaize wrote: [Replying to post 123 by Zzyzx]
I can't help but give a wry smile when I read your replies. By way of an experiement, consider some of the statements from your last few posts, but replacing the word 'chair' with 'God'.
In the absence of any reasoning, are you making anything more than a statement of faith? Is that different from ignoring a logical argument and relying on a pre-existing belief of God?'You are certainly entitled to consider yourself and God to be illusions. However I am not bound to accept that reasoning.'
'However, it is difficult for me (and I trust, others) to accept your suggestion that God is an illusion.'
"I am not inclined to discuss anything serious with a person who has difficulty accepting that God is more than an illusion. (and/or asks others to prove to them that God is not just an illusion)."
What difference is there? Because the chair obviously exists? Because most readers would agree with you?
This old argument that "faith" is required to believe anything, therefore EVERYthing is a matter of faith, is ridiculous. In a way that argument says there is no difference between a single pound note and a billion pounds. The amount of faith required makes a significant difference.
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Zzyzx
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Post #126
.
"Gods" and their proposed characteristics are concepts that cannot be demonstrated to exist outside of imagination / hallucination / fantasy / mental construct
No reasoning or logical argument or pre-existing belief is required to sit in a chair, but ARE required to conceptualize an invisible, undetectable, supernatural "god" that cannot be shown to be anything more than imagination.bishblaize wrote:In the absence of any reasoning, are you making anything more than a statement of faith? Is that different from ignoring a logical argument and relying on a pre-existing belief of God?Zzyzx wrote: "I am not inclined to discuss anything serious with a person who has difficulty accepting that God is more than an illusion. (and/or asks others to prove to them that God is not just an illusion)."
Are you actually asking for a difference between a chair and a god?bishblaize wrote: What difference is there?
The existence of a chair can be demonstrated with a wide range of repeatable, verifiable tests or experiments that those interested and motivated can perform. The existence of a proposed "god" cannot be demonstrated by repeatable, verifiable tests or experiments that those interested and motivated can performbishblaize wrote: Because the chair obviously exists?
Argumentum ad populum is faulty whether applied to existence of chairs or gods.bishblaize wrote: Because most readers would agree with you?
That most people in the US agree that "God" exists is no indication that it does.bishblaize wrote: How many billions of people have believed that God(s) obviously exists?
I do not ask that anyone agree with me (or care whether they do or not). What I DO suggest is that people make sound decisions based upon consideration of evidence from wide-ranging, disconnected sources that they can verify.bishblaize wrote: And if you had made those statements about God rather than a chair, those readers would agree with you.
The "point" of debate for me is to present ideas for readers to consider and evaluate.bishblaize wrote: I don't think that counts for anything, not least on a forum where the whole point is to debate the issues at hand.
The chairs in my world are not concepts, they are objects. I can demonstrate their existence and their characteristics to anyone interested and motivated.bishblaize wrote: If you prefer your view on the concept of the chair to be an expression of faith and your faith to be more convincing to you than a simple 'If A Then B' style argument, then that's fine. But I don't see how you can consider such a viewpoint to be materially different from perceiving something to be the act of a god.
"Gods" and their proposed characteristics are concepts that cannot be demonstrated to exist outside of imagination / hallucination / fantasy / mental construct
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Non-Theist
ANY of the thousands of "gods" proposed, imagined, worshiped, loved, feared, and/or fought over by humans MAY exist -- awaiting verifiable evidence
Non-Theist
ANY of the thousands of "gods" proposed, imagined, worshiped, loved, feared, and/or fought over by humans MAY exist -- awaiting verifiable evidence
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DanieltheDragon
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Post #127
[Replying to post 124 by bishblaize]
What you are advocating really is solipsism. Which has no real value in anything related to debate. It reduces everything to an illusion therefore nothing is knowable and nothing is debatable. After all we could just be brains in a vat programmed to experience what we feel and touch. At some point yes we have to make some logical pre-suppositions like I exist and the chair I am sitting on exists. The question is what do we include and exclude in these suppositions. We use reason to sort that out. Is it reasonable to assume I am sitting on a chair? Is it reasonable to believe in something that has no evidence to exist? These are two very different questions.
I will give solipsism some merit for self awareness that is its main value, not debate.
What you are advocating really is solipsism. Which has no real value in anything related to debate. It reduces everything to an illusion therefore nothing is knowable and nothing is debatable. After all we could just be brains in a vat programmed to experience what we feel and touch. At some point yes we have to make some logical pre-suppositions like I exist and the chair I am sitting on exists. The question is what do we include and exclude in these suppositions. We use reason to sort that out. Is it reasonable to assume I am sitting on a chair? Is it reasonable to believe in something that has no evidence to exist? These are two very different questions.
I will give solipsism some merit for self awareness that is its main value, not debate.
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bishblaize
Post #128
[Replying to post 125 by Danmark]
I can only assume you didn't read my previous posts. Fair enough, there's a lot of posts on here to read. However you do seem to have taken my tongue in cheek reductio ad absurdum post at face value and swapped my actual position as an atheist stating that logical arguments should be considered on logical grounds, not merely 'because it is so', and made out that I'm arguing that since someone believes in a chair they should believe in God. How ironic irony can be.
Suffice to say that was not my argument. My argument was that all thoughts of the mind are interpretations of the things we see, taste, feel, hear etc.
I can only assume you didn't read my previous posts. Fair enough, there's a lot of posts on here to read. However you do seem to have taken my tongue in cheek reductio ad absurdum post at face value and swapped my actual position as an atheist stating that logical arguments should be considered on logical grounds, not merely 'because it is so', and made out that I'm arguing that since someone believes in a chair they should believe in God. How ironic irony can be.
Suffice to say that was not my argument. My argument was that all thoughts of the mind are interpretations of the things we see, taste, feel, hear etc.
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bishblaize
Post #129
[Replying to post 127 by DanieltheDragon]
The non-existence of self and that all phenomena are empty are key aspects of Buddhism and that was my position.
I've never really looked at solipsism though, which I'll go and read up on.
Clearly I dont think about such things when deciding what shirt to put on in the morning or when talking to my two year old. However if there was ever a place for such a debate, this is probably it. Considering the experience of someone's meeting with God is the time to review the fundamentals.
The non-existence of self and that all phenomena are empty are key aspects of Buddhism and that was my position.
I've never really looked at solipsism though, which I'll go and read up on.
Clearly I dont think about such things when deciding what shirt to put on in the morning or when talking to my two year old. However if there was ever a place for such a debate, this is probably it. Considering the experience of someone's meeting with God is the time to review the fundamentals.
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bishblaize
Post #130
[Replying to post 126 by Zzyzx]
I can tell from your reply you didn't understand my main argument. Apologies, this is no doubt my poor explanation of what is a fairly hard to explain concept.
If you're not interested, you're not interested. However the non-existence of self and the emptiness of phenomena are fairly central concepts to me. I won't labour the point, other than to say that as an atheist I found the concept extremely eye opening and worthy of more reading, particularly when we consider what constitutes the true and false experiences of our lives.
I can tell from your reply you didn't understand my main argument. Apologies, this is no doubt my poor explanation of what is a fairly hard to explain concept.
If you're not interested, you're not interested. However the non-existence of self and the emptiness of phenomena are fairly central concepts to me. I won't labour the point, other than to say that as an atheist I found the concept extremely eye opening and worthy of more reading, particularly when we consider what constitutes the true and false experiences of our lives.

