CypressChristian wrote:Sethbag
1. That's not what we're talking about. This has nothing to do with the issue at hand. We are discussing what explains the uniformity of nature, naturalism CANNOT explain/account for the uniformity of nature while the Christian God does. In order to make this point you must first concede that God IS an explanation for the uniformity of nature, are you doing this?
The Christian God no more accounts for uniformity in nature than does the hypothesized Flying Spaghetti Monster. You can't just imagine a being that theoretically solves some imagined problem, and then proclaim that the fit is so good it simply
must be real. Humans are sophisticated problem solvers, and what you're doing in justifying your own faith in God is really just an exercise in problem solving. What you can't sidestep is, however, the fact that your Christian God is still just a figment of your imagination.
2. The God of the Christian worldview is unexplainable. That's the point. He created all things. As created beings, how would we have the capacity to describe our Creator?
Evolutionary biologists and geneticists don't seem to have a problem explaining and describing the processes by which we came about. What you posit as an unsolvable problem doesn't actually seem that impossible after all.
The Christian God you imagine to exist is just your Ace up the Sleeve. You can pull him out at will, to solve all sorts of problems. You can use him to explain to others how they ought to think and act. You can use him to back up the claims of certain individuals to power over other people. You can pull him out to claim you've solved any particular problem in philosophy, science, or any other discipline. But you've priveleged your imagined God with a sort of philosophical immunity. You see, you have created a God which
can't be explained, which you use to dodge the problem of how to explain him, while simultaneously demanding an explanation from everyone else.
You can't have it both ways. If your imagined Christian God is inexplicable, and doesn't need to be explained, then I don't have to explain anything to you about how the natural universe operates or came to be. I can just claim that it exists, and is inexplicable, and I'm on pretty much the same level as you.
You are basically asking me a question you KNOW is unanswerable just so you can point and say, "See!!" and feel better about having no reason for believing nature is uniform.
And how is this different from your "I have no reason to believe that nature is uniform either, except to say that God did it, but I can't explain how or why God did it, so in reality I haven't explained anything at all, but I've defined my God in such a way as to dodge any requirement to explain him, so I win."
Explain to me how the universe formed itself.
I don't know how the universe formed itself. Scientists are working on evermore sophisticated models to explain how the universe formed from the aftermath of the Big Bang, taking us earlier and earlier back into the results of that cosmic explosion. What happened before the Big Bang, I don't know, and I don't think anyone else does either. I'm OK with that. But one thing is for sure. Not knowing how or why the universe exists, there is no basis
whatsoever to suppose that it might not have existed. Ie: as far as we know, there might never have been any alternative to the universe's existence.
Mormonism ceased being a compelling topic for me when I finally came to terms with its transformation from a personality cult into a combination of a real estate company, a SuperPac, and Westboro Baptist Church. - Kishkumen