This sounds like nonsensical post-modernist crap. Even if one could extrapolate some meaning it still becomes a false purpose fallacy (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_purpose) and clearly a strawman argument. It completely obfuscates the point by adding another possible and unlikely occurence.Torazelan wrote:Hello, I'm new here, applying to the corp. I was reading this and thought you all might appreciate a couple bits of text from chat I follow:
"> It is different if the unlikely event is pre-specified. If a
> series of stars went nova so as to spell out "I am the Lord
> your God, so fuck you, atheists" then I would have to admit
> that something unusual was going on... Stathis Papaioannou
Here is how one can tell the difference between a typical extropian type person versus pretty much all normal people in the world. In the event that the novae spelled out such a message as Stathis describes above, the normal people would immediately conclude there is a supreme being and fervently worship accordingly. We extro and transhumanist types, on the other hand, would have an alternate explanation. We would conclude that it isn't necessarily a supreme being exactly, but rather that we are all simulations
(or at least I am, you guys may be avatars), and that the not-necessarily-supreme programmer has a sense of humor.
-spike"
I am an Atheist but I was raised mormon (yes "lol" get it out of your system ) So I can give you the mormon version if that might help- Mormons believe that God is an alien for all intents and purpose. He is all powerful and all knowing (I'm assuming that those two characteristics are mandatory to be considered a deity) that created Earth for his amusment and fell in love with his creation (kinda creepy to fall in love with your "pseudo children" very Woody Allen of "him" ). A mormon can become a god of his/her own universe when they die if they follow simple rules while they are alive (i.e. married in a temple, have children etc...)Oleksandr wrote:So what is God? Can somebody on a pro-God side provide a definition?
(A supreme being does not count, unless you explain what supreme means.)
Anyways, I do like Ayn Rands explanation best: "God... a being whose only definition is that he is beyond man's power to conceive."