Quote Originally Posted by hazetwostep
i believe the more abstract you get in your definition of god, the more accurate you probably are since the language of finite minds is so inadequate to describe the infinite.
Exactly what i think... and i think that its why the "usual" notion of God, held by "simpler" people, ("a man sitting in the sky") may be somehow "offensive" to some more "educated" people... while in fact God is far beyond any human notion, no matter how complex it can be, and never anything fathomable, predictable, nothing that can be molded in human parameters, nothing that be so simple to be ever comprehended by any human.

EDIT: Oh damnit! Some of my posts were deleted, so now this post is my 2012th again...
Coelho Reviewed by Coelho on . The thing about God: He doesn't exist (you do) As far as being an atheist, I doubt I'd adopt the philosophy with any certainty; maybe one day, but I doubt it. But one thing I have been pretty set on over the last few fews years is being an Adeist (lacking belief in a diety). The way I see it, whether you be Christian, Buddhist, or just a God-goin' type of fella: if you believe in an omni-present God, it just doesn't seem logical for it to have any type of singular consciousness, central mind, a separate and distinct being in and of Rating: 5