Romance › Re: J by johnydon22(m): 2:58pm On May 28, 2018 |
IamPlato: ...
I Was Talking About Your Belief In No God Where did that come from? Is this thread about that? |
Romance › Re: J by johnydon22(m): 11:25am On May 28, 2018 |
IamPlato: ...
It May Take Awhile But You Will Change Your Mind One Day. Uuuhm what are you talking about? |
Romance › Re: J by johnydon22(m): 10:32am On May 28, 2018 |
IamPlato: ...
He Is A Hardcore atheist.
Ask Him Hardcore.. Lol |
Romance › Re: J by johnydon22(m): 10:31am On May 28, 2018 |
BiggerbossAmani: The two op above me tho
Do you have any proof he's an Atheists IamPlato
Why must you love johnydon22 An unbeliever like me does not deserve to love  |
Romance › Re: J by johnydon22(m): 10:30am On May 28, 2018 |
IamPlato: ...
If You Dont Love It Who Will.
Hatists Atheists in The Building Hello |
Romance › Re: J by johnydon22(m): 9:10am On May 28, 2018 |
Lol. I love this thread �� |
Education › Re: Who Is Greater: Newton Or Einstein? by johnydon22(m): 10:03am On May 22, 2018 |
AkpaMgbor: Lol some historians will say it was king Solomon..although there is a debate between wisdom and genius which is superior..I vote wisdom...that’s off topic though. Some historians? Mind mentioning these historians? What are some of King solomon's genius ideas to merit a spot amongst the most genius or wise individual's in history? |
Education › Re: Who Is Greater: Newton Or Einstein? by johnydon22(m): 7:57am On May 22, 2018 |
derrydinny: newton's laws are somehow stupid, einstein's were beyond the thinking faculty of geniuses but the greatest of all scientists is galileo Please explain |
Education › Re: Who Is Greater: Newton Or Einstein? by johnydon22(m): 7:57am On May 22, 2018 |
AkpaMgbor: Only because Einstein had the technological advantage that newton didn’t have in his time..bar that Newton is touted as the greatest genius in modern history and one of the highest IQ in history.. Newton is regarded the greatest genius in history |
Education › Re: Who Is Greater: Newton Or Einstein? by johnydon22(m): 7:56am On May 22, 2018 |
Zane2point4: Newton worked on universal gravitation (gravity), Newton developed the three laws of motion
which form the basic principles of modern physics. His discovery of calculus led the way to more powerful methods of solving mathematical problems. Automobile makers learnt about fiction from him and it effects on breaking pads.
Albert Einstein worked on General Theory of Relativity and the concept of mass-energy equivalence expressed by the famous equation, E = mc2.
He is important but he is the chief creator of atomic bombs. I'll pick Newton blc he contributed immensely to humanity, Eistein did too, but his works comes with destruction. No it doesn't. Nuclear reactors can also be an incredibly efficient means of energy (power) creation |
Education › Re: Who Is Greater: Newton Or Einstein? by johnydon22(m): 7:54am On May 22, 2018 |
maxtop: None of them ....
Baba God is the greatest ...... Everything must be dragged into a religious term by Nigerians. Fuckin_g morons |
Education › Re: Who Is Greater: Newton Or Einstein? by johnydon22(m): 7:54am On May 22, 2018 |
|
Education › Re: Who Is Greater: Newton Or Einstein? by johnydon22(m): 7:52am On May 22, 2018 |
darkhorizon: Newton is a boss in classical physics,Einstein is a boss in modern physics. Moreover,Einstein extended newtonian mechanics to form the special relativity. It was found by Einstein that Newton's law began to fail,when used to describe objects approaching the speed of light,hence the need for a new paradigm. So it depends on you,as to who is better In terms of intellect, Newton has it.. |
Education › Re: Who Is Greater: Newton Or Einstein? by johnydon22(m): 7:51am On May 22, 2018 |
Elxandre: I say Newton though. He was more influential, both in math and physics. He's a founding master of Calculus, and his laws in physics are some of the basic founding principles.
Einstein has even been accused of plagiarism sef.  It's claimed he stole others ideas, and 'explained' them better. I had always wondered how he could achieve so much without being an incredible mathematician. (His wife reportedly helped him sometimes in mathematical aspects of his researches). Newton was a mathematical genius but his works also were influenced by older works, Newton was particularly influenced well enough by Joahannes Kepler |
Christianity Etc › Re: Why Is There Something Instead Of Nothing? (A Philosophical Overview) by johnydon22(op): 6:22pm On May 21, 2018 |
We are yet to hear any atheistic perspective. Hopefullandlord martinez, hahn, invite others |
Christianity Etc › Re: Why Is There Something Instead Of Nothing? (A Philosophical Overview) by johnydon22(op): 6:22pm On May 21, 2018 |
DoctorAlien: It is really interesting that the excerpt you posted began with the word "if", and that Hawking refers to his "no boundary condition" as a hypothesis in the lecture.
I like that Hawking was very honest in calling this concept of his "imaginary time". However, I don't think the excerpt you posted supports the eternal cyclic universe theory which conflicts badly with the Second Law of Thermodynamics. Instead, I think Hawking was trying so hard to circumvent the need for a Creator, which a singularity poses. I believe this is evident from the conclusion of the lecture in which he at least admits that real time would still require a singularity. You see, a singularity would mean a beginning of time, and barring any explanation, a Creator. To marry the inevitable beginning of the universe with his Creatorless worldview, he invokes imaginary time before real time. Just what was happening at that imaginary time, he did not tell us. I guess imaginary things were happening in the imaginary time in preparation for the coming into existence of the real time. All imaginary.
Anyway, according to William Lane Craig, "Hawking acknowledges that models which use imaginary time “are not realistic descriptions of the universe“, rather, they have only instrumental value. [William Lane Craig, Time and Eternity, pg. 218 (2001) referencing Stephen Hawking and Roger Penrose, The Nature of Space and Time, pgs. 3-4, 121; cf 53-55 (1996)] Hawking also admits that when you go back to the “real time in which we live”, “there will still appear to be singularities.” [William Lane Craig, Time and Eternity, pg. 218 (2001) referencing Stephen Hawking, A Brief History of Time, pg. 139 (1996)]" http://factsandfaith.com/does-imaginary-time-eliminate-the-need-for-a-creator/
If only the imaginary would be allowed to remain imaginary... Actually the concept of imaginary time is a term used for an extra dimensional time, i have explained this here to someone before. the concept of space/time continuum in hyper-space/time continuum.. |
Christianity Etc › Re: Why Is There Something Instead Of Nothing? (A Philosophical Overview) by johnydon22(op): 6:20pm On May 21, 2018 |
MuttleyLaff: "Worthy are You, our Lord and God, to receive glory and honor and power; for You created all things, and because of Your will they existed and were created." - Revelation 4:11
Where there's a will there's a way. If One is determined enough, One can find a way to achieve what One wants, even if it is very hard. Genesis 18:14, Jeremiah 32:27 and Luke 1:37 are useful and informative, methinks. I guess, anything exist at all because, creation was and/or is calling, to be created
The universe exists as an objective matter with a matrix undertone
Why not? Why does this thread had to be opened rather than not be opened? Prerogative things?
Now let's behave correctly and be properly theologically sensible here If its going to be a theologically natural response to the question then, then the answer has to be, it is because God said and/or says so
After all, the "Let..." catchphrase as in, to cause and make something to happen by not doing anything to stop it from coming into being or to allow someone to do something by not doing anything to stop the action or give your permission for something to take place and come about is a recognisable special one that is associated with a particular famous Person.
From conventional religious world view the universe, was created, CORRECTLY, "creatio ex-materia"
At the emboldened underlined. Bravo! Where there is nothing, there is God.
[img]https://s1/images/HistoryUniverse.jpg[/img] God CREATED the universe not much different to how, Bill Gates, created the world's largest software business, Microsoft, using a combination of knowledge and method(s)?
I am sorry I cant, in toto, tell you EXACTLY how, God designed and created the universe. Reiterating, conventional wisdom, plus science, as seen in above pic, however each, give a simplified understanding of everything that happened 1 second after the Big Bang
Let's discuss, close to home - man's sperm; a worthy of attention workmanship of an Intelligent Designer
In creation of human, the journey of the sperm in search of the egg, is mind-boggling and extremely interesting
Even astronomers, are at sea, because all the stars, planets and galaxies that can be seen today, make up just 4% of the universe, whilst the rest 96% of the universe, is made of mysterious and invisible matter.
These mysterious substances are called dark energy and dark matter
Dark matter, which makes up 22% of the universe, is a material that has yet to be detected in the laboratory
Dark energy is a gravitationally repulsive entity. Its existence is confirmed and determined to fill 74% of the universe.
"Why Is There Something Instead Of Nothing? A Philosophical Overview"
If about above quotation, then nothing created God. Even Aristotle, that you previously quoted, accepts God, who is the First Cause, as a necessary being who has always existed from eternity.
I am thinking: If atheism is true, that God doesnt exist, then, God created nothing. If theism is true, that God exists and exists as a First Cause, then, God created nothing
The nothing created, is not a vacuum (i.e. it's not an empty space or something entirely devoid of matter) The empty space is actually, in the universe, depicted as the lying on its side church dumbbell cone of expansion image above, and the empty space is something from nothing Now where there is nothing, there is God, a non-physical Force, who is another Something.
Again, friend, "creatio ex-materia" and not ex materia, as you incorrectly put it Without a shadow of doubt, subscription is trio "creatio ex nihilo" "creatio ex-materia" and "creatio ex deo"
1In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. 2The same was in the beginning with God. 3All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made. - John 1:1-3
Just like Aristotle, I believe, God to be the Prime Mover/Unmoved Mover, who caused creation into existence but no one caused God to exist.
Reiterating, the nothing, is not a vacuum The empty space is the universe depicted as the lying on its side church dumbbell cone of expansion image above, and the empty space is something from nothing Now when and/or where there is nothing, there is God, a non-physical Force, immaterial Something.
"I'm not religious in the normal sense. I believe the universe is governed by the laws of science. The laws may have been decreed by God, but God does not intervene to break the laws." - Stephen Hawking © Alright good perspective |
Christianity Etc › Re: Why Is There Something Instead Of Nothing? (A Philosophical Overview) by johnydon22(op): 12:31am On May 20, 2018 |
vaxx: i have another thought. What if ex nihilo and ex material are both real. maybe the reason why there is something rather than nothing is because we both have mistakenly overlooked the fact that they both exist. i suspect the are harmonious conjoined opposites. Neither can exist without the other. That means that there is something even more basic which is both something and nothing. lets call it Possibility. Possibility is what underlies probability in quantum mechanics. therefore, i my good to say possibility is indeed possible? Nice perspective, I'd like to hear more |
Christianity Etc › Re: Why Is There Something Instead Of Nothing? (A Philosophical Overview) by johnydon22(op): 12:24am On May 20, 2018 |
DoctorAlien: Lol. The very title of Hawking's lecture should prove to you that he does not agree with the theory of oscillating cosmos/cyclic universes, because it requires time to not have a beginning.
But let's see. What do you think that Hawking means when he says in the lecture that your theory is in bad trouble when it conflicts with the Second Law of Thermodynamics? If the universe has been going through an eternal series of contractions and expansions – our Big Bang supposedly being the latest contraction in an eternal series, we should find ourselves in a universe that is completely disordered and dead, which is what the Second Law of Thermodynamics predicts should happen.
An article from New Scientist puts it this way:
“Such a universe would be uniformly lukewarm and featureless, and definitely lacking such complicated beings as stars, planets and physicists—nothing like the one we see around us.” Grossman, L., Death of the eternal cosmos, New Scientist 213(2847):6–7, 14 January 2012; from https://creation.com/universe-had-a-beginning
We do not find ourselves in such a universe, hence a cyclical universe cannot extend infinitely into the past. To invoke Hawkins' lecture further still "If space and imaginary time are indeed like the surface of the Earth, there wouldn't be any singularities in the imaginary time direction, at which the laws of physics would break down. And there wouldn't be any boundaries, to the imaginary time space-time, just as there aren't any boundaries to the surface of the Earth. This absence of boundaries means that the laws of physics would determine the state of the universe uniquely, in imaginary time. But if one knows the state of the universe in imaginary time, one can calculate the state of the universe in real time. One would still expect some sort of Big Bang singularity in real time. So real time would still have a beginning. But one wouldn't have to appeal to something outside the universe, to determine how the universe began. Instead, the way the universe started out at the Big Bang would be determined by the state of the universe in imaginary time. Thus, the universe would be a completely self-contained system. It would not be determined by anything outside the physical universe, that we observe. " Can we further this implication then?/ |
Christianity Etc › Re: Hypocrisy And Irony Of The Christian Religion by johnydon22(op): 8:27pm On May 19, 2018 |
CAPSLOCKED:
TO A CHRISTIAN, BURNING SHRINES IS MORE IMPORTANT THAN HELPING THE POOR AND NEEDY.
JUST LIKE GOD SENDS HURRICANES BECAUSE OF GAYS INSTEAD OF ENDING WORLD HUNGER AND POVERTY. LOL |
Christianity Etc › Re: Why Is There Something Instead Of Nothing? (A Philosophical Overview) by johnydon22(op): 7:00pm On May 19, 2018*. Modified: 7:17pm On May 19, 2018 |
DoctorAlien: Oh! Forgive me. I forgot that everyone is entitled to believing whatever they want to believe. Answer the question. The lecture is actually a summary of A brief history of time And second question: what implication of Hawkins' lecture negates an eternal oscillating cosmos? |
Christianity Etc › Re: Why Is There Something Instead Of Nothing? (A Philosophical Overview) by johnydon22(op): 2:46pm On May 19, 2018 |
DoctorAlien: The lecture in that link I posted is not "A Brief History of Time", which is a 256-page book published in 1988. The lecture in the link I posted is titled "The Beginning of Time". And I don't think that you have read that article, or else you would not be making assertions like the one below which you made in the OP So what you mean is that supposing I have read the lecture I would have modified my conclusion to coincide with Stephen Hawkins'? |
Christianity Etc › Re: Does Evolution Negate Design? by johnydon22(op): 9:26am On May 19, 2018 |
HCpaul: All
1. It's obvious that if there is a God then we all are abandoned creatures. God must have created the universe (particularly our solar system) in a haste and must have forgotten or so busy with a lot of stuff that he didn't perceive that intelligent being like humans happen to exist on planet earth.
2. The coming of Jesus Christ is a very good example. God realized a faulty human-like creature and decided to come visit earth in their form, in order to modify them and start with them afresh. The afterlife ish also prove this.
3.This is so obvious to everyone as our careless creator has abandon us with the woeful problems that life presented to us. We wake up everyday facing unending struggles and challenges. We gradually evolve both in our use of intellectual faculty, emotional Intelligence and in relationship with our immediate world and environment.
Many possibilities exist 1. It's either there is a God who happen to have abandoned us 2. A God who knew that we exist but doesn't care about us, deliberately or probably because he has too many planets to worry about. 3. A God who only consider earth and our solar system as an impractical model of what a real planet or solar system should look like 4. A God who lack all the characteristics of a father or doesn't meet the criteria 5. A partial God 6. A God that has now become an inferior version of what he created 7. A God that sees human as a competition 8. A God that can't do or live without human 9. A God that was only written about by our ancestors just to pass over time. 10. Our ancestors hyped imaginations
The tragedy here is that we all were told and indoctrinated with the same fables, but at a certain time, some start putting their brain to use.
I use this opportunity to say that in the year 2018 and beyond, we will experience the sudden death of religion in Nigeria, science will stand a chance to reign, more churches and mosques demolish, more industries taking place, companies littered everywhere, more firms on our street, adults using their brain, no more doom saying of going back to farming by our politicians and prophets, people going into IT, more automaths, more polymaths among us, more inventors, no more tithing, donations to IT firms, apprehension of pastopreneurs, constructions of our political system and most expecially the rise of Gods insignificance.
Happy new year. I totally forgot about this. I will reply to this later |
Christianity Etc › Re: Hypocrisy And Irony Of The Christian Religion by johnydon22(op): 9:21am On May 19, 2018 |
frank317: hypocrite Frank you should know better than pay any attention to the guy. He is a full blown retard and is proud of it. Ignoring him is at least an effective remedy to the effects of his madness. |
Christianity Etc › Re: Hypocrisy And Irony Of The Christian Religion by johnydon22(op): 9:18am On May 19, 2018 |
UncleSnr:
 Seun, Lalasticlala Come and ban me  |
Christianity Etc › Re: Why Is There Something Instead Of Nothing? (A Philosophical Overview) by johnydon22(op): 8:52am On May 19, 2018 |
DoctorAlien: Johnydon22, I'd like to introduce you to creation.com
I'd like you to check out what they have to say on things like the eternal universe theory, and the theory of unending cycle of universes. Great... |
Christianity Etc › Re: Why Is There Something Instead Of Nothing? (A Philosophical Overview) by johnydon22(op): 8:52am On May 19, 2018 |
malvisguy212: you know what baffle me? the atheist concept of God, why you guys portray Him as material ,limited and contained within the confine of the universe........ isn't that a self defeating concept of God to begin with? the Christian perspective has always been 1 king 8:27: " But will God indeed dwell on the earth? the heaven cannot contain thee" 1. Please I am not interested in your biblical quotations Malvisguy 2. You have not made any argument yet.. |
Christianity Etc › Re: Why Is There Something Instead Of Nothing? (A Philosophical Overview) by johnydon22(op): 8:51am On May 19, 2018 |
DoctorAlien: I found the lecture in the link below, given by Stephen Hawking, who was an atheist. I think you might want to check out what Hawking has to say on whether the universe has always existed.
http://www.hawking.org.uk/the-beginning-of-time.html
For the other things he discussed in the lecture, I want you to note the amount of "would haves" and "ifs" and other like words in the lecture. I have read a brief history of time.. What's the point you are making? |
Christianity Etc › Re: Why Is There Something Instead Of Nothing? (A Philosophical Overview) by johnydon22(op): 8:50am On May 19, 2018 |
Gggg102: questions like this do not have answers. Perhaps but I think they do maybe not yet but eventually. all those who searched for answers to questions about existence follow the same road; they ask the question, postulate some theories most of which are filled with holes and then they just conclude that what is just is. With each attempt and study we get closer and closer in quality of truthful approximation we acknowledge and accept that there is something and make the best use of it. Good idea |
Christianity Etc › Why Is There Something Instead Of Nothing? (A Philosophical Overview) by johnydon22(op): 5:20pm On May 17, 2018 |
Human intelligence is a recipe to existential crisis. We not only able to perceive the world around us, we are also capable of questions regarding the universe and existence herself.
One question that is at the pinnacle of our enquiry is Why exactly does anything exist at all?
Very many approaches we have towards answering this questions may lead us towards different method of thinking and worldview, but one thing neither of us can deny is: The universe exists
Whether as a hologram objective matter matrix
what ever your perception about the universe is, the end point is; it exists.
And this begs the question; Why?
Why does something exist rather than nothing?
Theologically, the natural answer to this question is, God. From conventional religious world view the universe was created out of nothing (Ex nihilo) by God.
But then the question we are addressing is; Why is there something instead of nothing? And if God is the answer then obviously God is also something and thus if we must pursue this question courageously we must ask the next question.
Why is there God (something) rather than nothing?
The obvious answer to this theologically is that God has always existed.
This argument can also be extended to the universe by stating it has always existed therefore eliminating the need for God as a cause (not necessarily as a designer).
Aristotle argued that the idea of an uncaused cause is nonsensical, that the universe just is.
Going further in this answer, we explore the remarkable position of the ancient Hindus. They happen to have a profound perspective on existence, cosmological causality.
Like Aristotle, the Hindus believe in an eternal universe but this eternity is looped like a circle. From Hindu cosmogony; the universe is going through an eternal loop of death and rebirth. A circular existential model that makes out the universe to be just an incessant repetition or perfect balance between birth and death. An old universe dies and a new one springs up from it, round and round it goes.
One of the implications of the big bang model is an oscillating universe. This implication suggests that with the right amount of gravitational force present in the universe, the universe will eventually collapse on itself and form a kind or singularity which ultimately sparks off another Big bang and thus it goes like the Hindu model.
Now with this background in place i will go ahead and make my own argument:
I happen to think that ex nihilo is nonsensical at best (Though i leave a possibility due to the knowledge that my perception on the necessity of causality is not objectively or cosmologically binding, it is just the reach of my perception)
Even if the universe was designed, i do not think God created the universe out of nothing, i do believe if we apply the principle of design as we know it just like the principle of causality; you can't design nothing but can design something.
so for God to design the universe, the universe must have existed in a raw form prior to God's manipulation (ex materia).
Therefore i hold the idea that the universe has always existed whether designed or not.
And if the universe have always existed, the question why is there something instead of nothing becomes a logical absurdity..
What about you?
What do you think?
Do you subscribe to the ex nihilo or ex materia?
Why do you think there is something rather than nothing? |
Christianity Etc › Re: Would You Be Kind Without Religion? by johnydon22(m): 2:01pm On May 17, 2018 |
CAPSLOCKED: MANY ANIMALS SHOW KINDNESS BECAUSE IT'S A VIRTUE, AND NOT BECAUSE THEY KNOW JESUS.
I FEAR FOR THE PEOPLE WHO HAVE TO BEAR YOUR RELIGIOUS NONSENSE EVERYDAY. Not necessarily: Kindness in animals (mammals most especially) is a rather intrinsic part of our neurological/psychological make-up. Our responses to events invoke emotions such as Anger, hate, love, pity, sympathy, empathy and these and much more inform our choices that may otherwise may be regarded as moral or otherwise in human conception. our moral compass resides in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex of our brain. |
Celebrities › Re: Ifu Ennada And Bambam Visit Senator Florence Ita Giwa At Her Home (photos) by johnydon22(m): 5:50pm On May 12, 2018 |
Omihanifa: occultic woman that sleeps with young boys to better her own life Oga is it your occult? Is it your sleep? Is it your life?  |