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Post by nightclaw on Mar 17, 2016 9:21:03 GMT -5
Proof
Base assumptions There was nothing in the beginning There is everything now Numbers extend to infinity in both directions It is impossible to destroy matter/energy God exists and is in everything. Light travels at a constant speed.
In the beginning, there was nothing. Point 1: It is impossible to create or destroy matter/energy, ergo God could not have created everything.
Point 2: light travels at a speed, and the universe is expanding at an acceleration, ergo it will be impossible to see the whole of the universe.
Point 3: There is no way of knowing whether or not there is a separate sum of matter and/or energy in space, ergo, due to infinity, there almost certainly is.
Point 4: As it is impossible to know the value of the sum, there are infinite possible values.
Point 5: If God is in everything, his value is equal to the amount of him in each portion of everything, times the number of those portions, or xy = z where x is the number of portions, y is the amount of God in it, and z is the total value of God.
Conclusion: In the beginning, there is nothing. An unknowable fraction of an invisible sum moves from the location of the invisible sum to the space of everything we can see. Everything is equal to the unknowable fraction of the sum via the 0 theorem. The value of God is a function of his stake in each portion of everything times the number of portions, ergo God is equal to a function of unknowable fraction of the sum and the amount of God in each portion of the unknowable fraction of the sum, via the identity theorem. God has, therefore, an unknowable and presumably infinite number of values, and is therefore equal to infinity.
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Post by nightclaw on Mar 17, 2016 9:22:25 GMT -5
Equation
Z = The value of God Y = The amount of God in each unit of everything S = The amount of the sum that was moved K = The full value of the sum
Z = (S/K)Y
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Post by Viempth on Mar 17, 2016 20:21:14 GMT -5
What if god is not equally distributed throughout everything? That is, what if each portion of everything X does NOT contain the same amount of god Y? Does that meaningfully alter the results?
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Post by nightclaw on Mar 18, 2016 3:32:44 GMT -5
Well, the whole point of the proof is to come to a conclusion based on the assumptions. If you change the assumptions, the conclusion is inherently going to be different.
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