by stephiebaby » November 3rd, 2009, 1:41 am
"In the question of God, where does the burden of proof lie? "
This isn't actually a question. The FACT is that the burden of proof lies with believers. If it was any other topic than religion (bigfoot for example) no one would ask this question. The only reason to try and disput this fact is if one is a believer because this burden is always too much for them. They would rather reject reason and logic, and insist all others do the same, to keep their fragile beliefs intact. But only for their own religion. Ask them about another religion and they will require proof.
The fact is religion is very old, and as a species our very concept of god comes from old dead religions. So old they most likely do not even come from our species, there is evidence of religion in protohumans. And who were these gods? The sun and the moon, fire, the dark. Simple things primitive people encountered but did not understand. So they made up meanings so they could pretend to understand, because if you understand something it can't hurt you, and you can use it. Pretending to understand won't keep you safe, but it will keep you blissfully ignorant, unafraid. This is the basis of all religion. There is nothing in any religion to suggest there is more to the concept of god than what was handed down from our primitive ancestors.
"It aims to prove to us that God simply HAS to exist. "
This is religion, whatever name it hides behind. Anyone who says god HAS to exist, instead of proving god DOES exist, is preaching their beliefs and nothing more. In this case they are starting with the assumption god does exist, because of their religion or culture, then they try to convince themselves and others that their assumption HAS to exist, simply because it's theirs.
When it comes to proof of gods, one does not first assume something which has no proof. One must begin with the universe as we know it, including the social historical origins of the concept of god. With everything we know, there is no evidence of any gods of any kind, and no reason to even assume any gods exist. The only reason a person would even consider the concept of a god is because they have been exposed to it through their culture (or indoctrinated through their religion).
"A hundred real thalers (thalers were a german coin) do not contain one coin more than a hundred possible thalers."
Take this idea to a racetrack and see if it works in real life. Take $10000 to the racetrack and bet it all on the first even money bet you can find. I doubt anyone will do that, because the 10000 you have contains 10000 more dollars than what you could possibly win, and favourites don't always win.
"For example, someone may say that there is an invisible insubstantial all-powerful God ruling the universe. In this case, it would be up to them to prove such a being exists.
I might reply that their God is an immature figment of their imagination. It would be up to me to prove that this is the case. "
Actually you would not have to prove that. Unless they could prove their claim then that is exactly what their god is. You don't have to prove where a person started, they already did that.
"They may reply that I am merely wrongheaded and need God's love. It would be up to them to prove that it would help."
No, you are jumping ahead. Just because you correctly told them their god does not exist (because they had not proven it's existence) does not mean they can ignore the first step and start defending their god. If they mention love or acting a certain way, or needing to believe, then you remind them that their god still does not exist and it is up to them to prove it's existence before the conversation can proceed.
"I was flipping through the channels and it saids in 2012 Jesus is coming again, it will be his second coming, plus in the code book of that guy that knew what was to become of the world has been true to this day least what I saw and heared in a real doc show with the real one, not the dumb movie the real book, it also says earth destroyed in 2012 by metor, another part they found says 2012 earth saved, so that makes it a 50% thing."
This is some nut trying to connect the dots with the Mayan calender which runs out in 2012. It's just another doomsday theory, they are everywhere. 2012 is a popular date because of the romanticised view of the Mayans, but 2000 was also popular simply because of all those 0's. In fact years that end in 5 or 0 are the most popular for doomsday predictions. As for religious docos, watch them carefully. Most are just people preaching their beliefs, not actually proving anything. The good ones tell the myth story with some nutters giving their opinion, then they have a voice of reason explaining why it's all just mythology. None provide proof of the supernatural.
"i used to be an atheist but could not think of any thing good to say while getting a blow job"
Ooh (insert name here). The person giving it to you deserves the praise, not an imaginary creature.
"Jesus's proposals have never been good for tyrants and thieves. "
Are you kidding? Any and all gods are good for tyrants. You may want to take a closer look at the biblical jesus, and the wrathful god standing behind him, and the lake of fire below him. Fear and control are the main components of christianity, not peace and love.