E3
Posts: 47
Joined: 4/10/2005 Status: offline
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Hm. I guess prehaps I am misusing the word science. I always took it not only for the study of the "thing", but the "thing" itself. But yes, vincent you do seem to have translated my misuse of the word correctly. And yes, exactly what I meant, God works through natural laws that science can study, and we are working through science to understand those laws. There is nothing in our scientific study that says a being of that kind of power cannot exist, just that we have not found one. And there is nothing in the bible or any holy writing, to imply that any diety is supernatural, but instead natural. though I like your question regarding a diety being outside nature to have created it, or part of it, and thus created by it. All Abrahamic religions have a god based outside nature, not bound by creations limitations, omnipotent, all powerful, and not bound by the passage of time. Roman, Greek, Egyptian, Sumerian/Mesopotamian ancient religions had a god outside nature, to create nature, but then gods that were created within the scope of nature, rose up to slay/supplant/remove said creator (as once a machine is running, it no longer needs a creator, only maintainers). Gods created within the scope of nature, one would stand to reason that they would face limitations imposed by nature. Not as powerful, not as "magical" appearing, and even bound within time. As an example of that, think of Greek Mythology, where Zeus and his brothers rose up to slay their father, who had been injesting them to keep his own power secure (I beleive). I'd quote other mythologies, since I know most of them seem based off each other, but I dont know names of gods as well as the greeks ones. If you ask me, gods created within nature, are a concept far easier to grasp, and understand than ones from outside nature. BUT prehaps calling these things gods is a bad choice of words since they are bound within the limitations of nature (were such to have ever existed). OH and I realized why I defaulted to science and misusing tha word as opposed to nature. To me, nature refers to natural things on this planet, and in truth, I was debating things far beyond just this planet. All planets, stars, all of space, etcettera. And in such discussions, I'd never heard the word nature utilized to refer to "all of existence". To be fair, in hindsight, yes science is used only in regards to the study of these things, and my erorr was in "finding the best fit"
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