Actually, my links don't have anything to do with debunking the scientific proof that God exists. You simply say they do.
And your links don't debunk the scientific proof that God exists. You simply shove into them a bunch of things, written by others, that you can't explain, yourself.
If you want to debunk the scientific proof that God exists, find a point in the proof, explain your debunking point in simple language, and let's take it from there. The scientific proof, again, is:
1. cause and effect, combined with;
2. entropy, combined with;
3. complexity;
and the explanation is found here:
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.10718395https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.14047133https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1662153.40https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.16803380.
Certainly if you need more info, you can research beyond the links.
You don't know if everything has a cause, you just simply say that's the case but as I said several times there are physicists that would claim that radioactivity decay doesn't have a cause. Now even if we agree that everything has a cause, the argument of cause and effect stops there. You established that everything has a cause. Now to jump from that conclusion to the conclusion that God did it, it's a leap of faith and you have nothing to back up that claim, sure the universe is complex but that still doesn't prove God made it.
Cause and effect act in everything that we see, understand. Arguments against it haven't been substantiated.
The links attempt to show you that no matter what the source of cause and effect is, it is God.
Let me state several very goofy things to show you what I mean:1. If cause and effect were put into place by a certain microbe, then that certain microbe is God;
2. If cause and effect were put into place by Zeus, then Zeus is God;
3. If cause and effect were put into place by a salamander, then the salamander is God;
4. If cause and effect were put into place by big bang, then big bang is God;
5. Whatever put cause and effect into place, that "thing" is God.
Get the idea? We don't know what it is that set up cause and effect to work way it works. But whatever did it, it is God. We see this by the ultra-complex way that cause and effect act. Entropy shows us that there was a beginning, so that we can't say that everything always acted this way for no reason we can put our finger on.
My links explain this. But you are having so much trouble forcing yourself to understand the stuff in the links because you don't want to, that I see that I have to force you to understand it. The only way that you can NOT understand is to be gone from this and similar threads.
The problem with that is that the big bang is not something alive therefore you can't call it god, it is not something that is sentient or aware, it's just a process and the same thing happens with many other possibilities.
That's a problem for big bang. Big bang math doesn't account for the complexities of the universe, especially life, human intelligence, the human brain, the emotion, the spirit and soul. Since it doesn't account for these things, it is incomplete with regard to reality. BB might be complete regarding itself. But it isn't the way things work in reality.
Thank you for pointing out that BB as it theoretically stands can't be God. But
if it happened to be the source of cause and effect - cause and effect which produces life, human intelligence, the human brain, the emotion, the spirit and soul, and everything else as well - then it would be God.
No, it wouldn't. God is supposed to be the creator. The big bang is just a process, it's like calling a tsunami, God. God is supposed to be sentient and aware, not just a process or stardust as you say. Otherwise I don't know what your definition of God is, since you never really explained it.
Nobody has come near answering all the questions regarding how BB produced the universe. BB math has barely become strong enough to show that it might exist. The fact that it has been proven possible by lab experimentation actually creating a BB, shows that BB doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the creation of the universe.
The point wasn't BB being the "creator." The point was that if BB WAS the creator, then it would be God. Why? Because only God, no matter what he/she/it is, could create the super-complexities of the universe... especially the mind-boggling massive amount of cause and effect that exists all over the place all the time.
Why does the universe reflect God? Because we have found no other answer to where this "stuff" of the universe could come from.
Why call it God and not simply big bang, when you are calling it God, you are giving it different attributes. Complexity does not require God nor another entity that must be complex.
http://www.freethoughtdebater.org/2011/12/30/complexity-probability-and-god/I would have thought that you could see the answer to your question quite easily. It has to do with confusion.
Obviously, God makes His entrance, so to speak, at times with a big bang. If someone wanted to give Him that pet name in his mind, why not?
But God is not the BB of science. The BB of science is way too inadequately explained to fit what God would have to be to make the universe.
If complexity happened to be great, but did not include mind and identity, we might possibly be able to get away with using some other word than "God." But the "God" connotation is that God is like people in some ways, but greater.
As far as comparing
complexity with
design in some abstract way, there could be some debate about the necessity of having a God. But when comparing the two along with cause and effect, in the universe as it stands, God is a requirement.
In the scientific proof for God, one doesn't simply say that God exists or doesn't exist. Rather, one takes what exists and attempts to explain where the whole thing came from. As I said above:
1. If cause and effect were put into place by a certain microbe, then that certain microbe is God;
2. If cause and effect were put into place by Zeus, then Zeus is God;
3. If cause and effect were put into place by a salamander, then the salamander is God;
4. If cause and effect were put into place by big bang, then big bang is God;
5. Whatever put cause and effect into place, that "thing" is God.
Those are simply a few lines to get the point across. The point is that whatever made the universe as it now stands, fits the definition of "God."