Kurieuo wrote:hughfarey wrote:Time for a reality check?
neo-x wrote:To the original question in the title, God doesn't need to create if he places the laws of nature as they are, the rest will simply follow.
This is a rather bleak view of God, I think, theologically just possible, but missing Kureiou's point about those laws having to be maintained.
Really, something we agree on?
I had to go digging back, but
here is what I said neo-x.
From my previous exchanges with neo-x however, he prefers to take the minimum approach possible to the point that not even God is required to "guide" things. This can never be attacked or had the rug pulled from out from underneath it. Similarly, so impersonal and even bleak as you say that a person believes nothing but the bar barest existence of God must be maintained with science rather than the other way around. The bleakness that you see in neo-x's thinking, I think comes from philosophical restraints placed upon us in an era of Materialism (which I see approaching an end).
I think it is an ever so important point to realise that things aren't just "created" but must be upheld such that the realities we experience are perpetually created. It is like, a building that is set upon it's foundation, struts and so on. Remove the building's foundation, make those struts vanish, and it'll all collapse and fall down. Similarly, just because "God created" doesn't mean God can walk away. Given God create, God becomes the foundation that keeps every single particle existing and glue that binds everything together.
On the other hand, we have
many who don't like to consider the foundational nature of reality. They don't like asking questions about what lays beneath the physical realities that we experience. Rather, for such, ourselves and the world we experience just exist and we shouldn't be startled or surprised that they do exist and function all by themselves running on absolutely nothing.
This is similar to the "big bang" problem if you will, that is, things just existing as they are and working as they do. The world came into existence
from nothing and keeps running do
based upon nothing, and we shouldn't even entertain the nothing that something keeps everything in existence, stable and running -- for the lens with which we've all been taught to view the world through won't let us do that!
As Tolkien stated, to entertain there is more behind the walls would be an act of treason.
K, thank you for linking back to your post. I don't disagree with you, but I think this point is one of aesthetics, rather than something foundational. A more fitting analogy to me, is a driver, putting down his foot on the pedal to move the car. How much involvement is needed from the driver to make the engine, he designed, run? only his foot pushing down, the engine, and all its internal processes are working without the direct tinkering of the driver. To that end I agree with you that there is something sustainable - the foot on the pedal - that keeps things going. Once it's designed it runs with minimum effort on the part of the driver.
However to your broader point, I absolutely agree with you. God is reality and existence itself and anything that happens must happen by extension via his existence. No God, nothing.
And does that mean, God is actively guiding things? I don't know, maybe he is. Although as I said before, to me it looks like an aesthetics question, like "he must be". I just don't think it's necessary.
BTW, I don't take this position because "This can never be attacked or had the rug pulled from out from underneath it." Why do you think so, all anyone needs to do is to show that there is no bleakness, so to say, in God creating things, that he is doing things intimately. But may be that can never be shown? I don't know.
Your thoughts are much appreciated.
It would be a blessing if they missed the cairns and got lost on the way back. Or if
the Thing on the ice got them tonight.
I could only turn and stare in horror at the chief surgeon.
Death by starvation is a terrible thing, Goodsir, continued Stanley.
And with that we went below to the flame-flickering Darkness of the lower deck
and to a cold almost the equal of the Dante-esque Ninth Circle Arctic Night
without.
//johnadavid.wordpress.com