To atheists...

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islam-truth said:
you sitting there while you disobey your creator is evidence for me that the creator exists.


Classic circular logic by religious people!
 
No it cannot. And that is why religion is based on faith.

If you even attempt to prove the existance of god it means you don't have faith in your own religion.

Islam calls people to understand, not to accept things blindly, it actually forbids following what we don't have knowledge of. So we are required to know our religion is the right one, not just follow it. And while all other faiths depend on just accepting with no proof, the Quran provides clear proofs to what is the right religion.

Do you believe the rule of cause and effect applies to everything we know in the universe? (this is the basis of science)
 
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Quoted from ILL_Leat:

The existence of God is based on faith, and the non-existence of God is also based on faith.

Very thought provoking comment.
 
iLL_LeaT said:
The existence of God is based on faith, and the non-existence of God is also based on faith.


No its not!

The god of love and the god of war do a lot of work here on the earth.

The god of Moses and Jesus and Muhammad (pbuh) does nothing.
 
The human hand is amazing isn't it...Don't you feel empty? Lost? No peace in your heart? When you breath, where did it come from? When you stop breathing, where do you think you go for eternity? In darkness, what a horrible thought! Something must stur your thoughts, someone may direct you, peace and blessing to you.
 
The human hand is amazing isn't it...Don't you feel empty? Lost? No peace in your heart? When you breath, where did it come from? When you stop breathing, where do you think you go for eternity? In darkness, what a horrible thought! Something must stur your thoughts, someone may direct you, peace and blessing to you.

This are things each of us must and can only answer within our selves. We do not know the inner thoughts of any person except our selves, and often we can not fully understand or express them. There is so much we take on the basis we believe it. As we learn more reasons for the belief, the stronger our faith becomes. All things are a learning process. Some of us read different sources.
 
Greetings,
The existance of God can be proven logically to yourself if not to others.

That's a self-contradictory statement. If it could be proved by logic, then everyone would automatically accept it.

We need to start with somethings we agree upon, if a person rejects some of the basic things that most people would not reject, then ofcourse you can't prove anything to him.

Perhaps, but what do atheists reject that "most people" would not?

By the way - to Joe98 - atheism is a faith position whether we like it or not. It's a negative faith, but there's no way of proving it, so it is a form of faith.

Peace
 
then everyone would automatically accept it

Everyone should accept it, but it doesn't neccessarily mean everyone would. It's not self-contradictory, because sometimes people will accept false things and reject true things just so they don't accept the conclusion.

Perhaps, but what do atheists reject that "most people" would not?

everyone intuitively knows movement of something needs a cause, nothing just happens without a cause, some athiests accept this for everything but make an exception for the begining of the universe where they assert things just colided at some point without a cause. So they make an acception to the intuitive facts everyone knows and even they acknowledge for everything else, just for the sake of not accepting the need of uncause eternal no begining (thus time not applied to) no end for the cause of what has begining (has numbered not infinite eternal existance), changes, etc.
 
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Greetings Link,
Everyone should accept it, but it doesn't neccessarily mean everyone would. It's not self-contradictory, because sometimes people will accept false things and reject true things just so they don't accept the conclusion.

I don't think you've read me right. Your comment is indeed self-contradictory, because it is in the nature of logical proofs that someone would be irrational or crazy not to accept them. For example, take the following argument:

Premise 1: All men are mortal,

Premise 2: Socrates is a man,

Conclusion: Socrates is mortal.

If we assume that the premises are true, then it would be absurd to deny that the conclusion was also true. This sort of certainty does not exist in the case of the "logical proof" of god's existence that you speak of.

everyone intuitively knows movement of something needs a cause, nothing just happens without a cause, some athiests accept this for everything but make an exception for the begining of the universe where they assert things just colided at some point without a cause.

This is the first cause argument, but you misrepresent the atheist response to it (or at least this atheist's response to it). The fact is that the ultimate cause of the universe is unknown, and no amount of religious affirmation will change that.

Peace
 
:

Premise 1: All men are mortal,

Premise 2: Socrates is a man,

Conclusion: Socrates is mortal.

I am saying the problems is not if the arugment is valid, it's when the premises are rejected as being false when they are true.
 
I will try to prove to you somethings about the 'unknown 1st cause' that I believe are intuitive knowledges everyone has.

1]Whatever always existed must of had no begining
2] If had no begining 'time' does not apply to it (like I am 20 years old - because I had begining - without begining I would be infinite in age all the time) hence is always the last also (begining and end forever)
3] Things that had a begining must have been caused and being caused if they exist by what didn't have a begining and always existed
4] The existance of such things would prove the eternal existance always had ability and power to create
5] Since the eternal existance outside of time and causes everything in time, it knows the begining and end of everything within time
6] Alos since it had no begining and no end and time doesn't apply to it, it neither decrease or increases and whatever it is, it exists in the absolute infinite beyond measurement that cannot be increased (like if it was increasing from measurement of 1 to 2 to 4etc or at a known measurement it would it would mean it had begining and is in frame of time increasing which would mean it didn't always exist eternally since it would mean it had a begining and numbered age)

Conclusion: The cause of the universe is a something that always existed and will continue to exist beyond time and measurement and has knowledge of all the things that happened and will happen.

There are other things we can prove about the eternal existance with intuitive knowledge. like the fact it doesn't have colour, height, width, body, hands, feet, place etc.
 
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Greetings Link,

Thanks for your interesting post. I really like this kind of philosophical discussion.

1]Whatever always existed must of had no begining

That is logical, assuming that there is indeed something that "always existed", but how do you know there is? I believe this question negates most of your following points, since they all rely on this assumption. Almost everything you say does indeed logically proceed from this, but in terms of matters of fact, none of these things is necessarily true.

3] Things that had a begining must have been caused and being caused if they exist by what didn't have a begining and always existed

I'm not sure I agree with you here. For example: I had a beginning in time, and the direct cause of it was the sexual union of my parents, who certainly haven't always existed.

There are other things we can prove about the eternal existance with intuitive knowledge. like the fact it doesn't have colour, height, width, body, hands, feet, place etc.

As you'd expect, I don't believe any of this constitutes "proof" or "intuitive knowledge", because of my objection to the assumption underlying all of this. The point is that there may or may not be an "eternal existence"; if such a thing does exist, it's never been observed or detected by anybody; as such, it cannot be considered an object of knowledge at all.

Peace
 
Peace be upon you inshallah

Thanks for your interesting post. I really like this kind of philosophical discussion.

You welcome, I hope you continue to enjoy it.


That is logical, assuming that there is indeed something that "always existed", but how do you know there is?

Because it doesn't make sense everything appeared out of nothing. From nothing, nothing follows.


I believe this question negates most of your following points, since they all rely on this assumption.

That's alright. Because the assumption is something everyone knows, from nothing nothing follows, that is why thiest and athiest alike believe something did always exist.

Almost everything you say does indeed logically proceed from this, but in terms of matters of fact, none of these things is necessarily true.

Something needed to eternally exist or there would be simply nothingness. It is a true assumption.

I'm not sure I agree with you here. For example: I had a beginning in time, and the direct cause of it was the sexual union of my parents, who certainly haven't always existed.

There is a series of causes, the ultimate cause must have always existed.


The point is that there may or may not be an "eternal existence"; if such a thing does exist, it's never been observed or detected by anybody; as such, it cannot be considered an object of knowledge at all.

It is impossible to know what it is, but somethings can be known about it, like it being timeless since it must have always existed and had no begining, it being able to cause the universe to exist.
 
Greetings Link,
Because it doesn't make sense everything appeared out of nothing. From nothing, nothing follows.

Because the assumption is something everyone knows, from nothing nothing follows, that is why thiest and athiest alike believe something did always exist.

But this isn't an acceptable justification for something to count as knowledge, and it certainly is not something that everyone knows.

We don't know for sure that there is something that always existed. The concept of infinite time stretching back makes as little sense as the idea of something arising from nothing. This is what the philosopher Immanuel Kant called one of the antinomies (paradoxes) of space and time. Both propositions are equally (un)likely, and so it is rash to assume that we know one of them must be true. The obvious (and truest) answer is to say that we do not know.

You're also crediting atheists here with a belief that many of them do not in fact hold, i.e. the idea that something always existed.

Peace
 
If you intuitively think it is possible that things came out of nothing, then yes this would end my argument. This is why I said perhaps it is impossible to prove to everyone, but not so to yourself. To me it is absurd to think something came out of nothing without a cause what so ever.
 
However, I have a couple more arguments aside from cause and effect I will share later.
 
Belief or disbelief in a higher being are, basically, matters of personal preference. There's no accounting for taste...
 

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