I should've said "since the beginning of human history."cbit wrote: 1. Humans haven't existed since the beginning of time. At a certain point in history, none of our ancestors believed in anything supernatural (perhaps we'd have to go back to our common ancestor with the chimp.. or maybe we could find universal lack of supernatural belief much more recently).
My point was that the majority of humankind has always had some notion of a creator or God in mind. Local cultural influences have resulted in that God or that force being imagined in an almost infinite variety of ways. That doesn't mean there's no creator.cbit wrote: 2. The deities that people have believed in through the ages aren't 'One god' (who just wears different outfits), far from it. Consider the polytheistic religions. Consider Baal, Thor, Zeus etc etc. these are quite distinct intentional objects. The old gods have fallen out of fashion, the judeo christian god is very much in vogue now. Same omnipotence maybe, but different guys.
We covered that in the previous paragraph. He's a localized, culture-bound attempt to explain or portray the one, ineffable source of everything.cbit wrote: 3. Since there was a time in which a large number of people believed in the literal existence of Thor. should we take "Thor exists" seriously as a truth claim? Thor presents the same problem to theists as the FSM does (with the difference that people did really believe in thor).
DUDES! We're gonna make it!
