Not-That-Bright said:
I just worry he's just going to be the sort of person that likes to write pages and pages of rhetoric, always hiding their claims and never revealing all their cards... I'd just prefer people to be a bit more upfront.
Dude, the only reason I didnt continue the second part of what I believe does prove the existence of a God is because the first part is so damn controvertial. And after all those replies to the 'limited' argument, im sure you'd agree. Theres no point continuing my argument if who im talking to doesnt understand the fundamental concept.
But if you really want me to.
Here goes.
Previous posts discussed the limited attribute of the three distinct forms of exstence. A second attribute of man, life and the universe is that all of these are
needy and
dependent. Needy in that to exist, they must have assistance from something external to themselves, they are not self-sustaining. Man needs food and water to survive. Plants and animals similarly are dependant on a water cycle which in turn is dependant upon the sun, which is dependant upon the relationship with the galaxies, and burning mass. Nothing that we can perceive can survive independent of other things . There is nothing in our perception that is self-subsistent. So things exist but do not have the power of existence.
The fact that is inextricably interwoven with these facts of being limited, finite, dependant, and needy is that ultimately there has to be a Creator or initiator for it all. The sum of all finite and dependent things is something that is finite and dependant. Dependant on what? Dependent upon something to start and sustain life, and something to plan and develop the complex interrelationship between all living things.
There can only be one solution to the question of Creation that an 'unlimited' Creator has accounted for all we see and preceive. Anything that is finite must have a dynamic force to create it; otherwise it cannot come into existence . All limited things depend upon something for their sustenance. There can be no doubt over these points. Challenge yourself to bring any example. All limited and dependent things are created.
A second way of looking at this argument shows that if we contemplate about all that we perceive as being limited and dependant we can only explain it in two ways; either:
(1) All we perceive depends for its existence on something else, which in turn depends on still another thing,
ad infinitum or
(2) All we perceive derives its existence from something else that exists by its own nature and that is accordingly eternal, unlimited.
The first alternative is false because it does not provide an explanation of how anything came into existence to begin with. It simply puts off giving a reason. it does not provide a reason why finite and limited things exist, or from whence they came, it is therefore illogical, incomplete and without an answer for us. Therefore we deduce that all limited and dependant things depend upon something that exists by its own nature.
Necessarily and as a corollary of the above discussion this Being should be above any prescribed limits (either of time, size, power, knowledge, etc) Therefore He cannot be a creation of anybody else. The possiblity that He is self-created is to be ruled out because it implies a contradiction. He should not depend on anything for His sustenance. For if He does, he becomes limited and therefore he is not the 'infinte' that we are talking about. Hence only infinte and eternal can be the requirements of independence. Now since we already exist, then His existence becomes an inevitable necessity.
Therefore what was just described were the conditions of the creator, who created all that exists in the universe. It is God, the Supreme, the Lord of the universe. :uhhuh: