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smirkymonkey

(63,221 posts)
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 10:27 AM Oct 2018

When you say you believe or do not believe in "God", what exactly is your definition of "God".

I always thought that having a discussion about God was pointless unless you first defined exactly what you meant by the term "God". I think many people have different interpretations of God so they may not be discussing the same thing when they argue or debate. What is your concept or definition?

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When you say you believe or do not believe in "God", what exactly is your definition of "God". (Original Post) smirkymonkey Oct 2018 OP
My definition of god... Act_of_Reparation Oct 2018 #1
FYI, I am an athiest agnostic. smirkymonkey Oct 2018 #3
It wasn't directed at you, specifically. Act_of_Reparation Oct 2018 #10
Any omnipotent OR omnipresent supernatural sentience. Foolacious Oct 2018 #2
I'm closer to the "omnipresent sentience"-- thucythucy Oct 2018 #5
That's why I'm unwilling to rule out God UNLESS... Foolacious Oct 2018 #16
Well, if such an object was either observed by at least some people thucythucy Oct 2018 #20
to me one kind of gets you pretty close to having the other qazplm135 Oct 2018 #9
I think this is still too narrow to handle polytheism. Pope George Ringo II Oct 2018 #17
I am clueless. nancy1942 Oct 2018 #4
It's difficult to get an answer to that question, even from religious people. MineralMan Oct 2018 #6
I just think it is something that is completely beyond the realm of human understanding. smirkymonkey Oct 2018 #12
Almost everything is greater than us. Truly. MineralMan Oct 2018 #14
God ghostsinthemachine Oct 2018 #7
I love that song. thucythucy Oct 2018 #22
You've hit on it because it's a range qazplm135 Oct 2018 #8
Lack of a coherent definition is one of the reasons to reject belief in god(s). trotsky Oct 2018 #11
Exactly! smirkymonkey Oct 2018 #13
If it was just "god vs. no god" I agree there wouldn't be a point. trotsky Oct 2018 #15
That's the thing... uriel1972 Oct 2018 #24
Neither do I, but for some it is a very specific "being" and for others it is an abstract concept smirkymonkey Oct 2018 #21
except qazplm135 Oct 2018 #41
I imagine that atheists don't agree that your theoretical gods meet your range of possibilities. marylandblue Oct 2018 #44
which was my point qazplm135 Oct 2018 #45
"Any god I've ever heard of." Iggo Oct 2018 #18
God is the thing that caused the laws of nature to be what they are. MarvinGardens Oct 2018 #19
Does it have intelligence? edhopper Oct 2018 #25
I tend to think it is intelligent. MarvinGardens Oct 2018 #27
So where did God in turn come from? Bretton Garcia Oct 2018 #33
It's a good question. MarvinGardens Oct 2018 #37
This message was self-deleted by its author MineralMan Oct 2018 #40
"God is the thing that caused the laws of nature to be what they are." trotsky Oct 2018 #35
Says me. MarvinGardens Oct 2018 #38
Really? Please show your evidence of that. MineralMan Oct 2018 #36
It's definitional, not requiring proof. MarvinGardens Oct 2018 #39
Lulzd. Voltaire2 Oct 2018 #23
A Republican will tell you God has their values. Doodley Oct 2018 #26
So will most religious Democrats. nt. Mariana Oct 2018 #43
God has many names. Croney Oct 2018 #28
Descartes proved with logic that God exists but the Catholic Church rejected it because logic and pr keithbvadu2 Oct 2018 #29
"Proved" Act_of_Reparation Oct 2018 #32
You cannot prove that such a Renee Descartes Voltaire2 Oct 2018 #34
I can concieve of a universe where I am right all the time. Act_of_Reparation Oct 2018 #42
Somebody who gibraltar72 Oct 2018 #30
I like to think of Jesus... Docreed2003 Oct 2018 #31

Act_of_Reparation

(9,116 posts)
1. My definition of god...
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 10:38 AM
Oct 2018

...is "something that doesn't exist."

If apologists get to use weasel definitions, then so do I.

 

smirkymonkey

(63,221 posts)
3. FYI, I am an athiest agnostic.
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 10:42 AM
Oct 2018

But definitions can range from a big man in the sky to a numinous life force. I am just curious as to how other people define it.

Act_of_Reparation

(9,116 posts)
10. It wasn't directed at you, specifically.
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 11:49 AM
Oct 2018

The point is I don't think there is much variance in how people, broadly, define god, beyond the aforementioned cosmetic differences. While you can always rely on the apologist to show up spouting some crap about the "universe is god",it is important to remember two things: 1) these alternative definitions aren't worth consideration because no one beyond the apologist actually believes it, and 2) the apolgist's motive is to win an argument and it is likely they doesn't believe such definitions themselves.

People who believe in god generally believe in some sort of supernatural intelligence or force that created and/or guides the universe in some way. Everything else is just window dressing.

Foolacious

(497 posts)
2. Any omnipotent OR omnipresent supernatural sentience.
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 10:41 AM
Oct 2018

Doesn't have to have both omni-characteristics, and doesn't have to be omnibenevolent.

thucythucy

(8,083 posts)
5. I'm closer to the "omnipresent sentience"--
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 11:01 AM
Oct 2018

doesn't have to be supernatural in that it might be part of the natural order but not yet detectable to any of our senses or instruments (as gamma radiation was undetectable two centuries ago).

Perhaps omnibenevolent but not omnipotent, or if omnipotent then certainly not omnibenevolent, at any rate not in this sphere of existence.

I'm an agnostic. I've seen no independently verifiable evidence of such a sentience as yet, but also believe in the old cliché: "Absence of evidence is not necessarily evidence of absence."

Foolacious

(497 posts)
16. That's why I'm unwilling to rule out God UNLESS...
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 01:09 PM
Oct 2018

... I'm also willing to rule out a manatee-shaped butter sculpture orbiting the star that is currently the 10,000th most distant from the central black hole of the Andromeda galaxy. I haven't seen any evidence of such a sculpture, but that's not necessarily evidence of its absence. Still pondering....

thucythucy

(8,083 posts)
20. Well, if such an object was either observed by at least some people
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 04:18 PM
Oct 2018

or came as the result of some theory (as various sub atomic particles were postulated to exist before we had the ability to detect them) then I might agree.

Keep in mind that many people--perhaps millions--have had what can be described as a religious experience. Ever read "The Varieties of Religious Experience" by William James, or Maya Deren's book on Haitian theology? Religious inclinations are one of the most commonly shared features of the human experience. It could be mass hallucination, evolutionary detritus, or evidence of something we can't yet explain. Besides which, I'm not sure I'm willing to dismiss the belief of people as astute as Gandhi or Martin Luther King Jr. or Sophie Scholl or Barak Obama quite so blithely. Hence my agnosticism.

But your sarcasm is duly noted and appreciated.

qazplm135

(7,447 posts)
9. to me one kind of gets you pretty close to having the other
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 11:17 AM
Oct 2018

certainly if you are omnipotent you should be able to be omnipresent.

Maybe not vice versa, although either should help you with omniscience.

I don't think such an entity is per se omnibenevolent, although cruelty and arbitrariness don't seem to go well with high intelligence.

Pope George Ringo II

(1,896 posts)
17. I think this is still too narrow to handle polytheism.
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 01:52 PM
Oct 2018

If Tyr showed up in my living room this afternoon, I'd have to call him a god. He's not omnipotent enough to re-grow that hand, omniscience seems to be Heimdall's domain, but Tyr is as much a god as any.

Zeus would also qualify, but the Titans were more powerful than the Greek gods. Even there, Prometheus had his liver torn out every day and while it's true that recovery from that would be impressive, having it happen to you all the time shows some limits.

Heck, even within the xian pseudo-monotheism, the Jesus character is supposed to be a god, but that whole, "Why have you forsaken me?" routine does not suggest either omniscience or omnipotence. More broadly, are the offspring of male gods and mortal women (always seems to work that way for some reason...) actual gods? Demi-gods? Demi-semi-skinny-half caf-gods?

I'd almost feel better treating gods like pornography and falling back on "I know it when I see it."

nancy1942

(635 posts)
4. I am clueless.
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 10:56 AM
Oct 2018

The older I get the more I simply do not know. This particular question is one I've struggled with all my life. I wish I knew the answer.

MineralMan

(146,320 posts)
6. It's difficult to get an answer to that question, even from religious people.
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 11:11 AM
Oct 2018

It's easier to get a clear definition from atheists, who will tell you that all gods are imaginary entities created by the human mind. Since they don't believe any such entities exist, there is no reason to define them further. One cannot define what does not exist. Everyone seems to have a different idea of what the deity they believe exists is like.

Some simply refer to it as "The Creator," and won't answer any further questions regarding their deity. Perhaps that's the safest definition of all.

 

smirkymonkey

(63,221 posts)
12. I just think it is something that is completely beyond the realm of human understanding.
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 12:55 PM
Oct 2018

I do think there is something greater than us, I just have no fucking clue what it is. I will never know. Neither will anybody else.

MineralMan

(146,320 posts)
14. Almost everything is greater than us. Truly.
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 12:58 PM
Oct 2018

We are greater than us. The fun is in studying all that. We're lucky enough to be able to do that.

ghostsinthemachine

(3,569 posts)
7. God
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 11:14 AM
Oct 2018


God is a concept
By which we measure
Our pain
I'll say it again
God is a concept
By which we measure
Our pain
I don't believe in magic
I don't believe in I-Ching
I don't believe in Bible
I don't believe in tarot
I don't believe in Hitler
I don't believe in Jesus
I don't believe in Kennedy
I don't believe in Buddha
I don't believe in mantra
I don't believe in Gita
I don't believe in yoga
I don't believe in kings
I don't believe in Elvis
I don't believe in Zimmerman
I don't believe in Beatles
I just believe in me
Yoko…

thucythucy

(8,083 posts)
22. I love that song.
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 04:24 PM
Oct 2018

Of course, the same man wrote the words "God bless our love" and "the Goddess really smiled on our love" in subsequent songs.

Sounds like another agnostic to me.

qazplm135

(7,447 posts)
8. You've hit on it because it's a range
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 11:15 AM
Oct 2018

GOD: Omniscient. Omnipresent. Omnipotent. Creator of the universe. Ability to violate the laws of physics at will. Miracles. The whole shebang. Present before, present after, ruler of the afterlife. Burning bush. Yadda yadda yadda. As an agnostic, I find this version extremely unlikely.

God: An entity that is so powerful and so intelligent that it can do anything in the universe within the bounds of the laws of physics. A creature of the universe, but not necessarily a creator of it. Whatever an entity can be within the universe at the most powerful. Imagine a civilization that rose early on and has been progressing for say 8 billion years. At some point, they could reach a level of knowledge and power so vast that it becomes God-like to someone like us. I find this version unlikely, but theoretically possible. I tend to lean more towards the idea that it takes at least a second generation star to have the necessary building blocks for life and then it takes billions years more for that life to become a civilization, and thus we might be one of the first in the galaxy or even the universe and anyone ahead of us is "only" a few million years at most.

*god: A special case in my view where it turns out that the universe was created via a natural act in another or higher universe. See e.g. the theory that the universe is really a black hole in another universe that split off. If some highly intelligent, but otherwise mortal entity created that particular black hole that became our universe. Technically they created our universe. I rate this as somewhat unknowable, but possible.

Anything else. "A diffuse life force spread throughout the universe." Or the universe as a single living entity. None of those are really "God" definitionally to me.

trotsky

(49,533 posts)
11. Lack of a coherent definition is one of the reasons to reject belief in god(s).
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 12:51 PM
Oct 2018

Basically, I don't believe in any god that anyone has proposed so far.

trotsky

(49,533 posts)
15. If it was just "god vs. no god" I agree there wouldn't be a point.
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 01:04 PM
Oct 2018

But the problem is that so many who insist "god" also insist a whole shit-ton of ridiculous and harmful baggage come along with it, because... well... god!

uriel1972

(4,261 posts)
24. That's the thing...
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 09:12 PM
Oct 2018

If they just quietly pondered the nature of the universe etc... then no big deal.
However, many seem to think that what they believe in gives them the right to torture, rape, murder, plunder etc.
I wish it was just an academic quibble, but in the end it seems to be a life and death struggle.

 

smirkymonkey

(63,221 posts)
21. Neither do I, but for some it is a very specific "being" and for others it is an abstract concept
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 04:22 PM
Oct 2018

of "all that is". Those people are not having the same conversation. I just find it curious that when people speak of god they all assume that they are on the same page when they assume they have the exact same concept of what "god" means.

qazplm135

(7,447 posts)
41. except
Fri Oct 19, 2018, 03:49 PM
Oct 2018

for atheists, none of the possible definitions exist...so even if theists have different definitions, or an agnostic like me can come up with different definitions as ranging from extremely unlikely to theoretically possible...it's all the same to one side of the conversation.

So while I agree with you that people can have a different idea in their head what the word god means, not sure it really matters in the main argument as it were.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
44. I imagine that atheists don't agree that your theoretical gods meet your range of possibilities.
Mon Oct 22, 2018, 12:50 PM
Oct 2018

They may consider the range to be between impossible and extremely unlikely. I am agnostic like you, but I consider "theoretically possible" gods to be extremely unlikely.

qazplm135

(7,447 posts)
45. which was my point
Mon Oct 22, 2018, 01:30 PM
Oct 2018

since they think it's all more or less impossible, then what definition you give it really doesn't matter to any "conversation" between an atheist and theist.

MarvinGardens

(779 posts)
19. God is the thing that caused the laws of nature to be what they are.
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 04:15 PM
Oct 2018

All else, including us, exist as a consequence of those laws of nature.

MarvinGardens

(779 posts)
27. I tend to think it is intelligent.
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 10:07 PM
Oct 2018

And logically, if it is bound by the natural laws as we are, then it is not God. Thus, it can violate the natural laws.

MarvinGardens

(779 posts)
37. It's a good question.
Fri Oct 19, 2018, 12:40 PM
Oct 2018

This brings up the question in my mind: Was there a point of origin of the universe, or is the existence of the universe an infinite series of events stretching back in time forever? The cosmologists can't see back before the big bang, but that does not mean there was no existence prior. Infinite series exist in mathematics, so why not even in the physical world? In Western religions, the answer is that God is eternal and has always existed, thus God Himself had no creator. But if we instead ascribe that property to the physical universe, then it can be argued that the universe needs no creator.

Even if the universe is an infinite series in time, it is possible that it has a creator. This may at first seem absurd, but consider that time itself is a part of nature, treated as a fourth space-like dimension in some of Einstein's equations. It is possible that God created a universe that had always existed, forever, from our perspective.

Why is such a fanciful explanation necessary or desirable? For me, it is because I have repeatedly had the following profound revelation while lying in the dark contemplating such things: None of this should exist, yet it does. To me, this is intuitively true. Why then is there existence rather than non-existence? An intelligent creator is the best explanation I can come up with.

But I still have not answered your question. Where did God come from? If indeed He created time and exists independently of it, no answer is needed. He was there B.T. (before time) or outside of it. But because I'm on here answering questions I don't really know the answer to, I'll entertain the possibility that God had a creator, an Ubergod. In that case, perhaps the Ubergod also had a creator, and so on, ad infinitum. In that case, we could have a universe that appears either finite or infinite in time, and in addition have a God who is one in a series of infinite God-creation events.

Response to MarvinGardens (Reply #37)

trotsky

(49,533 posts)
35. "God is the thing that caused the laws of nature to be what they are."
Fri Oct 19, 2018, 11:12 AM
Oct 2018

Says who? What is your supporting evidence for this statement?

MarvinGardens

(779 posts)
38. Says me.
Fri Oct 19, 2018, 02:00 PM
Oct 2018

The OP asked us to define God. That is my definition. It does not ascribe any other properties to God. It does not even say whether the thing exists. Unicorns probably do not exist, yet they have a definition.

MineralMan

(146,320 posts)
36. Really? Please show your evidence of that.
Fri Oct 19, 2018, 11:23 AM
Oct 2018

That may be what you believe. Without evidence, though, it's just not a statement that is necessarily true.

So, what evidence do you have of this?

MarvinGardens

(779 posts)
39. It's definitional, not requiring proof.
Fri Oct 19, 2018, 02:11 PM
Oct 2018

There are definitions for things that do not exist, like unicorns, or the luminiferous aether. The latter was once presumed to exist, based on logic (light waves must propagate through something), but without evidence. According to modern physics, it is not needed to explain the behavior of light.

But if you've read my other posts, you know that I do lean toward the existence of God meeting the aforementioned definition, and that does require an explanation. My belief in such a thing is not an unshakable faith-based belief, but rather a presumption, or a logical placeholder, needed by me (but certainly not everyone) until we figure out what the heck is going on.

Croney

(4,661 posts)
28. God has many names.
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 10:27 PM
Oct 2018

Santa Claus, Easter Bunny, Tooth Fairy, etc. If you can disprove one, you've disproved them all. If you can prove one, you've proved them all.

Magical unicorns in the sky... nah.

keithbvadu2

(36,853 posts)
29. Descartes proved with logic that God exists but the Catholic Church rejected it because logic and pr
Thu Oct 18, 2018, 10:43 PM
Oct 2018

Descartes proved with logic that God exists but the Catholic Church rejected it because logic and proof negate the need for faith.

Act_of_Reparation

(9,116 posts)
32. "Proved"
Fri Oct 19, 2018, 07:34 AM
Oct 2018

I can conceive of a René Descartes ten feet tall with lasers for eyes and Honda Civics for legs, and because it is better to be ten feet tall with lasers for eyes and Honda Civics for legs than it is to be a skeleton in the ground somewhere in France, René Descartes must therefore be ten feet tall with lasers for eyes and Honda Civics for legs.

Voltaire2

(13,095 posts)
34. You cannot prove that such a Renee Descartes
Fri Oct 19, 2018, 10:06 AM
Oct 2018

does not exist inside a universe spawned from a black hole by a super intelligence.

So there! Your non belief is just as faithy as worshipping the triplet zombie gods.

Act_of_Reparation

(9,116 posts)
42. I can concieve of a universe where I am right all the time.
Mon Oct 22, 2018, 10:27 AM
Oct 2018

And because it is better to be right all the time than it is to be wrong even a little bit, I must therefore be right. All of the time.

QED!

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