Brilliant answer to "Where did God come from?"

Admittedly, he does make a point about the general idea of a god and how humans are too complex to be here by random chance. However, he doesn't prove the existence of Abrahamic gods and the events that happened in the bible. If anything, a deistic god or higher power is much more likely to exist than the gods that humans wrote about it.
 
Neon said:
Admittedly, he does make a point about the general idea of a god and how humans are too complex to be here by random chance. However, he doesn't prove the existence of Abrahamic gods and the events that happened in the bible. If anything, a deistic god or higher power is much more likely to exist than the gods that humans wrote about it.
exactly, the Biblical God is sometimes shown as having human emotions which is extremely unlikely.

my idea of god would more so be the catalytic event that started the big bang rather than an intelligent entity

Humans are not exactly here by random chance but a mixture of both random chance and the way chemistry behaves that allowed our DNA to shift to where we're at today.
 
Sophistry. All of what he said hints at only one thing, that there might have been "something" before the beginning of the universe. It really doesn't suggest much more than that at all.

For it to bear any significant support of a religion like the any of the Abrahamic ones, it needs to be part of a far more comprehensive argument. I didn't hear everything the gentleman said (beyond the video) so I afford him the benefit of the doubt. As for anyone who thinks this alone means anything significant in isolation, they need to reassess what can and can not be concluded from the evidence he provided.
 
mrzurnaci said:
exactly, the Biblical God is sometimes shown as having human emotions which is extremely unlikely.

my idea of god would more so be the catalytic event that started the big bang rather than an intelligent entity

Humans are not exactly here by random chance but a mixture of both random chance and the way chemistry behaves that allowed our DNA to shift to where we're at today.
Finally we agree with each other.
 
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