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Atheists, do you believe that an omnipotent god-being couldn't theoretically exist?
Do you believe that, theoretically, the laws of physics would absolutely prohibit a godlike being to exist?
If not, then god should exist, thanks to the laws of quantum mechanics.
(If you say 'yes', please provide the physical laws that would prevent it. And when I say 'omnipotent', I mean of our universe.)
Edit: Sorry guys, Firefox decided it would be fun to triple-post this question. Please see the most recent version of it, as I'll be deleting this one.
4 Answers
- Anonymous7 years agoFavorite Answer
Any theories worth their salt are testable and have evidence to work with.
Your God hypothesis has.......?
- ?Lv 77 years ago
It seems likely (and the evidence is compelling) that an omnipotent god-being couldn't exist.
It is the religionists' position (they so enjoy the 'special pleading' fallacy) that their God exists outside the laws of physics, and therefore does exist, and does all the things He does.
- ?Lv 77 years ago
can it make a rock so heavy it can't lift it? Then it ain't omnipotent. ...you can't suspend the laws for gawd, that's special pleading. You're pissing on your own feet.
- Frank UnderwoodLv 47 years ago
Je n'avais pas besoin de cette hypothèse-là .
Source(s): Pierre-Simon Laplace