1. On your criticism to my idea of defining God: you see, if God is left
undefined, then how will we even know when we have found God? It simply is a
philosophical dead-end then, to search for something, when that
something happens to be an experience we have no clue of. Even though we
have not yet perceived God, we can still *anticipate/expect *some experience
that we might, depending on our idea of God, possibly experience in the
future. You can think of God as the grey-bearded old man with a lot
of advice and kindness, you can think of God as the ultimate unificatory
quantum equation of the universe, you can think of God in many ways. If you
have some expectation in mind, only then will you know if you have found God
or not.

>How is this obvious?  Do atheists acknowledge the
>existence of that which they cannot see?  Do they accept the existence of a
>divinity as a logical principle?

Atheists have to acknowledge a higher power. If there is no entity governing
them, then do they imply that they have all the power in the world? If there
are any limits to your powers, then obviously there is a higher power
(unless you yourself chose to have lesser power, in which case you should be
able to gain back the power to be able to not believe in a higher power).
Atheists primarily don't believe in a personal God. I have known atheists
who believe in a God (as in, a higher power) but they deny that he should be
something you pray to and get rewards from. This is why I have stuck to my
idea of first having a clear idea of what to expect when we're trying to
find God. As the famous song goes, if you don't know where you're going, any
road will take you there.

>Do you refute the fact that what
>you've defined as "obvious" -- "a highest power governing this universe" --
>has some consequence
>for man?

Maybe it does have some consequence. That is simply what I meant by my
second statement. Let's see now... we know there is a higher power. Now, let
us see if this higher power cares about us enough and actually answers our
wishes. The question "does God exist?" is of low importance because it's
very simple, it's a mere yes or no question.

I do understand my mistake there. I made it sound as if all the stuff about
God was simply meaningless, which was not what I intended at all. You see,
depending on your idea of God, the question can be answered. Now, the case
is entirely different when all you know about God is "highest power" and
you're investigating its characteristics. This scenario was completely
outside the domains of the two statements I made. What I commented was only
on whether the entity (highest power) exists, not on the features of this
entity, which is of course a lifelong pursuit of truth.

Akshay



On 29/01/2008, Ham Priday <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Akshay --
>
>
> The reason I responded to your 1/20 post is that one so logical and
> articulate in his analysis of other matters could toss off the existence
> of
> God as an irrelevant issue.  It seems to me that there is no single belief
> in the annals of philosophy that is more paramount to man's understanding
> of
> meaning and purpose in existence.
>
> Your assertion that "We only have to define God and then find out if such
> an
> entity exists," is ludicrous for several reasons.  First of all, a
> definition is a statement designed to express the meaning of a word or
> term
> in common usage.  To define something that is unknown and not experienced,
> let alone believed in, is a fabrication out of whole cloth.  One might as
> well define the tooth fairy or the Easter bunny.
>
> So the logical process of definition begins with naming what we know or
> experience, then narrowing down that name to express its essence or
> nature.
> Since, unless we've had a mystical experience, we don't know God as an
> entity, and are therefore unable to define it.  But the fact that God is
> not
> accessible to man does not mean that God doesn't exist.
>
> You now say:
> > [I]t is very obvious that there is a highest power
> > governing this universe, who is to the universe what a
> > dreamer is to the dream. I believe that atheists only
> > nominally abandon.
>
> You see, that's my point.  How is this obvious?  Do atheists acknowledge
> the
> existence of that which they cannot see?  Do they accept the existence of
> a
> divinity as a logical principle?  Some may, but I don't think the majority
> do, or they wouldn't call themselves atheists.  I don't think the MOQists
> here understand DQ as "a power governing the universe".  In fact, I don't
> define God as a either a governing power or an existent.  What "exists" is
> what appears to conscious experience in time and space, what has
> "universal
> reality".  My idea of a primary source does not have such a description.
>
> [Akshay]:
> > I do not deny that they seem ludicrous, however, if you
> > really attempt to ponder over the question, "does God exist?",
> > at some point you have to define the word "God".
>
> I agree.  And that's of critical importance to any philosophy.
>
> > Whether such an entity exists or not does not truly make a
> > difference to us (coupled with the agnostic opinion), unless
> > of course it is an entity that answers all our wishes provided
> > we pray to him enough.
>
> If we cannot be certain that such an entity exists, how certain can we be
> that it doesn't make a difference to us?  Do you refute the fact that what
> you've defined as "obvious" -- "a highest power governing this universe"
> --
> has some consequence
> for man?  On what basis do you say that it doesn't make a difference to
> us?
> Wouldn't it be more reasonable to conclude that your believe in a primary
> source that creates and supports the universe makes you "different" from
> someone who does not share your belief?
>
> > You could add many more layers of power and end up
> > with an uninteresting hierarchy, what difference would it
> > make about the question of existence of a higher power?
> > This is what I meant by my first statement.
>
> Frankly, I think Mr. Pirsig has done precisely what you describe.  His
> philosophy adds layers of patterns to an arbitrarily-defined four-level
> hierarchy that makes the existence of a higher power uninteresting and
> inconsequential.  It offers no cosmic role for human beings, suggests no
> entelechy or purpose for individual consciousness, and even relegates
> morality to an evolving universe rather than to man himself.
>
> Someone here quoted the philosopher-historian Joseph Margolis as musing
> that
> if  "...we use "exist" and "existence" of things which offer brute
> resistance, while keeping 'the real' or 'reality' for numbers, and such
> entities which lack corporeal substance, we may escape many a
> philosophical
> headache."  If God is a primary reality, like the number '1' or '0', it
> does
> not exist; it simply IS.  As one who believes in Essence as the primary
> source, I suggest that this concept is worth looking into.
>
> Thanks for clarifying your points, Akshay.  I hope I've clarified my
> criticisms, as well.
> Regards,
> Ham
>
>
>
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