Rhi,
The thing about a creator god vs something created is that a created thing should leave tangible evidence - a unicorn hoof print, a leprechaun hat. Even if extinct there should be bones.
Not necessarily – there are many gaps in the fossil record for example but we know there must have been intermediary species to bridge the gaps between the fossils we do have. That’s not the point though – rather that point is that if someone can special plead into existence
ex nihilo a “creator”, why can’t we special plead into existence ten other things that appeared
ex nihilo too? Or a trillion? My
ex nihilo leprechauns could have given Vlad’s god a hand with the creation biz (the four-leafed clovers for example) but not have been created by him, or they could have been doing something else entirely. That’s the problem with special pleading a god – you can special plead anything else that takes your fancy with equal facility.
But a hidden creator god has no physical form.
Or maybe he’s just very good a hide and seek. Why is the “no physical form” bit needed, and what would that even mean in any case?
And yes, I do get the logic of the argument but for a theist you are dealing with concepts that are so far apart as to be barely worth consideration. Essentially a created thing - even one we believe to be mythical - would be natural, whereas god is supernatural. Why this Creator and not that is a much more interesting question.
That’s Vlad’s mistake. He keeps pointing to the different characteristics of his god and of my leprechauns as if that has anything to say to the quality of the argument the produces both with equal facility. The “you compare god with leprechauns” is just a lie he repeats over and over, when what’s actually being compared is the argument that produces them. The creator thing is a red herring – why not lots of creators all existing
ex nihilo?
‘Beliefs in’... well I guess many people add ‘beliefs’ to stuff about god, but essentially it’s experiential. I experience the universe as pantheistic, I don’t ‘belueve’ it as that is an interctual exercise that I don’t feel the need for. But yes, survivorship bias is why the many gods all turn out to be Christian, when someone experiences something they search to find a framework in which to understand it and in our culture Christianity is the first stopping off point, at least for now. Even the divine feminine and polytheism can be satisfied within it.
Pretty much, but the “experiential” bit isn’t pulling its weight. Thinking you experience the Christian (or any other) god doesn’t mean that you’re doing any such thing – rather it just means that you’ve found an explanatory narrative (usually culturally determined) that explains the experience to your satisfaction. That’s why when the Vlads of this world blithely tell us that they “experienced god” there’s a grinding of gears because they still have all their work ahead of them to demonstrate that they did any such thing, starting with a coherent definition of what on earth they mean by “god”.
Usually when you ask one of them to do this though, let alone to propose a method to test the claim the only sound you get is that of a door slamming behind them. Vlad is notorious for it, but to be fair he’s not alone in that.