Does God Exist?
Essay by review • November 26, 2010 • Essay • 928 Words (4 Pages) • 1,768 Views
Does God exist?
The question of God's existence is a perplexing one, the only evidence we have of God is what we are told from those who worship him, and unknowns can be debated logically if a higher being is in control.
It has been written that in the beginning there was man and there was woman, and God put the two together to create a new race of beings. We are to assume then that God gave these beings a soul to distinguish them from other beings, for example, plants. The soul is often argued to be a mystical form that is immortal and can not be proven to be anything else.
Assuming this argument to be valid then God is a supreme being to have created humans. We have several high beings that appear to stem from this one divine being, for example, Buddha. Therefore it makes sense those who were pure in religion were considered divine beings by their pupils.
We can not discern that there was not a God in the beginning, because if he was alone in this endeavor of creating our world then there are no witnesses. It is then reasonable to speculate God spread the word to his disciples, who in turn set about proving that he did exist, based on what the Bible told them.
In Aquinas's Argument from Efficient Causation each thing is caused to exist and there can be no regression of causes of existence. So there must be a first cause of existence, God. It is in this simple logic such as this that the people of the time based their philosophy on. Aquinas argument is not valid for nothing is its own cause, everything is circular in time. In his argument he leaves the possibility that God may not exist any more. He came, he created, and he left.
It is reasonable to say there is no way to check the existence of God using our senses. God could be a non-physical being that we can not see or feel. Then if that is to be valid, how can we prove it?
There are instances in life that simply can not be explained. Let's say death for example. Death is another of life's mystery, we just don't know what happens after life ceases to exist and death sets in. It is a strange phenomenon for such a live being to go cold in an instant.
This leads to the argument for a heaven and a hell, an afterlife for the immortal soul to move onto. Plato's cosmology dictates the Notion of Purity in the structure of the universe, going as far to say that the Earth is round and beyond the stars and planets is a World of Being.
His reasoning is what is pure will rise above the earth, and what is non-pure will slip from it. People of faith take this concept and say there must be a supreme being governing this process, thus God must exist.
It is Socrates metaphysics that leads us to two worlds, one of becoming, the other of being. In the World of Becoming the body is most like the seen, and in the World of Being the body is of the unseen, according to Socrates. In the World of Becoming humans are limited by
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