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by dragonwriter
3702 days ago
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> If god created the universe, but did not interact with it after it's creation then you can't claim him to be one of the many mythical figures people make him to be. Sure, you can, since the watchmaker god precisely is one of the many mythical figures people make him out to be. > Second, if god does interact with our universe he is than testable to some degree. Not really; if you have a complete model of all interactions within our universe, you can test whether there is anything else acting on our universe (though that's indistinguishable from a gap in your model of what goes on in our universe). OTOH, if you have a predictive model of how God interacts with our universe (which mythical portrayals disagree on whether this is even in principle possible) you could test if that particular model seems accurate. |
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Or it could be magical fairies with magical universe creating powder. You can't claim something without something to support the claim. My fairies with magical fairy universe creating powder is just as plausible as any god in this scenerio.
Also if it manifests in the universe it is at least detectable. We might not know the cause but we can see the "supernatural" event taking place in the universe