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Religion
In reply to the discussion: Where Do We Come From?: The 7 Most Intriguing Philosophical Arguments for the Existence of God [View all]stopbush
(24,812 posts)63. That would be the Gospel of Thomas.
It's possible that some of that book made its way into Revelation. Many early church leaders considered it to be heretical.
But you're correct in saying that there is no final judgement in the Gospel of Thomas.
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Where Do We Come From?: The 7 Most Intriguing Philosophical Arguments for the Existence of God [View all]
BridgeTheGap
Feb 2014
OP
The author himself admits that many are "easily refuted" philosophically. And they have been
Brettongarcia
Feb 2014
#78
The most-interesting question is actually "why is there something instead of nothing?"
stopbush
Feb 2014
#135
Lawrence Krauss addresses that question in his book, "A Universe From Nothing."
stopbush
Feb 2014
#166
Maybe that's where your author is coming from: "space" implies certain presuppositions/things
Brettongarcia
Feb 2014
#185
The simulation conjecture has some pretty solid math and physics behind it.
Warren Stupidity
Feb 2014
#57
Most philosophers today would call them "semantic." They play on oddities of words; "equivocation"
Brettongarcia
Feb 2014
#81
Epicurus they say, did not believe in God. He's one of the better ancient philosophers
Brettongarcia
Feb 2014
#122
I did read it. These are old and hackneyed arguments that can be dismissed with
stopbush
Feb 2014
#21
The author says many can be easily dismissed, I say all can be easily dismissed.
stopbush
Feb 2014
#26
So an uncited picking from wikipedia is what you base your definition of god on?
cbayer
Feb 2014
#49
One would hope that the anti-religionists could come up with anything - anything - new.
rug
Feb 2014
#69
No I don't see the implication, if the intent is to relate his paradox in some fashion to science.
rug
Feb 2014
#105
Which leaves me with my view that religion does not exist to explain how the universe works.
rug
Feb 2014
#114
At least two of the eight attributes in his "Scientific God Model" game the results.
rug
Feb 2014
#102
Those aren't Stenger's parameters, per se. They're the parameters that are common to
stopbush
Feb 2014
#120
It is that but it's also something so far outside physical laws as to be unreachable.
rug
Feb 2014
#138
"As I said, I'll wait to see if his math holds up after others trained in it examine it. "
edhopper
Feb 2014
#145
When the number of names dropped reaches four, it's a safe bet there's an appeal to authority.
rug
Feb 2014
#151
Here's an easy experiment to disprove the existence of the Christian God:
Brettongarcia
Feb 2014
#174
How do you as a Christian reconcile Jesus saying that he will condemn to eternal hellfire
stopbush
Feb 2014
#42
Most likely some other Gnostic tome. Many of them agree on basics like the "no hell" meme.
stopbush
Feb 2014
#65
The difference between me and believers (like you) is that you disbelieve in only ONE fewer gods
stopbush
Feb 2014
#43
Actually, the "one fewer god" argument is a great argument that never goes out of style.
stopbush
Feb 2014
#58
No, it's just another piece of dogmatic tripe pulled from the usual play books.
cbayer
Feb 2014
#163
Anybody taking the "religion" side in these arguments can't really demand original ideas
stopbush
Feb 2014
#167
There's your problem. There really is no common ground between religion and atheism.
stopbush
Feb 2014
#179
True, but that common ground is found outside of our religious belief or non-belief.
stopbush
Feb 2014
#181
Except that no one says that, cbayer. It's just something else you made up
skepticscott
Feb 2014
#91
I didn't compare death to Disneyland. I compared belief in an afterlife to Disneyland.
stopbush
Feb 2014
#95
I suppose it might be interesting to unpack these arguments, to see the underlying mechanisms,
struggle4progress
Feb 2014
#70
When philosophy entertains this question, has it left the realm of philosophy?
BridgeTheGap
Feb 2014
#79