☩ GOD IS REAL ☩ | [Atheists GTFIH] | IQMaxxing

connive

connive

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GOD IS REAL
INTRO

From what I have gathered, a majority of you guys reject belief in God, whether you are an atheist, agnostic, etc. I completely understand this position because I was in the exact same place six years ago. It is true that you cannot prove God is real; however, you can't disprove Him either. On the contrary, we can follow strong logical arguments that were created by some of the greatest minds in history.

The content of this post is a twenty-page letter that I wrote to someone very dear to me. This originally took me weeks to write, so I hope that all my effort is not in vain. If this post benefits just one person, that makes it all worth it. This is being treated as a part two that is focusing on the spirituality aspect mentioned in my recent post: https://looksmax.org/threads/the-actual-dangers-of-looksmaxxing-high-iq-gtfih.2113266/

St. Thomas Aquinas

St. Thomas Aquinas offered five classic ways that still hold up remarkably well even 500 years later.

  • The Argument from Motion / Change (Aquinas’ First Way): Nothing can move or change itself: whatever is in motion has to be moved by something else. Motion means reducing potentiality to actuality; only something already “actual” can do this. For example, an actuality would be “hot”. It is a potentiality to become hot. The actuality would be being “hot”. If something is put into motion, you would need a prior cause. (There cannot be an infinite chain of movers.) Therefore, there must be a First Mover that is pure actuality, that is God.

  • The Argument from Efficient Causation (Second Way): Every effect has a cause. Nothing can cause itself (that would require it to exist before it exists – an absurdity.) An infinite regress of causes is impossible. If there is no first cause, there is no intermediate or final effect. Therefore, there must be a First Efficient Cause that is uncaused. This is the one who is (Exodus 3:14 “I AM WHO I AM”).

  • The Argument from Contingency (Third Way): We observe many things that are contingent, beings, events, or things whose existence is not necessary, they depend on something else for their existence and could potentially not exist. (Born, grow, decay, die, break, etc.) If everything were contingent, then there would have been a time where nothing existed. To believe something can come from nothing is an absurdity. However, we can recognize existences that eventually will cease to exist, like me and you, for example.

  • Therefore, it is logically impossible to deduce that everything is contingent. There must be at least one being whose nature is to exist, that has to exist. This necessary being does not derive its necessity from anything else. Otherwise, we would need another cause, which would lead to an infinite regress. It must be necessary in its very nature. This is God.

  • The Argument from Degree (Fourth Way): We observe things of different degrees of quality: things are more or less good, true, beautiful, etc. These qualities are judged to a maximum or perfect standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections, something that is perfect in every way. God is that maximum.

  • We observe degrees of qualities; things are more or less good, true, beautiful, noble. These gradations imply a maximum standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections (goodness, truth, beauty) that we participate in. God is that maximum.

  • The Argument from Design / Governance (Fifth Way): The universe is not chaos. Plants, animals, laws of physics, etc., are all ordered to an end. These things lack intelligence and cannot guide themselves toward an end unless it is guided by something intelligent. For example, an arrow needs an archer. Therefore, there must be an intelligent being that directs all nature to its ends. This being is once again God.

Transcendental Argument for God

“A truly transcendental argument takes any fact of experience which it wishes to investigate, and tries to determine what the presuppositions of such fact must be, in order to make it what it is.” –Cornelius Van Til, A Survey of Christian Epistemology

We are going to be investigating human experience, knowledge, logic, morality, science, and intelligible prediction, which all are possible and actual. These experiences all presuppose specific conditions: universal, immaterial laws of logic, natural order, objective morality, the unity-and-diversity of being, and the reliability of inductive reasoning. Only the Christian worldview is true. Without the Christian worldview, there is a lack of preconditions of knowledge and meaningful experience, and more. Therefore, the triune God exists as the necessary precondition for epistemology and metaphysics.

Only the Triune God accounts for Logic and Reason, the One-and-Many Problem, Morality, and Science and Uniformity of Nature. I will go through and explain each of the following.

Laws of logic are universal, immaterial, and invariant in their very nature. They are all propositions that serve as primary bearers of truth. These are not simply linguistic or physical. You can state a law of logic in numerous languages; there is still the same law of logic that exists independently of language or brain chemistry. The issue here is that materialism will reduce them to brain chemistry, and atheism is unable to justify its application to reality without circularity or arbitrariness. The only way to ground these propositions is through a God that precedes these things.

Reality displays unity and diversity, and this is something that we can see. Pure monism reduces these distinctions into one essence; pure pluralism states that ultimate reality is not grounded in a single unified system and is grounded in diversity. This would ultimately mean that knowledge is impossible because knowledge requires relating things together. This ultimately yields chaos. The Trinity alone resolves this issue: one divine essence and three distinct Persons (hypostases) in eternal relational communion. Unity and diversity are equally ultimate and eternal in God, grounding a precedent and a coherent world without reductionism.

It is illogical for objective morality to rely on evolution, social convention, or preference. These foundations would reduce objective morality to relativism or a “might makes right.” Relativism reduces objective morality to subjectivism, and objective morality cannot work under a “might makes right” because it would assume that strength ought to define what is objectively moral. The only adequate foundation is the triune God who grounds objective morality within His holy nature, which is defined as perfect and eternal love that exists within the relationship of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Induction assumes that the future will resemble the past. This is a principle known as the uniformity of nature. Atheistic naturalism does not offer a guarantee against radical contingency. The triune God created and continues a natural order that the world participates in as long as the earth exists. “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease.” –Genesis 8:22 RSVCE

All religions and philosophies that deny the triune God fail to justify their own preconditions. Atheistic materialism reduces logic and morality to physics and opinion, which ultimately renders itself self-refuting. Other religions cannot adequately solve the one-and-many question and ultimately collapse into pluralism or monism.

The Transcendental Argument for God does not simply suggest God’s existence; it proves that without Him, nothing, not even the argument against Him, makes sense.

The Patristic Argument for the Existence of God

1. Everything that changes needs a Maker who doesn’t change (The “Uncreated Creator” Argument)

By: St. John of Damascus (c. 675-749 A.D.)


Everything we see around us is contingent — it comes into being, changes or eventually ends.. Stars burn out, living things die, man-made things break, etc. These realities cannot be self-explanatory; they require an external cause. If every cause itself needs a prior cause, we would face an infinite regress with no ultimate explanation. Therefore, there must be a creator who is eternal and is uncreated. This is God — the eternal source of all existence.

2. The perfect order and balance in the universe can’t be luck or chance (The “Harmony and Design” Argument)

The world is full of opposite forces that should clash yet somehow work together — fire and water, for example. Seasons arrive on schedule year after year. Even more impressive are living systems in nature. For example, a forest: trees release oxygen that animals need to breathe, while animals give off carbon dioxide that trees use to grow. Insects pollinate flowers, predators control animal populations, and bacteria breaks down dead matter to return nutrients to the soil. All these parts fit together in a balanced, ongoing cycle. If everything happened by random change, it’s hard to explain why we see this kind of stable order and teamwork instead of total chaos or everything being the same.

3. Deep down, we already know God exists (The “Implanted Knowledge” Argument)

Throughout history, almost every culture has believed in some higher power, even without hearing about the Bible. This feeling is built into human nature, similar to knowing right from wrong. Creation (sunsets, stars, a newborn baby) often stirs a sense that life isn’t meaningless. Only strong distractions or habits can push this awareness away. This inner sense suggests we’re wired to recognize something greater than ourselves.

4. Variety and Beauty in Creation Can’t Come from Blind Cause

If the world was created by random atoms or blind forces, everything would likely be uniform and mush. However, we see purposeful diversity: sun and moon, land and sea, unique plants and animals, all beautiful in their own way. This variety of beauty reflects an intelligent creator.

The Human Person

Beyond the physical world, look inward. We experience an objective moral law—
Deep down we know some things are truly right and wrong, not just cultural preferences (e.g., the slaughter of children is evil everywhere). Conscience calls us to goodness beyond self-interest. Where does this binding moral obligation come from if the universe is just blind matter? A moral Lawgiver best explains it.

We also have desires that nothing in this world fully satisfies: endless hunger for truth, beauty, perfect love, and lasting happiness. These point beyond the material to a transcendent fulfillment—God. Our very capacity for reason and science assumes an orderly, intelligible universe, which a rational Creator explains better than chance.

Without an intelligent creator there would be no objective morality. The only morality that would be present would be subjective. However, we know that there is an objective morality because there is something deep within us that tells us whether something is right or wrong i.e. your conscience. Objectively speaking we all agree that murder is wrong. It is wrong because it is the unlawful taking of another person’s life. We must ask ourselves, “Why does that matter?” It matters because there is an intelligent creator who designed us in his image and likeness, who provided us with a soul, a purpose, the ability to reason, etc. Without this world view, murder would not matter, we would simply be “bags of meat/clumps of cells” who have no transcendent value. who are in motion. If we have no purpose and we are here purely by chance then it wouldn’t matter if one person killed another. Without an intelligent creator we must ask, “Who cares if one clump of cells happens to bump into another clump of cells and kill it?” It wouldn’t matter because there is no purpose to our lives, there is no reason for us to live, there is no intelligent creator.

A lot of atheists argue that the value of life comes from thought, love, experience, etc. At the end of the day, however, none of this matters without a God. The absence of God means an absence of objective morality, an absence of love, etc. All of these things are reduced to purposeless electrochemical events in a purposeless universe, which would render them lacking in objective or ultimate significance. If we are here by chance, why treat love more than a useful illusion or murder as more than rearranging particles?

The Restlessness of the Human Heart

One of the Doctors of the Church and Church Father, St. Augustine’s most famous quote is, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”

Look inward and dig deep down. Do you ever sense a kind of emptiness that no relationship, achievement, experience, entertainment, or success has ever fully satisfied? You may find temporal things that bring real joy, and that’s good, but that eventually fades, leaving the same emptiness behind. Many people who step away from faith notice this same pattern: temporal fillers that never reach the depth that is craved.

The Catholic tradition doesn’t see this as a flaw or psychological accident, but as powerful evidence that we were made for something, someone, infinite. Our hearts are wired for perfect Truth, perfect Beauty, perfect Love, and perfect Happiness. Nothing in the created world will be able to ultimately fill that void because we were created by and for God. St. Augustine’s prayer, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” doesn’t prove God exists on its own, but it fits perfectly with everything else we’ve seen: a universe that points to an intelligent Creator, and a human heart that hungers for the infinite. Faith in Christ doesn’t erase life’s struggles, but it offers the relationship that can finally satisfy the deepest part of who we are.

A Black Pill Argument Against God

One of the most common refutations against God's existence I see on here is, "Why would God create subhumans?"

My response:

Every person has infinite dignity because they were created in the image and likeness of God. This dignity is not based on a looks scale. It’s inherent from the moment of conception. We must keep in mind that the world is not in its final, perfected state, and because of original sin, there is a brokenness of creation, which causes a spectrum of outcomes: some people are born with ideal genetics, and some people have severe deformities.

St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that the universe is more perfect with this range of perfections and imperfections. A world with stable natural laws allows for defects. Look at the looks hierarchy. We recognize that some people are chads and some people are gigadeformed subhumans. These are clear degrees of beauty that are not random chaos. This is a perfect example of Aquinas’ Fourth Way, which states that gradations only exist because they participate in a perfect, maximum Beauty. If everyone were equally attractive, this would actually argue against God. The brutal reality is that the looks scale itself is evidence of a Creator. God does not override the natural laws of the world with constant miracles because that would collapse creation into chaos. Subhumans are extreme cases of a fallen material world.

Everyone has a cross to bear and not everyone gets the same cross to bear. Some people hit the genetic lottery and have a different cross to bear than people who are born with poor genetics. We must keep in mind that even if someone is subhuman, they may be able to develop different virtues that may be harder for a Chad to develop. Some of these virtues include: radical humility, detachment from vanity, etc.

It is true that life is brutally unfair on the looks scale in this fallen world, and Catholic theology agrees; however, it adds that this earthly life is not the whole story. Your looks are temporal; what lasts is how you play the cards you are dealt. For example, the subhuman who improves what he can and unites his suffering towards Christ can rank higher in eternity than a Chad who is arrogant and uses his gifts on pride and vice. This is not to say that a Chad cannot have the same virtues as said subhuman.

There is no problem with improving what you can, however, it is important not to idolize looks because they are not your ultimate worth and are not the telos to life. Furthermore, even if you are subhuman, you are not worthless because you have an immortal soul and have an infinite ontological dignity and were created in the image and likeness of God.

In the same way that God allows suffering in the fallen world, he permits extreme genetic deformities. Christ’s passion shows that he did not abstain from deformity and pain; he entered it himself and lived out the fallen world and suffered himself.

@ALBOSS @Jason Voorhees @GUMMIKZKDI @Acquiescence @avgsub5human @Paul.jnxy

 
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dnr god doesn't exist
 
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IQMaxxing​

Download

Edit: Actually a decentish thread!
 
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can you address the epicurean paradox? I don't have time to reply to every single bit

Additionally, how are you blackpilled and theist? Blackpill is genetic determinism, which goes strongly against common theist scolar's belief, arguing that there is no determinism, and those religions that are abrahamic
1780221058260
 
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True dat💯
 
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proof god exists
 
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can you address the epicurean paradox? I don't have time to reply to every single bit

Additionally, how are you blackpilled and theist? Blackpill is genetic determinism, which goes strongly against theist scolar's belief, arguing that there is no determinism.
View attachment 5145333
Yes, and pretty easily.

First of all, the Epicurean Paradox assumes a false dilemma. Right off the bat, it's creating a logical fallacy.

Free will is the root of moral evil.

Real love, goodness, and virtue all require free will. Without free will, we wouldn't be able to truly love or be good, because we would essentially be robots. Moral evil comes from humans choosing to abuse the gift of free will. God is not the author of moral evil... we are. If God prevented every evil decision, that would destroy free will, the ability to choose.

Evil is not created by God

Evil is a lack of good. God created good in the world, and evil entered through the ability to rebel like Adam and Eve in the Garden. Similar to how darkness is the absence of light, evil is the absence of good.

God brings the good out of evil. A prime example would be suffering building virtue. Another example would be Christ's passion, death, and resurrection. Jesus went through torture and was nailed to a cross, yet was able to bring good from that evil.

"For the Almighty God, who, as even the heathen acknowledge, has supreme power over all things, being Himself supremely good, would never permit the existence of anything evil among His works, if He were not so omnipotent and good that He can bring good even out of evil." Augustine, Enchiridion on Faith, Hope, and Love, ch. 11.

The Epicurean Paradox ignores eternity and salvation. It also ignores God's ultimate judgment and justice.

On the question of, "Additionally, how are you blackpilled and theist? Blackpill is genetic determinism, which goes strongly against theist scolar's belief, arguing that there is no determinism."

Read the part labeled "A Black Pill Argument Against God"
 
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DNR this gpt shit
 
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GOD IS REAL
INTRO

From what I have gathered, a majority of you guys reject belief in God, whether you are an atheist, agnostic, etc. I completely understand this position because I was in the exact same place six years ago. It is true that you cannot prove God is real; however, you can't disprove Him either. On the contrary, we can follow strong logical arguments that were created by some of the greatest minds in history.

The content of this post is a twenty-page letter that I wrote to someone very dear to me. This originally took me weeks to write, so I hope that all my effort is not in vain. If this post benefits just one person, that makes it all worth it. This is being treated as a part two that is focusing on the spirituality aspect mentioned in my recent post: https://looksmax.org/threads/the-actual-dangers-of-looksmaxxing-high-iq-gtfih.2113266/

St. Thomas Aquinas

St. Thomas Aquinas offered five classic ways that still hold up remarkably well even 500 years later.

  • The Argument from Motion / Change (Aquinas’ First Way): Nothing can move or change itself: whatever is in motion has to be moved by something else. Motion means reducing potentiality to actuality; only something already “actual” can do this. For example, an actuality would be “hot”. It is a potentiality to become hot. The actuality would be being “hot”. If something is put into motion, you would need a prior cause. (There cannot be an infinite chain of movers.) Therefore, there must be a First Mover that is pure actuality, that is God.

  • The Argument from Efficient Causation (Second Way): Every effect has a cause. Nothing can cause itself (that would require it to exist before it exists – an absurdity.) An infinite regress of causes is impossible. If there is no first cause, there is no intermediate or final effect. Therefore, there must be a First Efficient Cause that is uncaused. This is the one who is (Exodus 3:14 “I AM WHO I AM”).

  • The Argument from Contingency (Third Way): We observe many things that are contingent, beings, events, or things whose existence is not necessary, they depend on something else for their existence and could potentially not exist. (Born, grow, decay, die, break, etc.) If everything were contingent, then there would have been a time where nothing existed. To believe something can come from nothing is an absurdity. However, we can recognize existences that eventually will cease to exist, like me and you, for example.

  • Therefore, it is logically impossible to deduce that everything is contingent. There must be at least one being whose nature is to exist, that has to exist. This necessary being does not derive its necessity from anything else. Otherwise, we would need another cause, which would lead to an infinite regress. It must be necessary in its very nature. This is God.

  • The Argument from Degree (Fourth Way): We observe things of different degrees of quality: things are more or less good, true, beautiful, etc. These qualities are judged to a maximum or perfect standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections, something that is perfect in every way. God is that maximum.

  • We observe degrees of qualities; things are more or less good, true, beautiful, noble. These gradations imply a maximum standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections (goodness, truth, beauty) that we participate in. God is that maximum.

  • The Argument from Design / Governance (Fifth Way): The universe is not chaos. Plants, animals, laws of physics, etc., are all ordered to an end. These things lack intelligence and cannot guide themselves toward an end unless it is guided by something intelligent. For example, an arrow needs an archer. Therefore, there must be an intelligent being that directs all nature to its ends. This being is once again God.

Transcendental Argument for God

“A truly transcendental argument takes any fact of experience which it wishes to investigate, and tries to determine what the presuppositions of such fact must be, in order to make it what it is.” –Cornelius Van Til, A Survey of Christian Epistemology

We are going to be investigating human experience, knowledge, logic, morality, science, and intelligible prediction, which all are possible and actual. These experiences all presuppose specific conditions: universal, immaterial laws of logic, natural order, objective morality, the unity-and-diversity of being, and the reliability of inductive reasoning. Only the Christian worldview is true. Without the Christian worldview, there is a lack of preconditions of knowledge and meaningful experience, and more. Therefore, the triune God exists as the necessary precondition for epistemology and metaphysics.

Only the Triune God accounts for Logic and Reason, the One-and-Many Problem, Morality, and Science and Uniformity of Nature. I will go through and explain each of the following.

Laws of logic are universal, immaterial, and invariant in their very nature. They are all propositions that serve as primary bearers of truth. These are not simply linguistic or physical. You can state a law of logic in numerous languages; there is still the same law of logic that exists independently of language or brain chemistry. The issue here is that materialism will reduce them to brain chemistry, and atheism is unable to justify its application to reality without circularity or arbitrariness. The only way to ground these propositions is through a God that precedes these things.

Reality displays unity and diversity, and this is something that we can see. Pure monism reduces these distinctions into one essence; pure pluralism states that ultimate reality is not grounded in a single unified system and is grounded in diversity. This would ultimately mean that knowledge is impossible because knowledge requires relating things together. This ultimately yields chaos. The Trinity alone resolves this issue: one divine essence and three distinct Persons (hypostases) in eternal relational communion. Unity and diversity are equally ultimate and eternal in God, grounding a precedent and a coherent world without reductionism.

It is illogical for objective morality to rely on evolution, social convention, or preference. These foundations would reduce objective morality to relativism or a “might makes right.” Relativism reduces objective morality to subjectivism, and objective morality cannot work under a “might makes right” because it would assume that strength ought to define what is objectively moral. The only adequate foundation is the triune God who grounds objective morality within His holy nature, which is defined as perfect and eternal love that exists within the relationship of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Induction assumes that the future will resemble the past. This is a principle known as the uniformity of nature. Atheistic naturalism does not offer a guarantee against radical contingency. The triune God created and continues a natural order that the world participates in as long as the earth exists. “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease.” –Genesis 8:22 RSVCE

All religions and philosophies that deny the triune God fail to justify their own preconditions. Atheistic materialism reduces logic and morality to physics and opinion, which ultimately renders itself self-refuting. Other religions cannot adequately solve the one-and-many question and ultimately collapse into pluralism or monism.

The Transcendental Argument for God does not simply suggest God’s existence; it proves that without Him, nothing, not even the argument against Him, makes sense.

The Patristic Argument for the Existence of God

1. Everything that changes needs a Maker who doesn’t change (The “Uncreated Creator” Argument)

By: St. John of Damascus (c. 675-749 A.D.)


Everything we see around us is contingent — it comes into being, changes or eventually ends.. Stars burn out, living things die, man-made things break, etc. These realities cannot be self-explanatory; they require an external cause. If every cause itself needs a prior cause, we would face an infinite regress with no ultimate explanation. Therefore, there must be a creator who is eternal and is uncreated. This is God — the eternal source of all existence.

2. The perfect order and balance in the universe can’t be luck or chance (The “Harmony and Design” Argument)

The world is full of opposite forces that should clash yet somehow work together — fire and water, for example. Seasons arrive on schedule year after year. Even more impressive are living systems in nature. For example, a forest: trees release oxygen that animals need to breathe, while animals give off carbon dioxide that trees use to grow. Insects pollinate flowers, predators control animal populations, and bacteria breaks down dead matter to return nutrients to the soil. All these parts fit together in a balanced, ongoing cycle. If everything happened by random change, it’s hard to explain why we see this kind of stable order and teamwork instead of total chaos or everything being the same.

3. Deep down, we already know God exists (The “Implanted Knowledge” Argument)

Throughout history, almost every culture has believed in some higher power, even without hearing about the Bible. This feeling is built into human nature, similar to knowing right from wrong. Creation (sunsets, stars, a newborn baby) often stirs a sense that life isn’t meaningless. Only strong distractions or habits can push this awareness away. This inner sense suggests we’re wired to recognize something greater than ourselves.

4. Variety and Beauty in Creation Can’t Come from Blind Cause

If the world was created by random atoms or blind forces, everything would likely be uniform and mush. However, we see purposeful diversity: sun and moon, land and sea, unique plants and animals, all beautiful in their own way. This variety of beauty reflects an intelligent creator.

The Human Person

Beyond the physical world, look inward. We experience an objective moral law—
Deep down we know some things are truly right and wrong, not just cultural preferences (e.g., the slaughter of children is evil everywhere). Conscience calls us to goodness beyond self-interest. Where does this binding moral obligation come from if the universe is just blind matter? A moral Lawgiver best explains it.

We also have desires that nothing in this world fully satisfies: endless hunger for truth, beauty, perfect love, and lasting happiness. These point beyond the material to a transcendent fulfillment—God. Our very capacity for reason and science assumes an orderly, intelligible universe, which a rational Creator explains better than chance.

Without an intelligent creator there would be no objective morality. The only morality that would be present would be subjective. However, we know that there is an objective morality because there is something deep within us that tells us whether something is right or wrong i.e. your conscience. Objectively speaking we all agree that murder is wrong. It is wrong because it is the unlawful taking of another person’s life. We must ask ourselves, “Why does that matter?” It matters because there is an intelligent creator who designed us in his image and likeness, who provided us with a soul, a purpose, the ability to reason, etc. Without this world view, murder would not matter, we would simply be “bags of meat/clumps of cells” who have no transcendent value. who are in motion. If we have no purpose and we are here purely by chance then it wouldn’t matter if one person killed another. Without an intelligent creator we must ask, “Who cares if one clump of cells happens to bump into another clump of cells and kill it?” It wouldn’t matter because there is no purpose to our lives, there is no reason for us to live, there is no intelligent creator.

A lot of atheists argue that the value of life comes from thought, love, experience, etc. At the end of the day, however, none of this matters without a God. The absence of God means an absence of objective morality, an absence of love, etc. All of these things are reduced to purposeless electrochemical events in a purposeless universe, which would render them lacking in objective or ultimate significance. If we are here by chance, why treat love more than a useful illusion or murder as more than rearranging particles?

The Restlessness of the Human Heart

One of the Doctors of the Church and Church Father, St. Augustine’s most famous quote is, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”

Look inward and dig deep down. Do you ever sense a kind of emptiness that no relationship, achievement, experience, entertainment, or success has ever fully satisfied? You may find temporal things that bring real joy, and that’s good, but that eventually fades, leaving the same emptiness behind. Many people who step away from faith notice this same pattern: temporal fillers that never reach the depth that is craved.

The Catholic tradition doesn’t see this as a flaw or psychological accident, but as powerful evidence that we were made for something, someone, infinite. Our hearts are wired for perfect Truth, perfect Beauty, perfect Love, and perfect Happiness. Nothing in the created world will be able to ultimately fill that void because we were created by and for God. St. Augustine’s prayer, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” doesn’t prove God exists on its own, but it fits perfectly with everything else we’ve seen: a universe that points to an intelligent Creator, and a human heart that hungers for the infinite. Faith in Christ doesn’t erase life’s struggles, but it offers the relationship that can finally satisfy the deepest part of who we are.

A Black Pill Argument Against God

One of the most common refutations against God's existence I see on here is, "Why would God create subhumans?"

My response:

Every person has infinite dignity because they were created in the image and likeness of God. This dignity is not based on a looks scale. It’s inherent from the moment of conception. We must keep in mind that the world is not in its final, perfected state, and because of original sin, there is a brokenness of creation, which causes a spectrum of outcomes: some people are born with ideal genetics, and some people have severe deformities.

St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that the universe is more perfect with this range of perfections and imperfections. A world with stable natural laws allows for defects. Look at the looks hierarchy. We recognize that some people are chads and some people are gigadeformed subhumans. These are clear degrees of beauty that are not random chaos. This is a perfect example of Aquinas’ Fourth Way, which states that gradations only exist because they participate in a perfect, maximum Beauty. If everyone were equally attractive, this would actually argue against God. The brutal reality is that the looks scale itself is evidence of a Creator. God does not override the natural laws of the world with constant miracles because that would collapse creation into chaos. Subhumans are extreme cases of a fallen material world.

Everyone has a cross to bear and not everyone gets the same cross to bear. Some people hit the genetic lottery and have a different cross to bear than people who are born with poor genetics. We must keep in mind that even if someone is subhuman, they may be able to develop different virtues that may be harder for a Chad to develop. Some of these virtues include: radical humility, detachment from vanity, etc.

It is true that life is brutally unfair on the looks scale in this fallen world, and Catholic theology agrees; however, it adds that this earthly life is not the whole story. Your looks are temporal; what lasts is how you play the cards you are dealt. For example, the subhuman who improves what he can and unites his suffering towards Christ can rank higher in eternity than a Chad who is arrogant and uses his gifts on pride and vice. This is not to say that a Chad cannot have the same virtues as said subhuman.

There is no problem with improving what you can, however, it is important not to idolize looks because they are not your ultimate worth and are not the telos to life. Furthermore, even if you are subhuman, you are not worthless because you have an immortal soul and have an infinite ontological dignity and were created in the image and likeness of God.

In the same way that God allows suffering in the fallen world, he permits extreme genetic deformities. Christ’s passion shows that he did not abstain from deformity and pain; he entered it himself and lived out the fallen world and suffered himself.

@ALBOSS @Jason Voorhees @GUMMIKZKDI @Acquiescence @avgsub5human @Paul.jnxy

DNR. God is either not all loving or not all powerful, or plainly doesnt exist. What existence can house an autistic child being beaten half to death by his sadistic schoolmates and still be called holy.
 
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Yeye mirin the chatgpt or smth
 
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Good thread, most of the people seething about it won't engage with it intellectually at all sadly, I say this as a lapsed christian/agnostic
 
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The Argument from Efficient Causation

literally debunks Christianity by its own
 
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Absolute truth nuke
 
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Read the part labeled "A Black Pill Argument Against God"
I've read it and it's about "subhumans" not genetic determinism.
I will read the rest of your argument in a bit.
 
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whhy doesnt he just make a world with free will and no evil at the same time if he wants it so bad
That would be a contradiction. Evil is a result of us abusing free will. If it were impossible to create evil, then there wouldn't be free will.
 
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GOD IS REAL
INTRO

From what I have gathered, a majority of you guys reject belief in God, whether you are an atheist, agnostic, etc. I completely understand this position because I was in the exact same place six years ago. It is true that you cannot prove God is real; however, you can't disprove Him either. On the contrary, we can follow strong logical arguments that were created by some of the greatest minds in history.

The content of this post is a twenty-page letter that I wrote to someone very dear to me. This originally took me weeks to write, so I hope that all my effort is not in vain. If this post benefits just one person, that makes it all worth it. This is being treated as a part two that is focusing on the spirituality aspect mentioned in my recent post: https://looksmax.org/threads/the-actual-dangers-of-looksmaxxing-high-iq-gtfih.2113266/

St. Thomas Aquinas

St. Thomas Aquinas offered five classic ways that still hold up remarkably well even 500 years later.

  • The Argument from Motion / Change (Aquinas’ First Way): Nothing can move or change itself: whatever is in motion has to be moved by something else. Motion means reducing potentiality to actuality; only something already “actual” can do this. For example, an actuality would be “hot”. It is a potentiality to become hot. The actuality would be being “hot”. If something is put into motion, you would need a prior cause. (There cannot be an infinite chain of movers.) Therefore, there must be a First Mover that is pure actuality, that is God.

  • The Argument from Efficient Causation (Second Way): Every effect has a cause. Nothing can cause itself (that would require it to exist before it exists – an absurdity.) An infinite regress of causes is impossible. If there is no first cause, there is no intermediate or final effect. Therefore, there must be a First Efficient Cause that is uncaused. This is the one who is (Exodus 3:14 “I AM WHO I AM”).

  • The Argument from Contingency (Third Way): We observe many things that are contingent, beings, events, or things whose existence is not necessary, they depend on something else for their existence and could potentially not exist. (Born, grow, decay, die, break, etc.) If everything were contingent, then there would have been a time where nothing existed. To believe something can come from nothing is an absurdity. However, we can recognize existences that eventually will cease to exist, like me and you, for example.

  • Therefore, it is logically impossible to deduce that everything is contingent. There must be at least one being whose nature is to exist, that has to exist. This necessary being does not derive its necessity from anything else. Otherwise, we would need another cause, which would lead to an infinite regress. It must be necessary in its very nature. This is God.

  • The Argument from Degree (Fourth Way): We observe things of different degrees of quality: things are more or less good, true, beautiful, etc. These qualities are judged to a maximum or perfect standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections, something that is perfect in every way. God is that maximum.

  • We observe degrees of qualities; things are more or less good, true, beautiful, noble. These gradations imply a maximum standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections (goodness, truth, beauty) that we participate in. God is that maximum.

  • The Argument from Design / Governance (Fifth Way): The universe is not chaos. Plants, animals, laws of physics, etc., are all ordered to an end. These things lack intelligence and cannot guide themselves toward an end unless it is guided by something intelligent. For example, an arrow needs an archer. Therefore, there must be an intelligent being that directs all nature to its ends. This being is once again God.

Transcendental Argument for God

“A truly transcendental argument takes any fact of experience which it wishes to investigate, and tries to determine what the presuppositions of such fact must be, in order to make it what it is.” –Cornelius Van Til, A Survey of Christian Epistemology

We are going to be investigating human experience, knowledge, logic, morality, science, and intelligible prediction, which all are possible and actual. These experiences all presuppose specific conditions: universal, immaterial laws of logic, natural order, objective morality, the unity-and-diversity of being, and the reliability of inductive reasoning. Only the Christian worldview is true. Without the Christian worldview, there is a lack of preconditions of knowledge and meaningful experience, and more. Therefore, the triune God exists as the necessary precondition for epistemology and metaphysics.

Only the Triune God accounts for Logic and Reason, the One-and-Many Problem, Morality, and Science and Uniformity of Nature. I will go through and explain each of the following.

Laws of logic are universal, immaterial, and invariant in their very nature. They are all propositions that serve as primary bearers of truth. These are not simply linguistic or physical. You can state a law of logic in numerous languages; there is still the same law of logic that exists independently of language or brain chemistry. The issue here is that materialism will reduce them to brain chemistry, and atheism is unable to justify its application to reality without circularity or arbitrariness. The only way to ground these propositions is through a God that precedes these things.

Reality displays unity and diversity, and this is something that we can see. Pure monism reduces these distinctions into one essence; pure pluralism states that ultimate reality is not grounded in a single unified system and is grounded in diversity. This would ultimately mean that knowledge is impossible because knowledge requires relating things together. This ultimately yields chaos. The Trinity alone resolves this issue: one divine essence and three distinct Persons (hypostases) in eternal relational communion. Unity and diversity are equally ultimate and eternal in God, grounding a precedent and a coherent world without reductionism.

It is illogical for objective morality to rely on evolution, social convention, or preference. These foundations would reduce objective morality to relativism or a “might makes right.” Relativism reduces objective morality to subjectivism, and objective morality cannot work under a “might makes right” because it would assume that strength ought to define what is objectively moral. The only adequate foundation is the triune God who grounds objective morality within His holy nature, which is defined as perfect and eternal love that exists within the relationship of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Induction assumes that the future will resemble the past. This is a principle known as the uniformity of nature. Atheistic naturalism does not offer a guarantee against radical contingency. The triune God created and continues a natural order that the world participates in as long as the earth exists. “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease.” –Genesis 8:22 RSVCE

All religions and philosophies that deny the triune God fail to justify their own preconditions. Atheistic materialism reduces logic and morality to physics and opinion, which ultimately renders itself self-refuting. Other religions cannot adequately solve the one-and-many question and ultimately collapse into pluralism or monism.

The Transcendental Argument for God does not simply suggest God’s existence; it proves that without Him, nothing, not even the argument against Him, makes sense.

The Patristic Argument for the Existence of God

1. Everything that changes needs a Maker who doesn’t change (The “Uncreated Creator” Argument)

By: St. John of Damascus (c. 675-749 A.D.)


Everything we see around us is contingent — it comes into being, changes or eventually ends.. Stars burn out, living things die, man-made things break, etc. These realities cannot be self-explanatory; they require an external cause. If every cause itself needs a prior cause, we would face an infinite regress with no ultimate explanation. Therefore, there must be a creator who is eternal and is uncreated. This is God — the eternal source of all existence.

2. The perfect order and balance in the universe can’t be luck or chance (The “Harmony and Design” Argument)

The world is full of opposite forces that should clash yet somehow work together — fire and water, for example. Seasons arrive on schedule year after year. Even more impressive are living systems in nature. For example, a forest: trees release oxygen that animals need to breathe, while animals give off carbon dioxide that trees use to grow. Insects pollinate flowers, predators control animal populations, and bacteria breaks down dead matter to return nutrients to the soil. All these parts fit together in a balanced, ongoing cycle. If everything happened by random change, it’s hard to explain why we see this kind of stable order and teamwork instead of total chaos or everything being the same.

3. Deep down, we already know God exists (The “Implanted Knowledge” Argument)

Throughout history, almost every culture has believed in some higher power, even without hearing about the Bible. This feeling is built into human nature, similar to knowing right from wrong. Creation (sunsets, stars, a newborn baby) often stirs a sense that life isn’t meaningless. Only strong distractions or habits can push this awareness away. This inner sense suggests we’re wired to recognize something greater than ourselves.

4. Variety and Beauty in Creation Can’t Come from Blind Cause

If the world was created by random atoms or blind forces, everything would likely be uniform and mush. However, we see purposeful diversity: sun and moon, land and sea, unique plants and animals, all beautiful in their own way. This variety of beauty reflects an intelligent creator.

The Human Person

Beyond the physical world, look inward. We experience an objective moral law—
Deep down we know some things are truly right and wrong, not just cultural preferences (e.g., the slaughter of children is evil everywhere). Conscience calls us to goodness beyond self-interest. Where does this binding moral obligation come from if the universe is just blind matter? A moral Lawgiver best explains it.

We also have desires that nothing in this world fully satisfies: endless hunger for truth, beauty, perfect love, and lasting happiness. These point beyond the material to a transcendent fulfillment—God. Our very capacity for reason and science assumes an orderly, intelligible universe, which a rational Creator explains better than chance.

Without an intelligent creator there would be no objective morality. The only morality that would be present would be subjective. However, we know that there is an objective morality because there is something deep within us that tells us whether something is right or wrong i.e. your conscience. Objectively speaking we all agree that murder is wrong. It is wrong because it is the unlawful taking of another person’s life. We must ask ourselves, “Why does that matter?” It matters because there is an intelligent creator who designed us in his image and likeness, who provided us with a soul, a purpose, the ability to reason, etc. Without this world view, murder would not matter, we would simply be “bags of meat/clumps of cells” who have no transcendent value. who are in motion. If we have no purpose and we are here purely by chance then it wouldn’t matter if one person killed another. Without an intelligent creator we must ask, “Who cares if one clump of cells happens to bump into another clump of cells and kill it?” It wouldn’t matter because there is no purpose to our lives, there is no reason for us to live, there is no intelligent creator.

A lot of atheists argue that the value of life comes from thought, love, experience, etc. At the end of the day, however, none of this matters without a God. The absence of God means an absence of objective morality, an absence of love, etc. All of these things are reduced to purposeless electrochemical events in a purposeless universe, which would render them lacking in objective or ultimate significance. If we are here by chance, why treat love more than a useful illusion or murder as more than rearranging particles?

The Restlessness of the Human Heart

One of the Doctors of the Church and Church Father, St. Augustine’s most famous quote is, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”

Look inward and dig deep down. Do you ever sense a kind of emptiness that no relationship, achievement, experience, entertainment, or success has ever fully satisfied? You may find temporal things that bring real joy, and that’s good, but that eventually fades, leaving the same emptiness behind. Many people who step away from faith notice this same pattern: temporal fillers that never reach the depth that is craved.

The Catholic tradition doesn’t see this as a flaw or psychological accident, but as powerful evidence that we were made for something, someone, infinite. Our hearts are wired for perfect Truth, perfect Beauty, perfect Love, and perfect Happiness. Nothing in the created world will be able to ultimately fill that void because we were created by and for God. St. Augustine’s prayer, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” doesn’t prove God exists on its own, but it fits perfectly with everything else we’ve seen: a universe that points to an intelligent Creator, and a human heart that hungers for the infinite. Faith in Christ doesn’t erase life’s struggles, but it offers the relationship that can finally satisfy the deepest part of who we are.

A Black Pill Argument Against God

One of the most common refutations against God's existence I see on here is, "Why would God create subhumans?"

My response:

Every person has infinite dignity because they were created in the image and likeness of God. This dignity is not based on a looks scale. It’s inherent from the moment of conception. We must keep in mind that the world is not in its final, perfected state, and because of original sin, there is a brokenness of creation, which causes a spectrum of outcomes: some people are born with ideal genetics, and some people have severe deformities.

St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that the universe is more perfect with this range of perfections and imperfections. A world with stable natural laws allows for defects. Look at the looks hierarchy. We recognize that some people are chads and some people are gigadeformed subhumans. These are clear degrees of beauty that are not random chaos. This is a perfect example of Aquinas’ Fourth Way, which states that gradations only exist because they participate in a perfect, maximum Beauty. If everyone were equally attractive, this would actually argue against God. The brutal reality is that the looks scale itself is evidence of a Creator. God does not override the natural laws of the world with constant miracles because that would collapse creation into chaos. Subhumans are extreme cases of a fallen material world.

Everyone has a cross to bear and not everyone gets the same cross to bear. Some people hit the genetic lottery and have a different cross to bear than people who are born with poor genetics. We must keep in mind that even if someone is subhuman, they may be able to develop different virtues that may be harder for a Chad to develop. Some of these virtues include: radical humility, detachment from vanity, etc.

It is true that life is brutally unfair on the looks scale in this fallen world, and Catholic theology agrees; however, it adds that this earthly life is not the whole story. Your looks are temporal; what lasts is how you play the cards you are dealt. For example, the subhuman who improves what he can and unites his suffering towards Christ can rank higher in eternity than a Chad who is arrogant and uses his gifts on pride and vice. This is not to say that a Chad cannot have the same virtues as said subhuman.

There is no problem with improving what you can, however, it is important not to idolize looks because they are not your ultimate worth and are not the telos to life. Furthermore, even if you are subhuman, you are not worthless because you have an immortal soul and have an infinite ontological dignity and were created in the image and likeness of God.

In the same way that God allows suffering in the fallen world, he permits extreme genetic deformities. Christ’s passion shows that he did not abstain from deformity and pain; he entered it himself and lived out the fallen world and suffered himself.

@ALBOSS @Jason Voorhees @GUMMIKZKDI @Acquiescence @avgsub5human @Paul.jnxy

good message but not the right site
 
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Not a single molecule
 
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GOD IS REAL
INTRO

From what I have gathered, a majority of you guys reject belief in God, whether you are an atheist, agnostic, etc. I completely understand this position because I was in the exact same place six years ago. It is true that you cannot prove God is real; however, you can't disprove Him either. On the contrary, we can follow strong logical arguments that were created by some of the greatest minds in history.

The content of this post is a twenty-page letter that I wrote to someone very dear to me. This originally took me weeks to write, so I hope that all my effort is not in vain. If this post benefits just one person, that makes it all worth it. This is being treated as a part two that is focusing on the spirituality aspect mentioned in my recent post: https://looksmax.org/threads/the-actual-dangers-of-looksmaxxing-high-iq-gtfih.2113266/

St. Thomas Aquinas

St. Thomas Aquinas offered five classic ways that still hold up remarkably well even 500 years later.

  • The Argument from Motion / Change (Aquinas’ First Way): Nothing can move or change itself: whatever is in motion has to be moved by something else. Motion means reducing potentiality to actuality; only something already “actual” can do this. For example, an actuality would be “hot”. It is a potentiality to become hot. The actuality would be being “hot”. If something is put into motion, you would need a prior cause. (There cannot be an infinite chain of movers.) Therefore, there must be a First Mover that is pure actuality, that is God.

  • The Argument from Efficient Causation (Second Way): Every effect has a cause. Nothing can cause itself (that would require it to exist before it exists – an absurdity.) An infinite regress of causes is impossible. If there is no first cause, there is no intermediate or final effect. Therefore, there must be a First Efficient Cause that is uncaused. This is the one who is (Exodus 3:14 “I AM WHO I AM”).

  • The Argument from Contingency (Third Way): We observe many things that are contingent, beings, events, or things whose existence is not necessary, they depend on something else for their existence and could potentially not exist. (Born, grow, decay, die, break, etc.) If everything were contingent, then there would have been a time where nothing existed. To believe something can come from nothing is an absurdity. However, we can recognize existences that eventually will cease to exist, like me and you, for example.

  • Therefore, it is logically impossible to deduce that everything is contingent. There must be at least one being whose nature is to exist, that has to exist. This necessary being does not derive its necessity from anything else. Otherwise, we would need another cause, which would lead to an infinite regress. It must be necessary in its very nature. This is God.

  • The Argument from Degree (Fourth Way): We observe things of different degrees of quality: things are more or less good, true, beautiful, etc. These qualities are judged to a maximum or perfect standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections, something that is perfect in every way. God is that maximum.

  • We observe degrees of qualities; things are more or less good, true, beautiful, noble. These gradations imply a maximum standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections (goodness, truth, beauty) that we participate in. God is that maximum.

  • The Argument from Design / Governance (Fifth Way): The universe is not chaos. Plants, animals, laws of physics, etc., are all ordered to an end. These things lack intelligence and cannot guide themselves toward an end unless it is guided by something intelligent. For example, an arrow needs an archer. Therefore, there must be an intelligent being that directs all nature to its ends. This being is once again God.

Transcendental Argument for God

“A truly transcendental argument takes any fact of experience which it wishes to investigate, and tries to determine what the presuppositions of such fact must be, in order to make it what it is.” –Cornelius Van Til, A Survey of Christian Epistemology

We are going to be investigating human experience, knowledge, logic, morality, science, and intelligible prediction, which all are possible and actual. These experiences all presuppose specific conditions: universal, immaterial laws of logic, natural order, objective morality, the unity-and-diversity of being, and the reliability of inductive reasoning. Only the Christian worldview is true. Without the Christian worldview, there is a lack of preconditions of knowledge and meaningful experience, and more. Therefore, the triune God exists as the necessary precondition for epistemology and metaphysics.

Only the Triune God accounts for Logic and Reason, the One-and-Many Problem, Morality, and Science and Uniformity of Nature. I will go through and explain each of the following.

Laws of logic are universal, immaterial, and invariant in their very nature. They are all propositions that serve as primary bearers of truth. These are not simply linguistic or physical. You can state a law of logic in numerous languages; there is still the same law of logic that exists independently of language or brain chemistry. The issue here is that materialism will reduce them to brain chemistry, and atheism is unable to justify its application to reality without circularity or arbitrariness. The only way to ground these propositions is through a God that precedes these things.

Reality displays unity and diversity, and this is something that we can see. Pure monism reduces these distinctions into one essence; pure pluralism states that ultimate reality is not grounded in a single unified system and is grounded in diversity. This would ultimately mean that knowledge is impossible because knowledge requires relating things together. This ultimately yields chaos. The Trinity alone resolves this issue: one divine essence and three distinct Persons (hypostases) in eternal relational communion. Unity and diversity are equally ultimate and eternal in God, grounding a precedent and a coherent world without reductionism.

It is illogical for objective morality to rely on evolution, social convention, or preference. These foundations would reduce objective morality to relativism or a “might makes right.” Relativism reduces objective morality to subjectivism, and objective morality cannot work under a “might makes right” because it would assume that strength ought to define what is objectively moral. The only adequate foundation is the triune God who grounds objective morality within His holy nature, which is defined as perfect and eternal love that exists within the relationship of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Induction assumes that the future will resemble the past. This is a principle known as the uniformity of nature. Atheistic naturalism does not offer a guarantee against radical contingency. The triune God created and continues a natural order that the world participates in as long as the earth exists. “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease.” –Genesis 8:22 RSVCE

All religions and philosophies that deny the triune God fail to justify their own preconditions. Atheistic materialism reduces logic and morality to physics and opinion, which ultimately renders itself self-refuting. Other religions cannot adequately solve the one-and-many question and ultimately collapse into pluralism or monism.

The Transcendental Argument for God does not simply suggest God’s existence; it proves that without Him, nothing, not even the argument against Him, makes sense.

The Patristic Argument for the Existence of God

1. Everything that changes needs a Maker who doesn’t change (The “Uncreated Creator” Argument)

By: St. John of Damascus (c. 675-749 A.D.)


Everything we see around us is contingent — it comes into being, changes or eventually ends.. Stars burn out, living things die, man-made things break, etc. These realities cannot be self-explanatory; they require an external cause. If every cause itself needs a prior cause, we would face an infinite regress with no ultimate explanation. Therefore, there must be a creator who is eternal and is uncreated. This is God — the eternal source of all existence.

2. The perfect order and balance in the universe can’t be luck or chance (The “Harmony and Design” Argument)

The world is full of opposite forces that should clash yet somehow work together — fire and water, for example. Seasons arrive on schedule year after year. Even more impressive are living systems in nature. For example, a forest: trees release oxygen that animals need to breathe, while animals give off carbon dioxide that trees use to grow. Insects pollinate flowers, predators control animal populations, and bacteria breaks down dead matter to return nutrients to the soil. All these parts fit together in a balanced, ongoing cycle. If everything happened by random change, it’s hard to explain why we see this kind of stable order and teamwork instead of total chaos or everything being the same.

3. Deep down, we already know God exists (The “Implanted Knowledge” Argument)

Throughout history, almost every culture has believed in some higher power, even without hearing about the Bible. This feeling is built into human nature, similar to knowing right from wrong. Creation (sunsets, stars, a newborn baby) often stirs a sense that life isn’t meaningless. Only strong distractions or habits can push this awareness away. This inner sense suggests we’re wired to recognize something greater than ourselves.

4. Variety and Beauty in Creation Can’t Come from Blind Cause

If the world was created by random atoms or blind forces, everything would likely be uniform and mush. However, we see purposeful diversity: sun and moon, land and sea, unique plants and animals, all beautiful in their own way. This variety of beauty reflects an intelligent creator.

The Human Person

Beyond the physical world, look inward. We experience an objective moral law—
Deep down we know some things are truly right and wrong, not just cultural preferences (e.g., the slaughter of children is evil everywhere). Conscience calls us to goodness beyond self-interest. Where does this binding moral obligation come from if the universe is just blind matter? A moral Lawgiver best explains it.

We also have desires that nothing in this world fully satisfies: endless hunger for truth, beauty, perfect love, and lasting happiness. These point beyond the material to a transcendent fulfillment—God. Our very capacity for reason and science assumes an orderly, intelligible universe, which a rational Creator explains better than chance.

Without an intelligent creator there would be no objective morality. The only morality that would be present would be subjective. However, we know that there is an objective morality because there is something deep within us that tells us whether something is right or wrong i.e. your conscience. Objectively speaking we all agree that murder is wrong. It is wrong because it is the unlawful taking of another person’s life. We must ask ourselves, “Why does that matter?” It matters because there is an intelligent creator who designed us in his image and likeness, who provided us with a soul, a purpose, the ability to reason, etc. Without this world view, murder would not matter, we would simply be “bags of meat/clumps of cells” who have no transcendent value. who are in motion. If we have no purpose and we are here purely by chance then it wouldn’t matter if one person killed another. Without an intelligent creator we must ask, “Who cares if one clump of cells happens to bump into another clump of cells and kill it?” It wouldn’t matter because there is no purpose to our lives, there is no reason for us to live, there is no intelligent creator.

A lot of atheists argue that the value of life comes from thought, love, experience, etc. At the end of the day, however, none of this matters without a God. The absence of God means an absence of objective morality, an absence of love, etc. All of these things are reduced to purposeless electrochemical events in a purposeless universe, which would render them lacking in objective or ultimate significance. If we are here by chance, why treat love more than a useful illusion or murder as more than rearranging particles?

The Restlessness of the Human Heart

One of the Doctors of the Church and Church Father, St. Augustine’s most famous quote is, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”

Look inward and dig deep down. Do you ever sense a kind of emptiness that no relationship, achievement, experience, entertainment, or success has ever fully satisfied? You may find temporal things that bring real joy, and that’s good, but that eventually fades, leaving the same emptiness behind. Many people who step away from faith notice this same pattern: temporal fillers that never reach the depth that is craved.

The Catholic tradition doesn’t see this as a flaw or psychological accident, but as powerful evidence that we were made for something, someone, infinite. Our hearts are wired for perfect Truth, perfect Beauty, perfect Love, and perfect Happiness. Nothing in the created world will be able to ultimately fill that void because we were created by and for God. St. Augustine’s prayer, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” doesn’t prove God exists on its own, but it fits perfectly with everything else we’ve seen: a universe that points to an intelligent Creator, and a human heart that hungers for the infinite. Faith in Christ doesn’t erase life’s struggles, but it offers the relationship that can finally satisfy the deepest part of who we are.

A Black Pill Argument Against God

One of the most common refutations against God's existence I see on here is, "Why would God create subhumans?"

My response:

Every person has infinite dignity because they were created in the image and likeness of God. This dignity is not based on a looks scale. It’s inherent from the moment of conception. We must keep in mind that the world is not in its final, perfected state, and because of original sin, there is a brokenness of creation, which causes a spectrum of outcomes: some people are born with ideal genetics, and some people have severe deformities.

St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that the universe is more perfect with this range of perfections and imperfections. A world with stable natural laws allows for defects. Look at the looks hierarchy. We recognize that some people are chads and some people are gigadeformed subhumans. These are clear degrees of beauty that are not random chaos. This is a perfect example of Aquinas’ Fourth Way, which states that gradations only exist because they participate in a perfect, maximum Beauty. If everyone were equally attractive, this would actually argue against God. The brutal reality is that the looks scale itself is evidence of a Creator. God does not override the natural laws of the world with constant miracles because that would collapse creation into chaos. Subhumans are extreme cases of a fallen material world.

Everyone has a cross to bear and not everyone gets the same cross to bear. Some people hit the genetic lottery and have a different cross to bear than people who are born with poor genetics. We must keep in mind that even if someone is subhuman, they may be able to develop different virtues that may be harder for a Chad to develop. Some of these virtues include: radical humility, detachment from vanity, etc.

It is true that life is brutally unfair on the looks scale in this fallen world, and Catholic theology agrees; however, it adds that this earthly life is not the whole story. Your looks are temporal; what lasts is how you play the cards you are dealt. For example, the subhuman who improves what he can and unites his suffering towards Christ can rank higher in eternity than a Chad who is arrogant and uses his gifts on pride and vice. This is not to say that a Chad cannot have the same virtues as said subhuman.

There is no problem with improving what you can, however, it is important not to idolize looks because they are not your ultimate worth and are not the telos to life. Furthermore, even if you are subhuman, you are not worthless because you have an immortal soul and have an infinite ontological dignity and were created in the image and likeness of God.

In the same way that God allows suffering in the fallen world, he permits extreme genetic deformities. Christ’s passion shows that he did not abstain from deformity and pain; he entered it himself and lived out the fallen world and suffered himself.

@ALBOSS @Jason Voorhees @GUMMIKZKDI @Acquiescence @avgsub5human @Paul.jnxy

even if god exists i hate him he made me ugly and short
 
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good message but not the right site
If you only ascend in the aspect of your looks you become an empty vessel. It is essential to ascend in aspects of spirituality and the mind. Read my last post that I linked in the intro.
 
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GOD IS REAL
INTRO

From what I have gathered, a majority of you guys reject belief in God, whether you are an atheist, agnostic, etc. I completely understand this position because I was in the exact same place six years ago. It is true that you cannot prove God is real; however, you can't disprove Him either. On the contrary, we can follow strong logical arguments that were created by some of the greatest minds in history.

The content of this post is a twenty-page letter that I wrote to someone very dear to me. This originally took me weeks to write, so I hope that all my effort is not in vain. If this post benefits just one person, that makes it all worth it. This is being treated as a part two that is focusing on the spirituality aspect mentioned in my recent post: https://looksmax.org/threads/the-actual-dangers-of-looksmaxxing-high-iq-gtfih.2113266/

St. Thomas Aquinas

St. Thomas Aquinas offered five classic ways that still hold up remarkably well even 500 years later.

  • The Argument from Motion / Change (Aquinas’ First Way): Nothing can move or change itself: whatever is in motion has to be moved by something else. Motion means reducing potentiality to actuality; only something already “actual” can do this. For example, an actuality would be “hot”. It is a potentiality to become hot. The actuality would be being “hot”. If something is put into motion, you would need a prior cause. (There cannot be an infinite chain of movers.) Therefore, there must be a First Mover that is pure actuality, that is God.

  • The Argument from Efficient Causation (Second Way): Every effect has a cause. Nothing can cause itself (that would require it to exist before it exists – an absurdity.) An infinite regress of causes is impossible. If there is no first cause, there is no intermediate or final effect. Therefore, there must be a First Efficient Cause that is uncaused. This is the one who is (Exodus 3:14 “I AM WHO I AM”).

  • The Argument from Contingency (Third Way): We observe many things that are contingent, beings, events, or things whose existence is not necessary, they depend on something else for their existence and could potentially not exist. (Born, grow, decay, die, break, etc.) If everything were contingent, then there would have been a time where nothing existed. To believe something can come from nothing is an absurdity. However, we can recognize existences that eventually will cease to exist, like me and you, for example.

  • Therefore, it is logically impossible to deduce that everything is contingent. There must be at least one being whose nature is to exist, that has to exist. This necessary being does not derive its necessity from anything else. Otherwise, we would need another cause, which would lead to an infinite regress. It must be necessary in its very nature. This is God.

  • The Argument from Degree (Fourth Way): We observe things of different degrees of quality: things are more or less good, true, beautiful, etc. These qualities are judged to a maximum or perfect standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections, something that is perfect in every way. God is that maximum.

  • We observe degrees of qualities; things are more or less good, true, beautiful, noble. These gradations imply a maximum standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections (goodness, truth, beauty) that we participate in. God is that maximum.

  • The Argument from Design / Governance (Fifth Way): The universe is not chaos. Plants, animals, laws of physics, etc., are all ordered to an end. These things lack intelligence and cannot guide themselves toward an end unless it is guided by something intelligent. For example, an arrow needs an archer. Therefore, there must be an intelligent being that directs all nature to its ends. This being is once again God.

Transcendental Argument for God

“A truly transcendental argument takes any fact of experience which it wishes to investigate, and tries to determine what the presuppositions of such fact must be, in order to make it what it is.” –Cornelius Van Til, A Survey of Christian Epistemology

We are going to be investigating human experience, knowledge, logic, morality, science, and intelligible prediction, which all are possible and actual. These experiences all presuppose specific conditions: universal, immaterial laws of logic, natural order, objective morality, the unity-and-diversity of being, and the reliability of inductive reasoning. Only the Christian worldview is true. Without the Christian worldview, there is a lack of preconditions of knowledge and meaningful experience, and more. Therefore, the triune God exists as the necessary precondition for epistemology and metaphysics.

Only the Triune God accounts for Logic and Reason, the One-and-Many Problem, Morality, and Science and Uniformity of Nature. I will go through and explain each of the following.

Laws of logic are universal, immaterial, and invariant in their very nature. They are all propositions that serve as primary bearers of truth. These are not simply linguistic or physical. You can state a law of logic in numerous languages; there is still the same law of logic that exists independently of language or brain chemistry. The issue here is that materialism will reduce them to brain chemistry, and atheism is unable to justify its application to reality without circularity or arbitrariness. The only way to ground these propositions is through a God that precedes these things.

Reality displays unity and diversity, and this is something that we can see. Pure monism reduces these distinctions into one essence; pure pluralism states that ultimate reality is not grounded in a single unified system and is grounded in diversity. This would ultimately mean that knowledge is impossible because knowledge requires relating things together. This ultimately yields chaos. The Trinity alone resolves this issue: one divine essence and three distinct Persons (hypostases) in eternal relational communion. Unity and diversity are equally ultimate and eternal in God, grounding a precedent and a coherent world without reductionism.

It is illogical for objective morality to rely on evolution, social convention, or preference. These foundations would reduce objective morality to relativism or a “might makes right.” Relativism reduces objective morality to subjectivism, and objective morality cannot work under a “might makes right” because it would assume that strength ought to define what is objectively moral. The only adequate foundation is the triune God who grounds objective morality within His holy nature, which is defined as perfect and eternal love that exists within the relationship of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Induction assumes that the future will resemble the past. This is a principle known as the uniformity of nature. Atheistic naturalism does not offer a guarantee against radical contingency. The triune God created and continues a natural order that the world participates in as long as the earth exists. “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease.” –Genesis 8:22 RSVCE

All religions and philosophies that deny the triune God fail to justify their own preconditions. Atheistic materialism reduces logic and morality to physics and opinion, which ultimately renders itself self-refuting. Other religions cannot adequately solve the one-and-many question and ultimately collapse into pluralism or monism.

The Transcendental Argument for God does not simply suggest God’s existence; it proves that without Him, nothing, not even the argument against Him, makes sense.

The Patristic Argument for the Existence of God

1. Everything that changes needs a Maker who doesn’t change (The “Uncreated Creator” Argument)

By: St. John of Damascus (c. 675-749 A.D.)


Everything we see around us is contingent — it comes into being, changes or eventually ends.. Stars burn out, living things die, man-made things break, etc. These realities cannot be self-explanatory; they require an external cause. If every cause itself needs a prior cause, we would face an infinite regress with no ultimate explanation. Therefore, there must be a creator who is eternal and is uncreated. This is God — the eternal source of all existence.

2. The perfect order and balance in the universe can’t be luck or chance (The “Harmony and Design” Argument)

The world is full of opposite forces that should clash yet somehow work together — fire and water, for example. Seasons arrive on schedule year after year. Even more impressive are living systems in nature. For example, a forest: trees release oxygen that animals need to breathe, while animals give off carbon dioxide that trees use to grow. Insects pollinate flowers, predators control animal populations, and bacteria breaks down dead matter to return nutrients to the soil. All these parts fit together in a balanced, ongoing cycle. If everything happened by random change, it’s hard to explain why we see this kind of stable order and teamwork instead of total chaos or everything being the same.

3. Deep down, we already know God exists (The “Implanted Knowledge” Argument)

Throughout history, almost every culture has believed in some higher power, even without hearing about the Bible. This feeling is built into human nature, similar to knowing right from wrong. Creation (sunsets, stars, a newborn baby) often stirs a sense that life isn’t meaningless. Only strong distractions or habits can push this awareness away. This inner sense suggests we’re wired to recognize something greater than ourselves.

4. Variety and Beauty in Creation Can’t Come from Blind Cause

If the world was created by random atoms or blind forces, everything would likely be uniform and mush. However, we see purposeful diversity: sun and moon, land and sea, unique plants and animals, all beautiful in their own way. This variety of beauty reflects an intelligent creator.

The Human Person

Beyond the physical world, look inward. We experience an objective moral law—
Deep down we know some things are truly right and wrong, not just cultural preferences (e.g., the slaughter of children is evil everywhere). Conscience calls us to goodness beyond self-interest. Where does this binding moral obligation come from if the universe is just blind matter? A moral Lawgiver best explains it.

We also have desires that nothing in this world fully satisfies: endless hunger for truth, beauty, perfect love, and lasting happiness. These point beyond the material to a transcendent fulfillment—God. Our very capacity for reason and science assumes an orderly, intelligible universe, which a rational Creator explains better than chance.

Without an intelligent creator there would be no objective morality. The only morality that would be present would be subjective. However, we know that there is an objective morality because there is something deep within us that tells us whether something is right or wrong i.e. your conscience. Objectively speaking we all agree that murder is wrong. It is wrong because it is the unlawful taking of another person’s life. We must ask ourselves, “Why does that matter?” It matters because there is an intelligent creator who designed us in his image and likeness, who provided us with a soul, a purpose, the ability to reason, etc. Without this world view, murder would not matter, we would simply be “bags of meat/clumps of cells” who have no transcendent value. who are in motion. If we have no purpose and we are here purely by chance then it wouldn’t matter if one person killed another. Without an intelligent creator we must ask, “Who cares if one clump of cells happens to bump into another clump of cells and kill it?” It wouldn’t matter because there is no purpose to our lives, there is no reason for us to live, there is no intelligent creator.

A lot of atheists argue that the value of life comes from thought, love, experience, etc. At the end of the day, however, none of this matters without a God. The absence of God means an absence of objective morality, an absence of love, etc. All of these things are reduced to purposeless electrochemical events in a purposeless universe, which would render them lacking in objective or ultimate significance. If we are here by chance, why treat love more than a useful illusion or murder as more than rearranging particles?

The Restlessness of the Human Heart

One of the Doctors of the Church and Church Father, St. Augustine’s most famous quote is, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”

Look inward and dig deep down. Do you ever sense a kind of emptiness that no relationship, achievement, experience, entertainment, or success has ever fully satisfied? You may find temporal things that bring real joy, and that’s good, but that eventually fades, leaving the same emptiness behind. Many people who step away from faith notice this same pattern: temporal fillers that never reach the depth that is craved.

The Catholic tradition doesn’t see this as a flaw or psychological accident, but as powerful evidence that we were made for something, someone, infinite. Our hearts are wired for perfect Truth, perfect Beauty, perfect Love, and perfect Happiness. Nothing in the created world will be able to ultimately fill that void because we were created by and for God. St. Augustine’s prayer, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” doesn’t prove God exists on its own, but it fits perfectly with everything else we’ve seen: a universe that points to an intelligent Creator, and a human heart that hungers for the infinite. Faith in Christ doesn’t erase life’s struggles, but it offers the relationship that can finally satisfy the deepest part of who we are.

A Black Pill Argument Against God

One of the most common refutations against God's existence I see on here is, "Why would God create subhumans?"

My response:

Every person has infinite dignity because they were created in the image and likeness of God. This dignity is not based on a looks scale. It’s inherent from the moment of conception. We must keep in mind that the world is not in its final, perfected state, and because of original sin, there is a brokenness of creation, which causes a spectrum of outcomes: some people are born with ideal genetics, and some people have severe deformities.

St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that the universe is more perfect with this range of perfections and imperfections. A world with stable natural laws allows for defects. Look at the looks hierarchy. We recognize that some people are chads and some people are gigadeformed subhumans. These are clear degrees of beauty that are not random chaos. This is a perfect example of Aquinas’ Fourth Way, which states that gradations only exist because they participate in a perfect, maximum Beauty. If everyone were equally attractive, this would actually argue against God. The brutal reality is that the looks scale itself is evidence of a Creator. God does not override the natural laws of the world with constant miracles because that would collapse creation into chaos. Subhumans are extreme cases of a fallen material world.

Everyone has a cross to bear and not everyone gets the same cross to bear. Some people hit the genetic lottery and have a different cross to bear than people who are born with poor genetics. We must keep in mind that even if someone is subhuman, they may be able to develop different virtues that may be harder for a Chad to develop. Some of these virtues include: radical humility, detachment from vanity, etc.

It is true that life is brutally unfair on the looks scale in this fallen world, and Catholic theology agrees; however, it adds that this earthly life is not the whole story. Your looks are temporal; what lasts is how you play the cards you are dealt. For example, the subhuman who improves what he can and unites his suffering towards Christ can rank higher in eternity than a Chad who is arrogant and uses his gifts on pride and vice. This is not to say that a Chad cannot have the same virtues as said subhuman.

There is no problem with improving what you can, however, it is important not to idolize looks because they are not your ultimate worth and are not the telos to life. Furthermore, even if you are subhuman, you are not worthless because you have an immortal soul and have an infinite ontological dignity and were created in the image and likeness of God.

In the same way that God allows suffering in the fallen world, he permits extreme genetic deformities. Christ’s passion shows that he did not abstain from deformity and pain; he entered it himself and lived out the fallen world and suffered himself.

@ALBOSS @Jason Voorhees @GUMMIKZKDI @Acquiescence @avgsub5human @Paul.jnxy

Lovely thread brother :feelsautistic:
I would have added Descartes and Saint Augustine of Hippo with their ontological arguments
 
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Lovely thread brother :feelsautistic:
I would have added Descartes and Saint Augustine of Hippo with their ontological arguments
I think I have it in my original 20 pg paper. It's just way too long for a forum post. I literally just copy pasted what I wrote in my paper and formatted it for the forum. It's already super long for a forum post xD
 
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Good thread
 
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GOD IS REAL
INTRO

From what I have gathered, a majority of you guys reject belief in God, whether you are an atheist, agnostic, etc. I completely understand this position because I was in the exact same place six years ago. It is true that you cannot prove God is real; however, you can't disprove Him either. On the contrary, we can follow strong logical arguments that were created by some of the greatest minds in history.

The content of this post is a twenty-page letter that I wrote to someone very dear to me. This originally took me weeks to write, so I hope that all my effort is not in vain. If this post benefits just one person, that makes it all worth it. This is being treated as a part two that is focusing on the spirituality aspect mentioned in my recent post: https://looksmax.org/threads/the-actual-dangers-of-looksmaxxing-high-iq-gtfih.2113266/

St. Thomas Aquinas

St. Thomas Aquinas offered five classic ways that still hold up remarkably well even 500 years later.

  • The Argument from Motion / Change (Aquinas’ First Way): Nothing can move or change itself: whatever is in motion has to be moved by something else. Motion means reducing potentiality to actuality; only something already “actual” can do this. For example, an actuality would be “hot”. It is a potentiality to become hot. The actuality would be being “hot”. If something is put into motion, you would need a prior cause. (There cannot be an infinite chain of movers.) Therefore, there must be a First Mover that is pure actuality, that is God.

  • The Argument from Efficient Causation (Second Way): Every effect has a cause. Nothing can cause itself (that would require it to exist before it exists – an absurdity.) An infinite regress of causes is impossible. If there is no first cause, there is no intermediate or final effect. Therefore, there must be a First Efficient Cause that is uncaused. This is the one who is (Exodus 3:14 “I AM WHO I AM”).

  • The Argument from Contingency (Third Way): We observe many things that are contingent, beings, events, or things whose existence is not necessary, they depend on something else for their existence and could potentially not exist. (Born, grow, decay, die, break, etc.) If everything were contingent, then there would have been a time where nothing existed. To believe something can come from nothing is an absurdity. However, we can recognize existences that eventually will cease to exist, like me and you, for example.

  • Therefore, it is logically impossible to deduce that everything is contingent. There must be at least one being whose nature is to exist, that has to exist. This necessary being does not derive its necessity from anything else. Otherwise, we would need another cause, which would lead to an infinite regress. It must be necessary in its very nature. This is God.

  • The Argument from Degree (Fourth Way): We observe things of different degrees of quality: things are more or less good, true, beautiful, etc. These qualities are judged to a maximum or perfect standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections, something that is perfect in every way. God is that maximum.

  • We observe degrees of qualities; things are more or less good, true, beautiful, noble. These gradations imply a maximum standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections (goodness, truth, beauty) that we participate in. God is that maximum.

  • The Argument from Design / Governance (Fifth Way): The universe is not chaos. Plants, animals, laws of physics, etc., are all ordered to an end. These things lack intelligence and cannot guide themselves toward an end unless it is guided by something intelligent. For example, an arrow needs an archer. Therefore, there must be an intelligent being that directs all nature to its ends. This being is once again God.

Transcendental Argument for God

“A truly transcendental argument takes any fact of experience which it wishes to investigate, and tries to determine what the presuppositions of such fact must be, in order to make it what it is.” –Cornelius Van Til, A Survey of Christian Epistemology

We are going to be investigating human experience, knowledge, logic, morality, science, and intelligible prediction, which all are possible and actual. These experiences all presuppose specific conditions: universal, immaterial laws of logic, natural order, objective morality, the unity-and-diversity of being, and the reliability of inductive reasoning. Only the Christian worldview is true. Without the Christian worldview, there is a lack of preconditions of knowledge and meaningful experience, and more. Therefore, the triune God exists as the necessary precondition for epistemology and metaphysics.

Only the Triune God accounts for Logic and Reason, the One-and-Many Problem, Morality, and Science and Uniformity of Nature. I will go through and explain each of the following.

Laws of logic are universal, immaterial, and invariant in their very nature. They are all propositions that serve as primary bearers of truth. These are not simply linguistic or physical. You can state a law of logic in numerous languages; there is still the same law of logic that exists independently of language or brain chemistry. The issue here is that materialism will reduce them to brain chemistry, and atheism is unable to justify its application to reality without circularity or arbitrariness. The only way to ground these propositions is through a God that precedes these things.

Reality displays unity and diversity, and this is something that we can see. Pure monism reduces these distinctions into one essence; pure pluralism states that ultimate reality is not grounded in a single unified system and is grounded in diversity. This would ultimately mean that knowledge is impossible because knowledge requires relating things together. This ultimately yields chaos. The Trinity alone resolves this issue: one divine essence and three distinct Persons (hypostases) in eternal relational communion. Unity and diversity are equally ultimate and eternal in God, grounding a precedent and a coherent world without reductionism.

It is illogical for objective morality to rely on evolution, social convention, or preference. These foundations would reduce objective morality to relativism or a “might makes right.” Relativism reduces objective morality to subjectivism, and objective morality cannot work under a “might makes right” because it would assume that strength ought to define what is objectively moral. The only adequate foundation is the triune God who grounds objective morality within His holy nature, which is defined as perfect and eternal love that exists within the relationship of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Induction assumes that the future will resemble the past. This is a principle known as the uniformity of nature. Atheistic naturalism does not offer a guarantee against radical contingency. The triune God created and continues a natural order that the world participates in as long as the earth exists. “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease.” –Genesis 8:22 RSVCE

All religions and philosophies that deny the triune God fail to justify their own preconditions. Atheistic materialism reduces logic and morality to physics and opinion, which ultimately renders itself self-refuting. Other religions cannot adequately solve the one-and-many question and ultimately collapse into pluralism or monism.

The Transcendental Argument for God does not simply suggest God’s existence; it proves that without Him, nothing, not even the argument against Him, makes sense.

The Patristic Argument for the Existence of God

1. Everything that changes needs a Maker who doesn’t change (The “Uncreated Creator” Argument)

By: St. John of Damascus (c. 675-749 A.D.)


Everything we see around us is contingent — it comes into being, changes or eventually ends.. Stars burn out, living things die, man-made things break, etc. These realities cannot be self-explanatory; they require an external cause. If every cause itself needs a prior cause, we would face an infinite regress with no ultimate explanation. Therefore, there must be a creator who is eternal and is uncreated. This is God — the eternal source of all existence.

2. The perfect order and balance in the universe can’t be luck or chance (The “Harmony and Design” Argument)

The world is full of opposite forces that should clash yet somehow work together — fire and water, for example. Seasons arrive on schedule year after year. Even more impressive are living systems in nature. For example, a forest: trees release oxygen that animals need to breathe, while animals give off carbon dioxide that trees use to grow. Insects pollinate flowers, predators control animal populations, and bacteria breaks down dead matter to return nutrients to the soil. All these parts fit together in a balanced, ongoing cycle. If everything happened by random change, it’s hard to explain why we see this kind of stable order and teamwork instead of total chaos or everything being the same.

3. Deep down, we already know God exists (The “Implanted Knowledge” Argument)

Throughout history, almost every culture has believed in some higher power, even without hearing about the Bible. This feeling is built into human nature, similar to knowing right from wrong. Creation (sunsets, stars, a newborn baby) often stirs a sense that life isn’t meaningless. Only strong distractions or habits can push this awareness away. This inner sense suggests we’re wired to recognize something greater than ourselves.

4. Variety and Beauty in Creation Can’t Come from Blind Cause

If the world was created by random atoms or blind forces, everything would likely be uniform and mush. However, we see purposeful diversity: sun and moon, land and sea, unique plants and animals, all beautiful in their own way. This variety of beauty reflects an intelligent creator.

The Human Person

Beyond the physical world, look inward. We experience an objective moral law—
Deep down we know some things are truly right and wrong, not just cultural preferences (e.g., the slaughter of children is evil everywhere). Conscience calls us to goodness beyond self-interest. Where does this binding moral obligation come from if the universe is just blind matter? A moral Lawgiver best explains it.

We also have desires that nothing in this world fully satisfies: endless hunger for truth, beauty, perfect love, and lasting happiness. These point beyond the material to a transcendent fulfillment—God. Our very capacity for reason and science assumes an orderly, intelligible universe, which a rational Creator explains better than chance.

Without an intelligent creator there would be no objective morality. The only morality that would be present would be subjective. However, we know that there is an objective morality because there is something deep within us that tells us whether something is right or wrong i.e. your conscience. Objectively speaking we all agree that murder is wrong. It is wrong because it is the unlawful taking of another person’s life. We must ask ourselves, “Why does that matter?” It matters because there is an intelligent creator who designed us in his image and likeness, who provided us with a soul, a purpose, the ability to reason, etc. Without this world view, murder would not matter, we would simply be “bags of meat/clumps of cells” who have no transcendent value. who are in motion. If we have no purpose and we are here purely by chance then it wouldn’t matter if one person killed another. Without an intelligent creator we must ask, “Who cares if one clump of cells happens to bump into another clump of cells and kill it?” It wouldn’t matter because there is no purpose to our lives, there is no reason for us to live, there is no intelligent creator.

A lot of atheists argue that the value of life comes from thought, love, experience, etc. At the end of the day, however, none of this matters without a God. The absence of God means an absence of objective morality, an absence of love, etc. All of these things are reduced to purposeless electrochemical events in a purposeless universe, which would render them lacking in objective or ultimate significance. If we are here by chance, why treat love more than a useful illusion or murder as more than rearranging particles?

The Restlessness of the Human Heart

One of the Doctors of the Church and Church Father, St. Augustine’s most famous quote is, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”

Look inward and dig deep down. Do you ever sense a kind of emptiness that no relationship, achievement, experience, entertainment, or success has ever fully satisfied? You may find temporal things that bring real joy, and that’s good, but that eventually fades, leaving the same emptiness behind. Many people who step away from faith notice this same pattern: temporal fillers that never reach the depth that is craved.

The Catholic tradition doesn’t see this as a flaw or psychological accident, but as powerful evidence that we were made for something, someone, infinite. Our hearts are wired for perfect Truth, perfect Beauty, perfect Love, and perfect Happiness. Nothing in the created world will be able to ultimately fill that void because we were created by and for God. St. Augustine’s prayer, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” doesn’t prove God exists on its own, but it fits perfectly with everything else we’ve seen: a universe that points to an intelligent Creator, and a human heart that hungers for the infinite. Faith in Christ doesn’t erase life’s struggles, but it offers the relationship that can finally satisfy the deepest part of who we are.

A Black Pill Argument Against God

One of the most common refutations against God's existence I see on here is, "Why would God create subhumans?"

My response:

Every person has infinite dignity because they were created in the image and likeness of God. This dignity is not based on a looks scale. It’s inherent from the moment of conception. We must keep in mind that the world is not in its final, perfected state, and because of original sin, there is a brokenness of creation, which causes a spectrum of outcomes: some people are born with ideal genetics, and some people have severe deformities.

St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that the universe is more perfect with this range of perfections and imperfections. A world with stable natural laws allows for defects. Look at the looks hierarchy. We recognize that some people are chads and some people are gigadeformed subhumans. These are clear degrees of beauty that are not random chaos. This is a perfect example of Aquinas’ Fourth Way, which states that gradations only exist because they participate in a perfect, maximum Beauty. If everyone were equally attractive, this would actually argue against God. The brutal reality is that the looks scale itself is evidence of a Creator. God does not override the natural laws of the world with constant miracles because that would collapse creation into chaos. Subhumans are extreme cases of a fallen material world.

Everyone has a cross to bear and not everyone gets the same cross to bear. Some people hit the genetic lottery and have a different cross to bear than people who are born with poor genetics. We must keep in mind that even if someone is subhuman, they may be able to develop different virtues that may be harder for a Chad to develop. Some of these virtues include: radical humility, detachment from vanity, etc.

It is true that life is brutally unfair on the looks scale in this fallen world, and Catholic theology agrees; however, it adds that this earthly life is not the whole story. Your looks are temporal; what lasts is how you play the cards you are dealt. For example, the subhuman who improves what he can and unites his suffering towards Christ can rank higher in eternity than a Chad who is arrogant and uses his gifts on pride and vice. This is not to say that a Chad cannot have the same virtues as said subhuman.

There is no problem with improving what you can, however, it is important not to idolize looks because they are not your ultimate worth and are not the telos to life. Furthermore, even if you are subhuman, you are not worthless because you have an immortal soul and have an infinite ontological dignity and were created in the image and likeness of God.

In the same way that God allows suffering in the fallen world, he permits extreme genetic deformities. Christ’s passion shows that he did not abstain from deformity and pain; he entered it himself and lived out the fallen world and suffered himself.

@ALBOSS @Jason Voorhees @GUMMIKZKDI @Acquiescence @avgsub5human @Paul.jnxy

I Read most of it.

I believe that there's no actual god and that we give meaning to a god ourselves, we invented it.

it's because nature is way too complex for our brains to understand it, so we invent things to make it make sense cause it just doesn't.

therefore god was invented, not because he actually existed, but because humans saw unexplainable things that are just nature, and looked for an explanation, that's how our brain works, if something doesn't make sense we have to think about why it happened.

If there was an actual god, why'd he stop being god NOW, why was he only god back then, it just doesn't make sense.

Religions are good coping methods if you have mental issues,
or just like a culture even, to make us more social with each other.

But dedicating your life to it is stupid in my opinion, cause you don't know if it exists or not, and betting your entire life on something like that is just being a retard.
 
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mirin, botb worthy
 
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The premise of the argument is the idea that everything and every state of existence has a cause
1.

This premise isnt even true if we look at modern physics , which cointains events that seem to happen without a cause.

Quantum events are often described as random . If these a truly uncaused events then the premise that everything must have is cause is basicly wrong
2.

.Still lets assume that for the sake of the argument that quantum events are not really random and that sciene has not discovered their causes yet.
In that case every event and every state of the universe would be caused by previous states

This would imply a deterministic universe

If the universe is deterministi then human thoughts and choices r also determined

What we call our will is ultimately a physical state of the brain and the brain is made of atoms that follow the laws of physics

If every movement of every atom is caused by prior conditions then every thought, desire, and decision is also caused by prior conditions

Under such a view free will becomes impossible because nobody could have acted differently from how they actually acted

This creates a serious problem for many Christian arguments

If people cannot freely choose their actions then moral responsibility becomes difficult to justify

Reward and punishment would lose their foundation and the common explanation that suffering exists because God gave humans free will would also collapse.

Likewise the idea that earthly life is some kind of test for Heaven or Hell becomes questionable if every action is already determined before a person is born

3.

even if we say that compatibilism could be true and that free will can coexist with a determistic universe

that still wouldnt prove the christian god

At most it would point to some kind of first cause

But why should this first cause be allgoo all knowing or identical to the God of Christianity?

The argument itself does not establish any of those qualities.

The first cause could be a completely different kind of being a different god, multiple gods or even some unknown form of existence that created the universe either intentionally or unintentionally

The existence of a first cause does not automatically tell us anything about its nature, its morality or its intentions

Therefore, even if the argument succeeded in proving a first cause it would still be a very large step from that conclusion to the specific claims of Christianity
 
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Water Thread but yes God does exist and Jesus is King ❤️
 
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GOD IS REAL
INTRO

From what I have gathered, a majority of you guys reject belief in God, whether you are an atheist, agnostic, etc. I completely understand this position because I was in the exact same place six years ago. It is true that you cannot prove God is real; however, you can't disprove Him either. On the contrary, we can follow strong logical arguments that were created by some of the greatest minds in history.

The content of this post is a twenty-page letter that I wrote to someone very dear to me. This originally took me weeks to write, so I hope that all my effort is not in vain. If this post benefits just one person, that makes it all worth it. This is being treated as a part two that is focusing on the spirituality aspect mentioned in my recent post: https://looksmax.org/threads/the-actual-dangers-of-looksmaxxing-high-iq-gtfih.2113266/

St. Thomas Aquinas

St. Thomas Aquinas offered five classic ways that still hold up remarkably well even 500 years later.

  • The Argument from Motion / Change (Aquinas’ First Way): Nothing can move or change itself: whatever is in motion has to be moved by something else. Motion means reducing potentiality to actuality; only something already “actual” can do this. For example, an actuality would be “hot”. It is a potentiality to become hot. The actuality would be being “hot”. If something is put into motion, you would need a prior cause. (There cannot be an infinite chain of movers.) Therefore, there must be a First Mover that is pure actuality, that is God.

  • The Argument from Efficient Causation (Second Way): Every effect has a cause. Nothing can cause itself (that would require it to exist before it exists – an absurdity.) An infinite regress of causes is impossible. If there is no first cause, there is no intermediate or final effect. Therefore, there must be a First Efficient Cause that is uncaused. This is the one who is (Exodus 3:14 “I AM WHO I AM”).

  • The Argument from Contingency (Third Way): We observe many things that are contingent, beings, events, or things whose existence is not necessary, they depend on something else for their existence and could potentially not exist. (Born, grow, decay, die, break, etc.) If everything were contingent, then there would have been a time where nothing existed. To believe something can come from nothing is an absurdity. However, we can recognize existences that eventually will cease to exist, like me and you, for example.

  • Therefore, it is logically impossible to deduce that everything is contingent. There must be at least one being whose nature is to exist, that has to exist. This necessary being does not derive its necessity from anything else. Otherwise, we would need another cause, which would lead to an infinite regress. It must be necessary in its very nature. This is God.

  • The Argument from Degree (Fourth Way): We observe things of different degrees of quality: things are more or less good, true, beautiful, etc. These qualities are judged to a maximum or perfect standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections, something that is perfect in every way. God is that maximum.

  • We observe degrees of qualities; things are more or less good, true, beautiful, noble. These gradations imply a maximum standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections (goodness, truth, beauty) that we participate in. God is that maximum.

  • The Argument from Design / Governance (Fifth Way): The universe is not chaos. Plants, animals, laws of physics, etc., are all ordered to an end. These things lack intelligence and cannot guide themselves toward an end unless it is guided by something intelligent. For example, an arrow needs an archer. Therefore, there must be an intelligent being that directs all nature to its ends. This being is once again God.

Transcendental Argument for God

“A truly transcendental argument takes any fact of experience which it wishes to investigate, and tries to determine what the presuppositions of such fact must be, in order to make it what it is.” –Cornelius Van Til, A Survey of Christian Epistemology

We are going to be investigating human experience, knowledge, logic, morality, science, and intelligible prediction, which all are possible and actual. These experiences all presuppose specific conditions: universal, immaterial laws of logic, natural order, objective morality, the unity-and-diversity of being, and the reliability of inductive reasoning. Only the Christian worldview is true. Without the Christian worldview, there is a lack of preconditions of knowledge and meaningful experience, and more. Therefore, the triune God exists as the necessary precondition for epistemology and metaphysics.

Only the Triune God accounts for Logic and Reason, the One-and-Many Problem, Morality, and Science and Uniformity of Nature. I will go through and explain each of the following.

Laws of logic are universal, immaterial, and invariant in their very nature. They are all propositions that serve as primary bearers of truth. These are not simply linguistic or physical. You can state a law of logic in numerous languages; there is still the same law of logic that exists independently of language or brain chemistry. The issue here is that materialism will reduce them to brain chemistry, and atheism is unable to justify its application to reality without circularity or arbitrariness. The only way to ground these propositions is through a God that precedes these things.

Reality displays unity and diversity, and this is something that we can see. Pure monism reduces these distinctions into one essence; pure pluralism states that ultimate reality is not grounded in a single unified system and is grounded in diversity. This would ultimately mean that knowledge is impossible because knowledge requires relating things together. This ultimately yields chaos. The Trinity alone resolves this issue: one divine essence and three distinct Persons (hypostases) in eternal relational communion. Unity and diversity are equally ultimate and eternal in God, grounding a precedent and a coherent world without reductionism.

It is illogical for objective morality to rely on evolution, social convention, or preference. These foundations would reduce objective morality to relativism or a “might makes right.” Relativism reduces objective morality to subjectivism, and objective morality cannot work under a “might makes right” because it would assume that strength ought to define what is objectively moral. The only adequate foundation is the triune God who grounds objective morality within His holy nature, which is defined as perfect and eternal love that exists within the relationship of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Induction assumes that the future will resemble the past. This is a principle known as the uniformity of nature. Atheistic naturalism does not offer a guarantee against radical contingency. The triune God created and continues a natural order that the world participates in as long as the earth exists. “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease.” –Genesis 8:22 RSVCE

All religions and philosophies that deny the triune God fail to justify their own preconditions. Atheistic materialism reduces logic and morality to physics and opinion, which ultimately renders itself self-refuting. Other religions cannot adequately solve the one-and-many question and ultimately collapse into pluralism or monism.

The Transcendental Argument for God does not simply suggest God’s existence; it proves that without Him, nothing, not even the argument against Him, makes sense.

The Patristic Argument for the Existence of God

1. Everything that changes needs a Maker who doesn’t change (The “Uncreated Creator” Argument)

By: St. John of Damascus (c. 675-749 A.D.)


Everything we see around us is contingent — it comes into being, changes or eventually ends.. Stars burn out, living things die, man-made things break, etc. These realities cannot be self-explanatory; they require an external cause. If every cause itself needs a prior cause, we would face an infinite regress with no ultimate explanation. Therefore, there must be a creator who is eternal and is uncreated. This is God — the eternal source of all existence.

2. The perfect order and balance in the universe can’t be luck or chance (The “Harmony and Design” Argument)

The world is full of opposite forces that should clash yet somehow work together — fire and water, for example. Seasons arrive on schedule year after year. Even more impressive are living systems in nature. For example, a forest: trees release oxygen that animals need to breathe, while animals give off carbon dioxide that trees use to grow. Insects pollinate flowers, predators control animal populations, and bacteria breaks down dead matter to return nutrients to the soil. All these parts fit together in a balanced, ongoing cycle. If everything happened by random change, it’s hard to explain why we see this kind of stable order and teamwork instead of total chaos or everything being the same.

3. Deep down, we already know God exists (The “Implanted Knowledge” Argument)

Throughout history, almost every culture has believed in some higher power, even without hearing about the Bible. This feeling is built into human nature, similar to knowing right from wrong. Creation (sunsets, stars, a newborn baby) often stirs a sense that life isn’t meaningless. Only strong distractions or habits can push this awareness away. This inner sense suggests we’re wired to recognize something greater than ourselves.

4. Variety and Beauty in Creation Can’t Come from Blind Cause

If the world was created by random atoms or blind forces, everything would likely be uniform and mush. However, we see purposeful diversity: sun and moon, land and sea, unique plants and animals, all beautiful in their own way. This variety of beauty reflects an intelligent creator.

The Human Person

Beyond the physical world, look inward. We experience an objective moral law—
Deep down we know some things are truly right and wrong, not just cultural preferences (e.g., the slaughter of children is evil everywhere). Conscience calls us to goodness beyond self-interest. Where does this binding moral obligation come from if the universe is just blind matter? A moral Lawgiver best explains it.

We also have desires that nothing in this world fully satisfies: endless hunger for truth, beauty, perfect love, and lasting happiness. These point beyond the material to a transcendent fulfillment—God. Our very capacity for reason and science assumes an orderly, intelligible universe, which a rational Creator explains better than chance.

Without an intelligent creator there would be no objective morality. The only morality that would be present would be subjective. However, we know that there is an objective morality because there is something deep within us that tells us whether something is right or wrong i.e. your conscience. Objectively speaking we all agree that murder is wrong. It is wrong because it is the unlawful taking of another person’s life. We must ask ourselves, “Why does that matter?” It matters because there is an intelligent creator who designed us in his image and likeness, who provided us with a soul, a purpose, the ability to reason, etc. Without this world view, murder would not matter, we would simply be “bags of meat/clumps of cells” who have no transcendent value. who are in motion. If we have no purpose and we are here purely by chance then it wouldn’t matter if one person killed another. Without an intelligent creator we must ask, “Who cares if one clump of cells happens to bump into another clump of cells and kill it?” It wouldn’t matter because there is no purpose to our lives, there is no reason for us to live, there is no intelligent creator.

A lot of atheists argue that the value of life comes from thought, love, experience, etc. At the end of the day, however, none of this matters without a God. The absence of God means an absence of objective morality, an absence of love, etc. All of these things are reduced to purposeless electrochemical events in a purposeless universe, which would render them lacking in objective or ultimate significance. If we are here by chance, why treat love more than a useful illusion or murder as more than rearranging particles?

The Restlessness of the Human Heart

One of the Doctors of the Church and Church Father, St. Augustine’s most famous quote is, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”

Look inward and dig deep down. Do you ever sense a kind of emptiness that no relationship, achievement, experience, entertainment, or success has ever fully satisfied? You may find temporal things that bring real joy, and that’s good, but that eventually fades, leaving the same emptiness behind. Many people who step away from faith notice this same pattern: temporal fillers that never reach the depth that is craved.

The Catholic tradition doesn’t see this as a flaw or psychological accident, but as powerful evidence that we were made for something, someone, infinite. Our hearts are wired for perfect Truth, perfect Beauty, perfect Love, and perfect Happiness. Nothing in the created world will be able to ultimately fill that void because we were created by and for God. St. Augustine’s prayer, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” doesn’t prove God exists on its own, but it fits perfectly with everything else we’ve seen: a universe that points to an intelligent Creator, and a human heart that hungers for the infinite. Faith in Christ doesn’t erase life’s struggles, but it offers the relationship that can finally satisfy the deepest part of who we are.

A Black Pill Argument Against God

One of the most common refutations against God's existence I see on here is, "Why would God create subhumans?"

My response:

Every person has infinite dignity because they were created in the image and likeness of God. This dignity is not based on a looks scale. It’s inherent from the moment of conception. We must keep in mind that the world is not in its final, perfected state, and because of original sin, there is a brokenness of creation, which causes a spectrum of outcomes: some people are born with ideal genetics, and some people have severe deformities.

St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that the universe is more perfect with this range of perfections and imperfections. A world with stable natural laws allows for defects. Look at the looks hierarchy. We recognize that some people are chads and some people are gigadeformed subhumans. These are clear degrees of beauty that are not random chaos. This is a perfect example of Aquinas’ Fourth Way, which states that gradations only exist because they participate in a perfect, maximum Beauty. If everyone were equally attractive, this would actually argue against God. The brutal reality is that the looks scale itself is evidence of a Creator. God does not override the natural laws of the world with constant miracles because that would collapse creation into chaos. Subhumans are extreme cases of a fallen material world.

Everyone has a cross to bear and not everyone gets the same cross to bear. Some people hit the genetic lottery and have a different cross to bear than people who are born with poor genetics. We must keep in mind that even if someone is subhuman, they may be able to develop different virtues that may be harder for a Chad to develop. Some of these virtues include: radical humility, detachment from vanity, etc.

It is true that life is brutally unfair on the looks scale in this fallen world, and Catholic theology agrees; however, it adds that this earthly life is not the whole story. Your looks are temporal; what lasts is how you play the cards you are dealt. For example, the subhuman who improves what he can and unites his suffering towards Christ can rank higher in eternity than a Chad who is arrogant and uses his gifts on pride and vice. This is not to say that a Chad cannot have the same virtues as said subhuman.

There is no problem with improving what you can, however, it is important not to idolize looks because they are not your ultimate worth and are not the telos to life. Furthermore, even if you are subhuman, you are not worthless because you have an immortal soul and have an infinite ontological dignity and were created in the image and likeness of God.

In the same way that God allows suffering in the fallen world, he permits extreme genetic deformities. Christ’s passion shows that he did not abstain from deformity and pain; he entered it himself and lived out the fallen world and suffered himself.

@ALBOSS @Jason Voorhees @GUMMIKZKDI @Acquiescence @avgsub5human @Paul.jnxy

Ai post😡

God is real but religion isnt rember that (high iq take:forcedsmile:)
 
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GOD IS REAL
INTRO

From what I have gathered, a majority of you guys reject belief in God, whether you are an atheist, agnostic, etc. I completely understand this position because I was in the exact same place six years ago. It is true that you cannot prove God is real; however, you can't disprove Him either. On the contrary, we can follow strong logical arguments that were created by some of the greatest minds in history.

The content of this post is a twenty-page letter that I wrote to someone very dear to me. This originally took me weeks to write, so I hope that all my effort is not in vain. If this post benefits just one person, that makes it all worth it. This is being treated as a part two that is focusing on the spirituality aspect mentioned in my recent post: https://looksmax.org/threads/the-actual-dangers-of-looksmaxxing-high-iq-gtfih.2113266/

St. Thomas Aquinas

St. Thomas Aquinas offered five classic ways that still hold up remarkably well even 500 years later.

  • The Argument from Motion / Change (Aquinas’ First Way): Nothing can move or change itself: whatever is in motion has to be moved by something else. Motion means reducing potentiality to actuality; only something already “actual” can do this. For example, an actuality would be “hot”. It is a potentiality to become hot. The actuality would be being “hot”. If something is put into motion, you would need a prior cause. (There cannot be an infinite chain of movers.) Therefore, there must be a First Mover that is pure actuality, that is God.

  • The Argument from Efficient Causation (Second Way): Every effect has a cause. Nothing can cause itself (that would require it to exist before it exists – an absurdity.) An infinite regress of causes is impossible. If there is no first cause, there is no intermediate or final effect. Therefore, there must be a First Efficient Cause that is uncaused. This is the one who is (Exodus 3:14 “I AM WHO I AM”).

  • The Argument from Contingency (Third Way): We observe many things that are contingent, beings, events, or things whose existence is not necessary, they depend on something else for their existence and could potentially not exist. (Born, grow, decay, die, break, etc.) If everything were contingent, then there would have been a time where nothing existed. To believe something can come from nothing is an absurdity. However, we can recognize existences that eventually will cease to exist, like me and you, for example.

  • Therefore, it is logically impossible to deduce that everything is contingent. There must be at least one being whose nature is to exist, that has to exist. This necessary being does not derive its necessity from anything else. Otherwise, we would need another cause, which would lead to an infinite regress. It must be necessary in its very nature. This is God.

  • The Argument from Degree (Fourth Way): We observe things of different degrees of quality: things are more or less good, true, beautiful, etc. These qualities are judged to a maximum or perfect standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections, something that is perfect in every way. God is that maximum.

  • We observe degrees of qualities; things are more or less good, true, beautiful, noble. These gradations imply a maximum standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections (goodness, truth, beauty) that we participate in. God is that maximum.

  • The Argument from Design / Governance (Fifth Way): The universe is not chaos. Plants, animals, laws of physics, etc., are all ordered to an end. These things lack intelligence and cannot guide themselves toward an end unless it is guided by something intelligent. For example, an arrow needs an archer. Therefore, there must be an intelligent being that directs all nature to its ends. This being is once again God.

Transcendental Argument for God

“A truly transcendental argument takes any fact of experience which it wishes to investigate, and tries to determine what the presuppositions of such fact must be, in order to make it what it is.” –Cornelius Van Til, A Survey of Christian Epistemology

We are going to be investigating human experience, knowledge, logic, morality, science, and intelligible prediction, which all are possible and actual. These experiences all presuppose specific conditions: universal, immaterial laws of logic, natural order, objective morality, the unity-and-diversity of being, and the reliability of inductive reasoning. Only the Christian worldview is true. Without the Christian worldview, there is a lack of preconditions of knowledge and meaningful experience, and more. Therefore, the triune God exists as the necessary precondition for epistemology and metaphysics.

Only the Triune God accounts for Logic and Reason, the One-and-Many Problem, Morality, and Science and Uniformity of Nature. I will go through and explain each of the following.

Laws of logic are universal, immaterial, and invariant in their very nature. They are all propositions that serve as primary bearers of truth. These are not simply linguistic or physical. You can state a law of logic in numerous languages; there is still the same law of logic that exists independently of language or brain chemistry. The issue here is that materialism will reduce them to brain chemistry, and atheism is unable to justify its application to reality without circularity or arbitrariness. The only way to ground these propositions is through a God that precedes these things.

Reality displays unity and diversity, and this is something that we can see. Pure monism reduces these distinctions into one essence; pure pluralism states that ultimate reality is not grounded in a single unified system and is grounded in diversity. This would ultimately mean that knowledge is impossible because knowledge requires relating things together. This ultimately yields chaos. The Trinity alone resolves this issue: one divine essence and three distinct Persons (hypostases) in eternal relational communion. Unity and diversity are equally ultimate and eternal in God, grounding a precedent and a coherent world without reductionism.

It is illogical for objective morality to rely on evolution, social convention, or preference. These foundations would reduce objective morality to relativism or a “might makes right.” Relativism reduces objective morality to subjectivism, and objective morality cannot work under a “might makes right” because it would assume that strength ought to define what is objectively moral. The only adequate foundation is the triune God who grounds objective morality within His holy nature, which is defined as perfect and eternal love that exists within the relationship of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Induction assumes that the future will resemble the past. This is a principle known as the uniformity of nature. Atheistic naturalism does not offer a guarantee against radical contingency. The triune God created and continues a natural order that the world participates in as long as the earth exists. “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease.” –Genesis 8:22 RSVCE

All religions and philosophies that deny the triune God fail to justify their own preconditions. Atheistic materialism reduces logic and morality to physics and opinion, which ultimately renders itself self-refuting. Other religions cannot adequately solve the one-and-many question and ultimately collapse into pluralism or monism.

The Transcendental Argument for God does not simply suggest God’s existence; it proves that without Him, nothing, not even the argument against Him, makes sense.

The Patristic Argument for the Existence of God

1. Everything that changes needs a Maker who doesn’t change (The “Uncreated Creator” Argument)

By: St. John of Damascus (c. 675-749 A.D.)


Everything we see around us is contingent — it comes into being, changes or eventually ends.. Stars burn out, living things die, man-made things break, etc. These realities cannot be self-explanatory; they require an external cause. If every cause itself needs a prior cause, we would face an infinite regress with no ultimate explanation. Therefore, there must be a creator who is eternal and is uncreated. This is God — the eternal source of all existence.

2. The perfect order and balance in the universe can’t be luck or chance (The “Harmony and Design” Argument)

The world is full of opposite forces that should clash yet somehow work together — fire and water, for example. Seasons arrive on schedule year after year. Even more impressive are living systems in nature. For example, a forest: trees release oxygen that animals need to breathe, while animals give off carbon dioxide that trees use to grow. Insects pollinate flowers, predators control animal populations, and bacteria breaks down dead matter to return nutrients to the soil. All these parts fit together in a balanced, ongoing cycle. If everything happened by random change, it’s hard to explain why we see this kind of stable order and teamwork instead of total chaos or everything being the same.

3. Deep down, we already know God exists (The “Implanted Knowledge” Argument)

Throughout history, almost every culture has believed in some higher power, even without hearing about the Bible. This feeling is built into human nature, similar to knowing right from wrong. Creation (sunsets, stars, a newborn baby) often stirs a sense that life isn’t meaningless. Only strong distractions or habits can push this awareness away. This inner sense suggests we’re wired to recognize something greater than ourselves.

4. Variety and Beauty in Creation Can’t Come from Blind Cause

If the world was created by random atoms or blind forces, everything would likely be uniform and mush. However, we see purposeful diversity: sun and moon, land and sea, unique plants and animals, all beautiful in their own way. This variety of beauty reflects an intelligent creator.

The Human Person

Beyond the physical world, look inward. We experience an objective moral law—
Deep down we know some things are truly right and wrong, not just cultural preferences (e.g., the slaughter of children is evil everywhere). Conscience calls us to goodness beyond self-interest. Where does this binding moral obligation come from if the universe is just blind matter? A moral Lawgiver best explains it.

We also have desires that nothing in this world fully satisfies: endless hunger for truth, beauty, perfect love, and lasting happiness. These point beyond the material to a transcendent fulfillment—God. Our very capacity for reason and science assumes an orderly, intelligible universe, which a rational Creator explains better than chance.

Without an intelligent creator there would be no objective morality. The only morality that would be present would be subjective. However, we know that there is an objective morality because there is something deep within us that tells us whether something is right or wrong i.e. your conscience. Objectively speaking we all agree that murder is wrong. It is wrong because it is the unlawful taking of another person’s life. We must ask ourselves, “Why does that matter?” It matters because there is an intelligent creator who designed us in his image and likeness, who provided us with a soul, a purpose, the ability to reason, etc. Without this world view, murder would not matter, we would simply be “bags of meat/clumps of cells” who have no transcendent value. who are in motion. If we have no purpose and we are here purely by chance then it wouldn’t matter if one person killed another. Without an intelligent creator we must ask, “Who cares if one clump of cells happens to bump into another clump of cells and kill it?” It wouldn’t matter because there is no purpose to our lives, there is no reason for us to live, there is no intelligent creator.

A lot of atheists argue that the value of life comes from thought, love, experience, etc. At the end of the day, however, none of this matters without a God. The absence of God means an absence of objective morality, an absence of love, etc. All of these things are reduced to purposeless electrochemical events in a purposeless universe, which would render them lacking in objective or ultimate significance. If we are here by chance, why treat love more than a useful illusion or murder as more than rearranging particles?

The Restlessness of the Human Heart

One of the Doctors of the Church and Church Father, St. Augustine’s most famous quote is, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”

Look inward and dig deep down. Do you ever sense a kind of emptiness that no relationship, achievement, experience, entertainment, or success has ever fully satisfied? You may find temporal things that bring real joy, and that’s good, but that eventually fades, leaving the same emptiness behind. Many people who step away from faith notice this same pattern: temporal fillers that never reach the depth that is craved.

The Catholic tradition doesn’t see this as a flaw or psychological accident, but as powerful evidence that we were made for something, someone, infinite. Our hearts are wired for perfect Truth, perfect Beauty, perfect Love, and perfect Happiness. Nothing in the created world will be able to ultimately fill that void because we were created by and for God. St. Augustine’s prayer, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” doesn’t prove God exists on its own, but it fits perfectly with everything else we’ve seen: a universe that points to an intelligent Creator, and a human heart that hungers for the infinite. Faith in Christ doesn’t erase life’s struggles, but it offers the relationship that can finally satisfy the deepest part of who we are.

A Black Pill Argument Against God

One of the most common refutations against God's existence I see on here is, "Why would God create subhumans?"

My response:

Every person has infinite dignity because they were created in the image and likeness of God. This dignity is not based on a looks scale. It’s inherent from the moment of conception. We must keep in mind that the world is not in its final, perfected state, and because of original sin, there is a brokenness of creation, which causes a spectrum of outcomes: some people are born with ideal genetics, and some people have severe deformities.

St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that the universe is more perfect with this range of perfections and imperfections. A world with stable natural laws allows for defects. Look at the looks hierarchy. We recognize that some people are chads and some people are gigadeformed subhumans. These are clear degrees of beauty that are not random chaos. This is a perfect example of Aquinas’ Fourth Way, which states that gradations only exist because they participate in a perfect, maximum Beauty. If everyone were equally attractive, this would actually argue against God. The brutal reality is that the looks scale itself is evidence of a Creator. God does not override the natural laws of the world with constant miracles because that would collapse creation into chaos. Subhumans are extreme cases of a fallen material world.

Everyone has a cross to bear and not everyone gets the same cross to bear. Some people hit the genetic lottery and have a different cross to bear than people who are born with poor genetics. We must keep in mind that even if someone is subhuman, they may be able to develop different virtues that may be harder for a Chad to develop. Some of these virtues include: radical humility, detachment from vanity, etc.

It is true that life is brutally unfair on the looks scale in this fallen world, and Catholic theology agrees; however, it adds that this earthly life is not the whole story. Your looks are temporal; what lasts is how you play the cards you are dealt. For example, the subhuman who improves what he can and unites his suffering towards Christ can rank higher in eternity than a Chad who is arrogant and uses his gifts on pride and vice. This is not to say that a Chad cannot have the same virtues as said subhuman.

There is no problem with improving what you can, however, it is important not to idolize looks because they are not your ultimate worth and are not the telos to life. Furthermore, even if you are subhuman, you are not worthless because you have an immortal soul and have an infinite ontological dignity and were created in the image and likeness of God.

In the same way that God allows suffering in the fallen world, he permits extreme genetic deformities. Christ’s passion shows that he did not abstain from deformity and pain; he entered it himself and lived out the fallen world and suffered himself.

@ALBOSS @Jason Voorhees @GUMMIKZKDI @Acquiescence @avgsub5human @Paul.jnxy

God is real
I am a christian
But many people belive god is a loving father.
When he is vengeful.
 
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GOD IS REAL
INTRO

From what I have gathered, a majority of you guys reject belief in God, whether you are an atheist, agnostic, etc. I completely understand this position because I was in the exact same place six years ago. It is true that you cannot prove God is real; however, you can't disprove Him either. On the contrary, we can follow strong logical arguments that were created by some of the greatest minds in history.

The content of this post is a twenty-page letter that I wrote to someone very dear to me. This originally took me weeks to write, so I hope that all my effort is not in vain. If this post benefits just one person, that makes it all worth it. This is being treated as a part two that is focusing on the spirituality aspect mentioned in my recent post: https://looksmax.org/threads/the-actual-dangers-of-looksmaxxing-high-iq-gtfih.2113266/

St. Thomas Aquinas

St. Thomas Aquinas offered five classic ways that still hold up remarkably well even 500 years later.

  • The Argument from Motion / Change (Aquinas’ First Way): Nothing can move or change itself: whatever is in motion has to be moved by something else. Motion means reducing potentiality to actuality; only something already “actual” can do this. For example, an actuality would be “hot”. It is a potentiality to become hot. The actuality would be being “hot”. If something is put into motion, you would need a prior cause. (There cannot be an infinite chain of movers.) Therefore, there must be a First Mover that is pure actuality, that is God.

  • The Argument from Efficient Causation (Second Way): Every effect has a cause. Nothing can cause itself (that would require it to exist before it exists – an absurdity.) An infinite regress of causes is impossible. If there is no first cause, there is no intermediate or final effect. Therefore, there must be a First Efficient Cause that is uncaused. This is the one who is (Exodus 3:14 “I AM WHO I AM”).

  • The Argument from Contingency (Third Way): We observe many things that are contingent, beings, events, or things whose existence is not necessary, they depend on something else for their existence and could potentially not exist. (Born, grow, decay, die, break, etc.) If everything were contingent, then there would have been a time where nothing existed. To believe something can come from nothing is an absurdity. However, we can recognize existences that eventually will cease to exist, like me and you, for example.

  • Therefore, it is logically impossible to deduce that everything is contingent. There must be at least one being whose nature is to exist, that has to exist. This necessary being does not derive its necessity from anything else. Otherwise, we would need another cause, which would lead to an infinite regress. It must be necessary in its very nature. This is God.

  • The Argument from Degree (Fourth Way): We observe things of different degrees of quality: things are more or less good, true, beautiful, etc. These qualities are judged to a maximum or perfect standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections, something that is perfect in every way. God is that maximum.

  • We observe degrees of qualities; things are more or less good, true, beautiful, noble. These gradations imply a maximum standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections (goodness, truth, beauty) that we participate in. God is that maximum.

  • The Argument from Design / Governance (Fifth Way): The universe is not chaos. Plants, animals, laws of physics, etc., are all ordered to an end. These things lack intelligence and cannot guide themselves toward an end unless it is guided by something intelligent. For example, an arrow needs an archer. Therefore, there must be an intelligent being that directs all nature to its ends. This being is once again God.

Transcendental Argument for God

“A truly transcendental argument takes any fact of experience which it wishes to investigate, and tries to determine what the presuppositions of such fact must be, in order to make it what it is.” –Cornelius Van Til, A Survey of Christian Epistemology

We are going to be investigating human experience, knowledge, logic, morality, science, and intelligible prediction, which all are possible and actual. These experiences all presuppose specific conditions: universal, immaterial laws of logic, natural order, objective morality, the unity-and-diversity of being, and the reliability of inductive reasoning. Only the Christian worldview is true. Without the Christian worldview, there is a lack of preconditions of knowledge and meaningful experience, and more. Therefore, the triune God exists as the necessary precondition for epistemology and metaphysics.

Only the Triune God accounts for Logic and Reason, the One-and-Many Problem, Morality, and Science and Uniformity of Nature. I will go through and explain each of the following.

Laws of logic are universal, immaterial, and invariant in their very nature. They are all propositions that serve as primary bearers of truth. These are not simply linguistic or physical. You can state a law of logic in numerous languages; there is still the same law of logic that exists independently of language or brain chemistry. The issue here is that materialism will reduce them to brain chemistry, and atheism is unable to justify its application to reality without circularity or arbitrariness. The only way to ground these propositions is through a God that precedes these things.

Reality displays unity and diversity, and this is something that we can see. Pure monism reduces these distinctions into one essence; pure pluralism states that ultimate reality is not grounded in a single unified system and is grounded in diversity. This would ultimately mean that knowledge is impossible because knowledge requires relating things together. This ultimately yields chaos. The Trinity alone resolves this issue: one divine essence and three distinct Persons (hypostases) in eternal relational communion. Unity and diversity are equally ultimate and eternal in God, grounding a precedent and a coherent world without reductionism.

It is illogical for objective morality to rely on evolution, social convention, or preference. These foundations would reduce objective morality to relativism or a “might makes right.” Relativism reduces objective morality to subjectivism, and objective morality cannot work under a “might makes right” because it would assume that strength ought to define what is objectively moral. The only adequate foundation is the triune God who grounds objective morality within His holy nature, which is defined as perfect and eternal love that exists within the relationship of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Induction assumes that the future will resemble the past. This is a principle known as the uniformity of nature. Atheistic naturalism does not offer a guarantee against radical contingency. The triune God created and continues a natural order that the world participates in as long as the earth exists. “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease.” –Genesis 8:22 RSVCE

All religions and philosophies that deny the triune God fail to justify their own preconditions. Atheistic materialism reduces logic and morality to physics and opinion, which ultimately renders itself self-refuting. Other religions cannot adequately solve the one-and-many question and ultimately collapse into pluralism or monism.

The Transcendental Argument for God does not simply suggest God’s existence; it proves that without Him, nothing, not even the argument against Him, makes sense.

The Patristic Argument for the Existence of God

1. Everything that changes needs a Maker who doesn’t change (The “Uncreated Creator” Argument)

By: St. John of Damascus (c. 675-749 A.D.)


Everything we see around us is contingent — it comes into being, changes or eventually ends.. Stars burn out, living things die, man-made things break, etc. These realities cannot be self-explanatory; they require an external cause. If every cause itself needs a prior cause, we would face an infinite regress with no ultimate explanation. Therefore, there must be a creator who is eternal and is uncreated. This is God — the eternal source of all existence.

2. The perfect order and balance in the universe can’t be luck or chance (The “Harmony and Design” Argument)

The world is full of opposite forces that should clash yet somehow work together — fire and water, for example. Seasons arrive on schedule year after year. Even more impressive are living systems in nature. For example, a forest: trees release oxygen that animals need to breathe, while animals give off carbon dioxide that trees use to grow. Insects pollinate flowers, predators control animal populations, and bacteria breaks down dead matter to return nutrients to the soil. All these parts fit together in a balanced, ongoing cycle. If everything happened by random change, it’s hard to explain why we see this kind of stable order and teamwork instead of total chaos or everything being the same.

3. Deep down, we already know God exists (The “Implanted Knowledge” Argument)

Throughout history, almost every culture has believed in some higher power, even without hearing about the Bible. This feeling is built into human nature, similar to knowing right from wrong. Creation (sunsets, stars, a newborn baby) often stirs a sense that life isn’t meaningless. Only strong distractions or habits can push this awareness away. This inner sense suggests we’re wired to recognize something greater than ourselves.

4. Variety and Beauty in Creation Can’t Come from Blind Cause

If the world was created by random atoms or blind forces, everything would likely be uniform and mush. However, we see purposeful diversity: sun and moon, land and sea, unique plants and animals, all beautiful in their own way. This variety of beauty reflects an intelligent creator.

The Human Person

Beyond the physical world, look inward. We experience an objective moral law—
Deep down we know some things are truly right and wrong, not just cultural preferences (e.g., the slaughter of children is evil everywhere). Conscience calls us to goodness beyond self-interest. Where does this binding moral obligation come from if the universe is just blind matter? A moral Lawgiver best explains it.

We also have desires that nothing in this world fully satisfies: endless hunger for truth, beauty, perfect love, and lasting happiness. These point beyond the material to a transcendent fulfillment—God. Our very capacity for reason and science assumes an orderly, intelligible universe, which a rational Creator explains better than chance.

Without an intelligent creator there would be no objective morality. The only morality that would be present would be subjective. However, we know that there is an objective morality because there is something deep within us that tells us whether something is right or wrong i.e. your conscience. Objectively speaking we all agree that murder is wrong. It is wrong because it is the unlawful taking of another person’s life. We must ask ourselves, “Why does that matter?” It matters because there is an intelligent creator who designed us in his image and likeness, who provided us with a soul, a purpose, the ability to reason, etc. Without this world view, murder would not matter, we would simply be “bags of meat/clumps of cells” who have no transcendent value. who are in motion. If we have no purpose and we are here purely by chance then it wouldn’t matter if one person killed another. Without an intelligent creator we must ask, “Who cares if one clump of cells happens to bump into another clump of cells and kill it?” It wouldn’t matter because there is no purpose to our lives, there is no reason for us to live, there is no intelligent creator.

A lot of atheists argue that the value of life comes from thought, love, experience, etc. At the end of the day, however, none of this matters without a God. The absence of God means an absence of objective morality, an absence of love, etc. All of these things are reduced to purposeless electrochemical events in a purposeless universe, which would render them lacking in objective or ultimate significance. If we are here by chance, why treat love more than a useful illusion or murder as more than rearranging particles?

The Restlessness of the Human Heart

One of the Doctors of the Church and Church Father, St. Augustine’s most famous quote is, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”

Look inward and dig deep down. Do you ever sense a kind of emptiness that no relationship, achievement, experience, entertainment, or success has ever fully satisfied? You may find temporal things that bring real joy, and that’s good, but that eventually fades, leaving the same emptiness behind. Many people who step away from faith notice this same pattern: temporal fillers that never reach the depth that is craved.

The Catholic tradition doesn’t see this as a flaw or psychological accident, but as powerful evidence that we were made for something, someone, infinite. Our hearts are wired for perfect Truth, perfect Beauty, perfect Love, and perfect Happiness. Nothing in the created world will be able to ultimately fill that void because we were created by and for God. St. Augustine’s prayer, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” doesn’t prove God exists on its own, but it fits perfectly with everything else we’ve seen: a universe that points to an intelligent Creator, and a human heart that hungers for the infinite. Faith in Christ doesn’t erase life’s struggles, but it offers the relationship that can finally satisfy the deepest part of who we are.

A Black Pill Argument Against God

One of the most common refutations against God's existence I see on here is, "Why would God create subhumans?"

My response:

Every person has infinite dignity because they were created in the image and likeness of God. This dignity is not based on a looks scale. It’s inherent from the moment of conception. We must keep in mind that the world is not in its final, perfected state, and because of original sin, there is a brokenness of creation, which causes a spectrum of outcomes: some people are born with ideal genetics, and some people have severe deformities.

St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that the universe is more perfect with this range of perfections and imperfections. A world with stable natural laws allows for defects. Look at the looks hierarchy. We recognize that some people are chads and some people are gigadeformed subhumans. These are clear degrees of beauty that are not random chaos. This is a perfect example of Aquinas’ Fourth Way, which states that gradations only exist because they participate in a perfect, maximum Beauty. If everyone were equally attractive, this would actually argue against God. The brutal reality is that the looks scale itself is evidence of a Creator. God does not override the natural laws of the world with constant miracles because that would collapse creation into chaos. Subhumans are extreme cases of a fallen material world.

Everyone has a cross to bear and not everyone gets the same cross to bear. Some people hit the genetic lottery and have a different cross to bear than people who are born with poor genetics. We must keep in mind that even if someone is subhuman, they may be able to develop different virtues that may be harder for a Chad to develop. Some of these virtues include: radical humility, detachment from vanity, etc.

It is true that life is brutally unfair on the looks scale in this fallen world, and Catholic theology agrees; however, it adds that this earthly life is not the whole story. Your looks are temporal; what lasts is how you play the cards you are dealt. For example, the subhuman who improves what he can and unites his suffering towards Christ can rank higher in eternity than a Chad who is arrogant and uses his gifts on pride and vice. This is not to say that a Chad cannot have the same virtues as said subhuman.

There is no problem with improving what you can, however, it is important not to idolize looks because they are not your ultimate worth and are not the telos to life. Furthermore, even if you are subhuman, you are not worthless because you have an immortal soul and have an infinite ontological dignity and were created in the image and likeness of God.

In the same way that God allows suffering in the fallen world, he permits extreme genetic deformities. Christ’s passion shows that he did not abstain from deformity and pain; he entered it himself and lived out the fallen world and suffered himself.

@ALBOSS @Jason Voorhees @GUMMIKZKDI @Acquiescence @avgsub5human @Paul.jnxy

dnred theres no evidence, wasted of time to read
 
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dnr faggot
“god is real” and “iqmaxxing” in the same sentence jfl
 
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dnr faggot
“god is real” and “iqmaxxing” in the same sentence jfl
inability to read due to tiktok brain... sad... stay low iq i guess
1780226128300
 
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The premise of the argument is the idea that everything and every state of existence has a cause
1.

This premise isnt even true if we look at modern physics , which cointains events that seem to happen without a cause.

Quantum events are often described as random . If these a truly uncaused events then the premise that everything must have is cause is basicly wrong
2.

.Still lets assume that for the sake of the argument that quantum events are not really random and that sciene has not discovered their causes yet.
In that case every event and every state of the universe would be caused by previous states

This would imply a deterministic universe

If the universe is deterministi then human thoughts and choices r also determined

What we call our will is ultimately a physical state of the brain and the brain is made of atoms that follow the laws of physics

If every movement of every atom is caused by prior conditions then every thought, desire, and decision is also caused by prior conditions

Under such a view free will becomes impossible because nobody could have acted differently from how they actually acted

This creates a serious problem for many Christian arguments

If people cannot freely choose their actions then moral responsibility becomes difficult to justify

Reward and punishment would lose their foundation and the common explanation that suffering exists because God gave humans free will would also collapse.

Likewise the idea that earthly life is some kind of test for Heaven or Hell becomes questionable if every action is already determined before a person is born

3.

even if we say that compatibilism could be true and that free will can coexist with a determistic universe

that still wouldnt prove the christian god

At most it would point to some kind of first cause

But why should this first cause be allgoo all knowing or identical to the God of Christianity?

The argument itself does not establish any of those qualities.

The first cause could be a completely different kind of being a different god, multiple gods or even some unknown form of existence that created the universe either intentionally or unintentionally

The existence of a first cause does not automatically tell us anything about its nature, its morality or its intentions

Therefore, even if the argument succeeded in proving a first cause it would still be a very large step from that conclusion to the specific claims of Christianity
@connive why don't you respond to him ?​
 
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GOD IS REAL
INTRO

From what I have gathered, a majority of you guys reject belief in God, whether you are an atheist, agnostic, etc. I completely understand this position because I was in the exact same place six years ago. It is true that you cannot prove God is real; however, you can't disprove Him either. On the contrary, we can follow strong logical arguments that were created by some of the greatest minds in history.

The content of this post is a twenty-page letter that I wrote to someone very dear to me. This originally took me weeks to write, so I hope that all my effort is not in vain. If this post benefits just one person, that makes it all worth it. This is being treated as a part two that is focusing on the spirituality aspect mentioned in my recent post: https://looksmax.org/threads/the-actual-dangers-of-looksmaxxing-high-iq-gtfih.2113266/

St. Thomas Aquinas

St. Thomas Aquinas offered five classic ways that still hold up remarkably well even 500 years later.

  • The Argument from Motion / Change (Aquinas’ First Way): Nothing can move or change itself: whatever is in motion has to be moved by something else. Motion means reducing potentiality to actuality; only something already “actual” can do this. For example, an actuality would be “hot”. It is a potentiality to become hot. The actuality would be being “hot”. If something is put into motion, you would need a prior cause. (There cannot be an infinite chain of movers.) Therefore, there must be a First Mover that is pure actuality, that is God.

  • The Argument from Efficient Causation (Second Way): Every effect has a cause. Nothing can cause itself (that would require it to exist before it exists – an absurdity.) An infinite regress of causes is impossible. If there is no first cause, there is no intermediate or final effect. Therefore, there must be a First Efficient Cause that is uncaused. This is the one who is (Exodus 3:14 “I AM WHO I AM”).

  • The Argument from Contingency (Third Way): We observe many things that are contingent, beings, events, or things whose existence is not necessary, they depend on something else for their existence and could potentially not exist. (Born, grow, decay, die, break, etc.) If everything were contingent, then there would have been a time where nothing existed. To believe something can come from nothing is an absurdity. However, we can recognize existences that eventually will cease to exist, like me and you, for example.

  • Therefore, it is logically impossible to deduce that everything is contingent. There must be at least one being whose nature is to exist, that has to exist. This necessary being does not derive its necessity from anything else. Otherwise, we would need another cause, which would lead to an infinite regress. It must be necessary in its very nature. This is God.

  • The Argument from Degree (Fourth Way): We observe things of different degrees of quality: things are more or less good, true, beautiful, etc. These qualities are judged to a maximum or perfect standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections, something that is perfect in every way. God is that maximum.

  • We observe degrees of qualities; things are more or less good, true, beautiful, noble. These gradations imply a maximum standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections (goodness, truth, beauty) that we participate in. God is that maximum.

  • The Argument from Design / Governance (Fifth Way): The universe is not chaos. Plants, animals, laws of physics, etc., are all ordered to an end. These things lack intelligence and cannot guide themselves toward an end unless it is guided by something intelligent. For example, an arrow needs an archer. Therefore, there must be an intelligent being that directs all nature to its ends. This being is once again God.

Transcendental Argument for God

“A truly transcendental argument takes any fact of experience which it wishes to investigate, and tries to determine what the presuppositions of such fact must be, in order to make it what it is.” –Cornelius Van Til, A Survey of Christian Epistemology

We are going to be investigating human experience, knowledge, logic, morality, science, and intelligible prediction, which all are possible and actual. These experiences all presuppose specific conditions: universal, immaterial laws of logic, natural order, objective morality, the unity-and-diversity of being, and the reliability of inductive reasoning. Only the Christian worldview is true. Without the Christian worldview, there is a lack of preconditions of knowledge and meaningful experience, and more. Therefore, the triune God exists as the necessary precondition for epistemology and metaphysics.

Only the Triune God accounts for Logic and Reason, the One-and-Many Problem, Morality, and Science and Uniformity of Nature. I will go through and explain each of the following.

Laws of logic are universal, immaterial, and invariant in their very nature. They are all propositions that serve as primary bearers of truth. These are not simply linguistic or physical. You can state a law of logic in numerous languages; there is still the same law of logic that exists independently of language or brain chemistry. The issue here is that materialism will reduce them to brain chemistry, and atheism is unable to justify its application to reality without circularity or arbitrariness. The only way to ground these propositions is through a God that precedes these things.

Reality displays unity and diversity, and this is something that we can see. Pure monism reduces these distinctions into one essence; pure pluralism states that ultimate reality is not grounded in a single unified system and is grounded in diversity. This would ultimately mean that knowledge is impossible because knowledge requires relating things together. This ultimately yields chaos. The Trinity alone resolves this issue: one divine essence and three distinct Persons (hypostases) in eternal relational communion. Unity and diversity are equally ultimate and eternal in God, grounding a precedent and a coherent world without reductionism.

It is illogical for objective morality to rely on evolution, social convention, or preference. These foundations would reduce objective morality to relativism or a “might makes right.” Relativism reduces objective morality to subjectivism, and objective morality cannot work under a “might makes right” because it would assume that strength ought to define what is objectively moral. The only adequate foundation is the triune God who grounds objective morality within His holy nature, which is defined as perfect and eternal love that exists within the relationship of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Induction assumes that the future will resemble the past. This is a principle known as the uniformity of nature. Atheistic naturalism does not offer a guarantee against radical contingency. The triune God created and continues a natural order that the world participates in as long as the earth exists. “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease.” –Genesis 8:22 RSVCE

All religions and philosophies that deny the triune God fail to justify their own preconditions. Atheistic materialism reduces logic and morality to physics and opinion, which ultimately renders itself self-refuting. Other religions cannot adequately solve the one-and-many question and ultimately collapse into pluralism or monism.

The Transcendental Argument for God does not simply suggest God’s existence; it proves that without Him, nothing, not even the argument against Him, makes sense.

The Patristic Argument for the Existence of God

1. Everything that changes needs a Maker who doesn’t change (The “Uncreated Creator” Argument)

By: St. John of Damascus (c. 675-749 A.D.)


Everything we see around us is contingent — it comes into being, changes or eventually ends.. Stars burn out, living things die, man-made things break, etc. These realities cannot be self-explanatory; they require an external cause. If every cause itself needs a prior cause, we would face an infinite regress with no ultimate explanation. Therefore, there must be a creator who is eternal and is uncreated. This is God — the eternal source of all existence.

2. The perfect order and balance in the universe can’t be luck or chance (The “Harmony and Design” Argument)

The world is full of opposite forces that should clash yet somehow work together — fire and water, for example. Seasons arrive on schedule year after year. Even more impressive are living systems in nature. For example, a forest: trees release oxygen that animals need to breathe, while animals give off carbon dioxide that trees use to grow. Insects pollinate flowers, predators control animal populations, and bacteria breaks down dead matter to return nutrients to the soil. All these parts fit together in a balanced, ongoing cycle. If everything happened by random change, it’s hard to explain why we see this kind of stable order and teamwork instead of total chaos or everything being the same.

3. Deep down, we already know God exists (The “Implanted Knowledge” Argument)

Throughout history, almost every culture has believed in some higher power, even without hearing about the Bible. This feeling is built into human nature, similar to knowing right from wrong. Creation (sunsets, stars, a newborn baby) often stirs a sense that life isn’t meaningless. Only strong distractions or habits can push this awareness away. This inner sense suggests we’re wired to recognize something greater than ourselves.

4. Variety and Beauty in Creation Can’t Come from Blind Cause

If the world was created by random atoms or blind forces, everything would likely be uniform and mush. However, we see purposeful diversity: sun and moon, land and sea, unique plants and animals, all beautiful in their own way. This variety of beauty reflects an intelligent creator.

The Human Person

Beyond the physical world, look inward. We experience an objective moral law—
Deep down we know some things are truly right and wrong, not just cultural preferences (e.g., the slaughter of children is evil everywhere). Conscience calls us to goodness beyond self-interest. Where does this binding moral obligation come from if the universe is just blind matter? A moral Lawgiver best explains it.

We also have desires that nothing in this world fully satisfies: endless hunger for truth, beauty, perfect love, and lasting happiness. These point beyond the material to a transcendent fulfillment—God. Our very capacity for reason and science assumes an orderly, intelligible universe, which a rational Creator explains better than chance.

Without an intelligent creator there would be no objective morality. The only morality that would be present would be subjective. However, we know that there is an objective morality because there is something deep within us that tells us whether something is right or wrong i.e. your conscience. Objectively speaking we all agree that murder is wrong. It is wrong because it is the unlawful taking of another person’s life. We must ask ourselves, “Why does that matter?” It matters because there is an intelligent creator who designed us in his image and likeness, who provided us with a soul, a purpose, the ability to reason, etc. Without this world view, murder would not matter, we would simply be “bags of meat/clumps of cells” who have no transcendent value. who are in motion. If we have no purpose and we are here purely by chance then it wouldn’t matter if one person killed another. Without an intelligent creator we must ask, “Who cares if one clump of cells happens to bump into another clump of cells and kill it?” It wouldn’t matter because there is no purpose to our lives, there is no reason for us to live, there is no intelligent creator.

A lot of atheists argue that the value of life comes from thought, love, experience, etc. At the end of the day, however, none of this matters without a God. The absence of God means an absence of objective morality, an absence of love, etc. All of these things are reduced to purposeless electrochemical events in a purposeless universe, which would render them lacking in objective or ultimate significance. If we are here by chance, why treat love more than a useful illusion or murder as more than rearranging particles?

The Restlessness of the Human Heart

One of the Doctors of the Church and Church Father, St. Augustine’s most famous quote is, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”

Look inward and dig deep down. Do you ever sense a kind of emptiness that no relationship, achievement, experience, entertainment, or success has ever fully satisfied? You may find temporal things that bring real joy, and that’s good, but that eventually fades, leaving the same emptiness behind. Many people who step away from faith notice this same pattern: temporal fillers that never reach the depth that is craved.

The Catholic tradition doesn’t see this as a flaw or psychological accident, but as powerful evidence that we were made for something, someone, infinite. Our hearts are wired for perfect Truth, perfect Beauty, perfect Love, and perfect Happiness. Nothing in the created world will be able to ultimately fill that void because we were created by and for God. St. Augustine’s prayer, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” doesn’t prove God exists on its own, but it fits perfectly with everything else we’ve seen: a universe that points to an intelligent Creator, and a human heart that hungers for the infinite. Faith in Christ doesn’t erase life’s struggles, but it offers the relationship that can finally satisfy the deepest part of who we are.

A Black Pill Argument Against God

One of the most common refutations against God's existence I see on here is, "Why would God create subhumans?"

My response:

Every person has infinite dignity because they were created in the image and likeness of God. This dignity is not based on a looks scale. It’s inherent from the moment of conception. We must keep in mind that the world is not in its final, perfected state, and because of original sin, there is a brokenness of creation, which causes a spectrum of outcomes: some people are born with ideal genetics, and some people have severe deformities.

St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that the universe is more perfect with this range of perfections and imperfections. A world with stable natural laws allows for defects. Look at the looks hierarchy. We recognize that some people are chads and some people are gigadeformed subhumans. These are clear degrees of beauty that are not random chaos. This is a perfect example of Aquinas’ Fourth Way, which states that gradations only exist because they participate in a perfect, maximum Beauty. If everyone were equally attractive, this would actually argue against God. The brutal reality is that the looks scale itself is evidence of a Creator. God does not override the natural laws of the world with constant miracles because that would collapse creation into chaos. Subhumans are extreme cases of a fallen material world.

Everyone has a cross to bear and not everyone gets the same cross to bear. Some people hit the genetic lottery and have a different cross to bear than people who are born with poor genetics. We must keep in mind that even if someone is subhuman, they may be able to develop different virtues that may be harder for a Chad to develop. Some of these virtues include: radical humility, detachment from vanity, etc.

It is true that life is brutally unfair on the looks scale in this fallen world, and Catholic theology agrees; however, it adds that this earthly life is not the whole story. Your looks are temporal; what lasts is how you play the cards you are dealt. For example, the subhuman who improves what he can and unites his suffering towards Christ can rank higher in eternity than a Chad who is arrogant and uses his gifts on pride and vice. This is not to say that a Chad cannot have the same virtues as said subhuman.

There is no problem with improving what you can, however, it is important not to idolize looks because they are not your ultimate worth and are not the telos to life. Furthermore, even if you are subhuman, you are not worthless because you have an immortal soul and have an infinite ontological dignity and were created in the image and likeness of God.

In the same way that God allows suffering in the fallen world, he permits extreme genetic deformities. Christ’s passion shows that he did not abstain from deformity and pain; he entered it himself and lived out the fallen world and suffered himself.

@ALBOSS @Jason Voorhees @GUMMIKZKDI @Acquiescence @avgsub5human @Paul.jnxy

mirin the effort
 
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GOD IS REAL
INTRO

From what I have gathered, a majority of you guys reject belief in God, whether you are an atheist, agnostic, etc. I completely understand this position because I was in the exact same place six years ago. It is true that you cannot prove God is real; however, you can't disprove Him either. On the contrary, we can follow strong logical arguments that were created by some of the greatest minds in history.

The content of this post is a twenty-page letter that I wrote to someone very dear to me. This originally took me weeks to write, so I hope that all my effort is not in vain. If this post benefits just one person, that makes it all worth it. This is being treated as a part two that is focusing on the spirituality aspect mentioned in my recent post: https://looksmax.org/threads/the-actual-dangers-of-looksmaxxing-high-iq-gtfih.2113266/

St. Thomas Aquinas

St. Thomas Aquinas offered five classic ways that still hold up remarkably well even 500 years later.

  • The Argument from Motion / Change (Aquinas’ First Way): Nothing can move or change itself: whatever is in motion has to be moved by something else. Motion means reducing potentiality to actuality; only something already “actual” can do this. For example, an actuality would be “hot”. It is a potentiality to become hot. The actuality would be being “hot”. If something is put into motion, you would need a prior cause. (There cannot be an infinite chain of movers.) Therefore, there must be a First Mover that is pure actuality, that is God.

  • The Argument from Efficient Causation (Second Way): Every effect has a cause. Nothing can cause itself (that would require it to exist before it exists – an absurdity.) An infinite regress of causes is impossible. If there is no first cause, there is no intermediate or final effect. Therefore, there must be a First Efficient Cause that is uncaused. This is the one who is (Exodus 3:14 “I AM WHO I AM”).

  • The Argument from Contingency (Third Way): We observe many things that are contingent, beings, events, or things whose existence is not necessary, they depend on something else for their existence and could potentially not exist. (Born, grow, decay, die, break, etc.) If everything were contingent, then there would have been a time where nothing existed. To believe something can come from nothing is an absurdity. However, we can recognize existences that eventually will cease to exist, like me and you, for example.

  • Therefore, it is logically impossible to deduce that everything is contingent. There must be at least one being whose nature is to exist, that has to exist. This necessary being does not derive its necessity from anything else. Otherwise, we would need another cause, which would lead to an infinite regress. It must be necessary in its very nature. This is God.

  • The Argument from Degree (Fourth Way): We observe things of different degrees of quality: things are more or less good, true, beautiful, etc. These qualities are judged to a maximum or perfect standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections, something that is perfect in every way. God is that maximum.

  • We observe degrees of qualities; things are more or less good, true, beautiful, noble. These gradations imply a maximum standard. There must be a perfect source of all perfections (goodness, truth, beauty) that we participate in. God is that maximum.

  • The Argument from Design / Governance (Fifth Way): The universe is not chaos. Plants, animals, laws of physics, etc., are all ordered to an end. These things lack intelligence and cannot guide themselves toward an end unless it is guided by something intelligent. For example, an arrow needs an archer. Therefore, there must be an intelligent being that directs all nature to its ends. This being is once again God.

Transcendental Argument for God

“A truly transcendental argument takes any fact of experience which it wishes to investigate, and tries to determine what the presuppositions of such fact must be, in order to make it what it is.” –Cornelius Van Til, A Survey of Christian Epistemology

We are going to be investigating human experience, knowledge, logic, morality, science, and intelligible prediction, which all are possible and actual. These experiences all presuppose specific conditions: universal, immaterial laws of logic, natural order, objective morality, the unity-and-diversity of being, and the reliability of inductive reasoning. Only the Christian worldview is true. Without the Christian worldview, there is a lack of preconditions of knowledge and meaningful experience, and more. Therefore, the triune God exists as the necessary precondition for epistemology and metaphysics.

Only the Triune God accounts for Logic and Reason, the One-and-Many Problem, Morality, and Science and Uniformity of Nature. I will go through and explain each of the following.

Laws of logic are universal, immaterial, and invariant in their very nature. They are all propositions that serve as primary bearers of truth. These are not simply linguistic or physical. You can state a law of logic in numerous languages; there is still the same law of logic that exists independently of language or brain chemistry. The issue here is that materialism will reduce them to brain chemistry, and atheism is unable to justify its application to reality without circularity or arbitrariness. The only way to ground these propositions is through a God that precedes these things.

Reality displays unity and diversity, and this is something that we can see. Pure monism reduces these distinctions into one essence; pure pluralism states that ultimate reality is not grounded in a single unified system and is grounded in diversity. This would ultimately mean that knowledge is impossible because knowledge requires relating things together. This ultimately yields chaos. The Trinity alone resolves this issue: one divine essence and three distinct Persons (hypostases) in eternal relational communion. Unity and diversity are equally ultimate and eternal in God, grounding a precedent and a coherent world without reductionism.

It is illogical for objective morality to rely on evolution, social convention, or preference. These foundations would reduce objective morality to relativism or a “might makes right.” Relativism reduces objective morality to subjectivism, and objective morality cannot work under a “might makes right” because it would assume that strength ought to define what is objectively moral. The only adequate foundation is the triune God who grounds objective morality within His holy nature, which is defined as perfect and eternal love that exists within the relationship of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

Induction assumes that the future will resemble the past. This is a principle known as the uniformity of nature. Atheistic naturalism does not offer a guarantee against radical contingency. The triune God created and continues a natural order that the world participates in as long as the earth exists. “As long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night, shall not cease.” –Genesis 8:22 RSVCE

All religions and philosophies that deny the triune God fail to justify their own preconditions. Atheistic materialism reduces logic and morality to physics and opinion, which ultimately renders itself self-refuting. Other religions cannot adequately solve the one-and-many question and ultimately collapse into pluralism or monism.

The Transcendental Argument for God does not simply suggest God’s existence; it proves that without Him, nothing, not even the argument against Him, makes sense.

The Patristic Argument for the Existence of God

1. Everything that changes needs a Maker who doesn’t change (The “Uncreated Creator” Argument)

By: St. John of Damascus (c. 675-749 A.D.)


Everything we see around us is contingent — it comes into being, changes or eventually ends.. Stars burn out, living things die, man-made things break, etc. These realities cannot be self-explanatory; they require an external cause. If every cause itself needs a prior cause, we would face an infinite regress with no ultimate explanation. Therefore, there must be a creator who is eternal and is uncreated. This is God — the eternal source of all existence.

2. The perfect order and balance in the universe can’t be luck or chance (The “Harmony and Design” Argument)

The world is full of opposite forces that should clash yet somehow work together — fire and water, for example. Seasons arrive on schedule year after year. Even more impressive are living systems in nature. For example, a forest: trees release oxygen that animals need to breathe, while animals give off carbon dioxide that trees use to grow. Insects pollinate flowers, predators control animal populations, and bacteria breaks down dead matter to return nutrients to the soil. All these parts fit together in a balanced, ongoing cycle. If everything happened by random change, it’s hard to explain why we see this kind of stable order and teamwork instead of total chaos or everything being the same.

3. Deep down, we already know God exists (The “Implanted Knowledge” Argument)

Throughout history, almost every culture has believed in some higher power, even without hearing about the Bible. This feeling is built into human nature, similar to knowing right from wrong. Creation (sunsets, stars, a newborn baby) often stirs a sense that life isn’t meaningless. Only strong distractions or habits can push this awareness away. This inner sense suggests we’re wired to recognize something greater than ourselves.

4. Variety and Beauty in Creation Can’t Come from Blind Cause

If the world was created by random atoms or blind forces, everything would likely be uniform and mush. However, we see purposeful diversity: sun and moon, land and sea, unique plants and animals, all beautiful in their own way. This variety of beauty reflects an intelligent creator.

The Human Person

Beyond the physical world, look inward. We experience an objective moral law—
Deep down we know some things are truly right and wrong, not just cultural preferences (e.g., the slaughter of children is evil everywhere). Conscience calls us to goodness beyond self-interest. Where does this binding moral obligation come from if the universe is just blind matter? A moral Lawgiver best explains it.

We also have desires that nothing in this world fully satisfies: endless hunger for truth, beauty, perfect love, and lasting happiness. These point beyond the material to a transcendent fulfillment—God. Our very capacity for reason and science assumes an orderly, intelligible universe, which a rational Creator explains better than chance.

Without an intelligent creator there would be no objective morality. The only morality that would be present would be subjective. However, we know that there is an objective morality because there is something deep within us that tells us whether something is right or wrong i.e. your conscience. Objectively speaking we all agree that murder is wrong. It is wrong because it is the unlawful taking of another person’s life. We must ask ourselves, “Why does that matter?” It matters because there is an intelligent creator who designed us in his image and likeness, who provided us with a soul, a purpose, the ability to reason, etc. Without this world view, murder would not matter, we would simply be “bags of meat/clumps of cells” who have no transcendent value. who are in motion. If we have no purpose and we are here purely by chance then it wouldn’t matter if one person killed another. Without an intelligent creator we must ask, “Who cares if one clump of cells happens to bump into another clump of cells and kill it?” It wouldn’t matter because there is no purpose to our lives, there is no reason for us to live, there is no intelligent creator.

A lot of atheists argue that the value of life comes from thought, love, experience, etc. At the end of the day, however, none of this matters without a God. The absence of God means an absence of objective morality, an absence of love, etc. All of these things are reduced to purposeless electrochemical events in a purposeless universe, which would render them lacking in objective or ultimate significance. If we are here by chance, why treat love more than a useful illusion or murder as more than rearranging particles?

The Restlessness of the Human Heart

One of the Doctors of the Church and Church Father, St. Augustine’s most famous quote is, “You have made us for yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.”

Look inward and dig deep down. Do you ever sense a kind of emptiness that no relationship, achievement, experience, entertainment, or success has ever fully satisfied? You may find temporal things that bring real joy, and that’s good, but that eventually fades, leaving the same emptiness behind. Many people who step away from faith notice this same pattern: temporal fillers that never reach the depth that is craved.

The Catholic tradition doesn’t see this as a flaw or psychological accident, but as powerful evidence that we were made for something, someone, infinite. Our hearts are wired for perfect Truth, perfect Beauty, perfect Love, and perfect Happiness. Nothing in the created world will be able to ultimately fill that void because we were created by and for God. St. Augustine’s prayer, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” doesn’t prove God exists on its own, but it fits perfectly with everything else we’ve seen: a universe that points to an intelligent Creator, and a human heart that hungers for the infinite. Faith in Christ doesn’t erase life’s struggles, but it offers the relationship that can finally satisfy the deepest part of who we are.

A Black Pill Argument Against God

One of the most common refutations against God's existence I see on here is, "Why would God create subhumans?"

My response:

Every person has infinite dignity because they were created in the image and likeness of God. This dignity is not based on a looks scale. It’s inherent from the moment of conception. We must keep in mind that the world is not in its final, perfected state, and because of original sin, there is a brokenness of creation, which causes a spectrum of outcomes: some people are born with ideal genetics, and some people have severe deformities.

St. Thomas Aquinas teaches that the universe is more perfect with this range of perfections and imperfections. A world with stable natural laws allows for defects. Look at the looks hierarchy. We recognize that some people are chads and some people are gigadeformed subhumans. These are clear degrees of beauty that are not random chaos. This is a perfect example of Aquinas’ Fourth Way, which states that gradations only exist because they participate in a perfect, maximum Beauty. If everyone were equally attractive, this would actually argue against God. The brutal reality is that the looks scale itself is evidence of a Creator. God does not override the natural laws of the world with constant miracles because that would collapse creation into chaos. Subhumans are extreme cases of a fallen material world.

Everyone has a cross to bear and not everyone gets the same cross to bear. Some people hit the genetic lottery and have a different cross to bear than people who are born with poor genetics. We must keep in mind that even if someone is subhuman, they may be able to develop different virtues that may be harder for a Chad to develop. Some of these virtues include: radical humility, detachment from vanity, etc.

It is true that life is brutally unfair on the looks scale in this fallen world, and Catholic theology agrees; however, it adds that this earthly life is not the whole story. Your looks are temporal; what lasts is how you play the cards you are dealt. For example, the subhuman who improves what he can and unites his suffering towards Christ can rank higher in eternity than a Chad who is arrogant and uses his gifts on pride and vice. This is not to say that a Chad cannot have the same virtues as said subhuman.

There is no problem with improving what you can, however, it is important not to idolize looks because they are not your ultimate worth and are not the telos to life. Furthermore, even if you are subhuman, you are not worthless because you have an immortal soul and have an infinite ontological dignity and were created in the image and likeness of God.

In the same way that God allows suffering in the fallen world, he permits extreme genetic deformities. Christ’s passion shows that he did not abstain from deformity and pain; he entered it himself and lived out the fallen world and suffered himself.

@ALBOSS @Jason Voorhees @GUMMIKZKDI @Acquiescence @avgsub5human @Paul.jnxy

If god actually exists we should hate him.:feelswah: Still mirin effort tho. And even then what's the point. Its best to not care if he exists or not. You will never find out realistically ofc.:soy:
 
Yes, and pretty easily.

First of all, the Epicurean Paradox assumes a false dilemma. Right off the bat, it's creating a logical fallacy.

Free will is the root of moral evil.

Real love, goodness, and virtue all require free will. Without free will, we wouldn't be able to truly love or be good, because we would essentially be robots. Moral evil comes from humans choosing to abuse the gift of free will. God is not the author of moral evil... we are. If God prevented every evil decision, that would destroy free will, the ability to choose.

Evil is not created by God

Evil is a lack of good. God created good in the world, and evil entered through the ability to rebel like Adam and Eve in the Garden. Similar to how darkness is the absence of light, evil is the absence of good.

God brings the good out of evil. A prime example would be suffering building virtue. Another example would be Christ's passion, death, and resurrection. Jesus went through torture and was nailed to a cross, yet was able to bring good from that evil.

"For the Almighty God, who, as even the heathen acknowledge, has supreme power over all things, being Himself supremely good, would never permit the existence of anything evil among His works, if He were not so omnipotent and good that He can bring good even out of evil." Augustine, Enchiridion on Faith, Hope, and Love, ch. 11.

The Epicurean Paradox ignores eternity and salvation. It also ignores God's ultimate judgment and justice.

On the question of, "Additionally, how are you blackpilled and theist? Blackpill is genetic determinism, which goes strongly against theist scolar's belief, arguing that there is no determinism."

Read the part labeled "A Black Pill Argument Against God"
the fact that humans don't have free will proves that god doesn't exist :cry::cry:
 
We literally do have free will... The whole argument was that we have free will. Do you have the reading comprehension of a 4 year old?
 
You can say that all of this is rational speculation but just like you said, there is no way to prove it
 
coming from a place of love, why would a God the triune one specifically let the place your born dictate what your beliefs are?
Why would he allow such confusion and ambiguity in seeking him surely an all powerful god capable of bringing everything into existence just by speaking them into existence wouldnt struggle with basic communication
Why is he silent? Why does he hide? Just why?
 
Dnr, religion is false
 
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