The Christian god is a software without user facing UI (a demon process) that is installed on host minds as functionally identical instances by the church. Exorcised demons are corrupted instances which are recognized by abberant checksums and are aborted to recover the host.
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Replying to @Plinz
hmm but you fail the first definition. the Christian god is defined as a being that is no beginning, not created, eternal and has no end. so anything that is created, or installed, or conjured, is by definition not a god anymore.
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Replying to @Muhd_Amrullah
I am not talking about the incantations that are being used while booting up the memetic virus on nascent human minds. I am talking about the actual god, which did not exist before the Nicene Creed.
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Replying to @Plinz
“I’m talking about the actual god, which does not exist before the Niceness creed”. the Christians define God as characteristically has no beginning or end. so your sentence contains a contradiction. it’s analogous to defining variables differently from the christians.
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Replying to @Muhd_Amrullah
No, you misunderstand: we observer cannot define reality, we can merely model it. The best model I find is this: The Christians installed a piece of software that claimed about itself that it has eternal existence, but the software was written in or slightly before the year 325.
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Replying to @Plinz @Muhd_Amrullah
If you talk about this to a member of the particular faith, they can usually not sufficiently sandbox their rationality to prevent the demon process to override the result they would get when they inquire rationally about its age.
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[PS I am asking myself which fraction of my readers will tend to misread words like 'Nicean creed' as 'niceness creed' without even noticing, and which parts of what I say register in randomized ways]
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