What part do you not understand.
The part where you, apparently, seem to feel that the words "before" and "after" have meaning outside of the concept that we understand as time.
You have repeated this a million times, why would you, I never disagreed with this ever.
And yet, you continue to suggest that words like "before" and "after" have meaning outside of the concept that we understand as time.
You keep pointing this out like it is an answer and it is not any answer and does not solve shit by saying something so logical.
That's not why I keep pointing it out. See above.
Who the fuck doesn`t know what you just wrote, a 2 year old knows this shit.wow you feel smart. Stop repeating the obvious.... wooooooooosh
Well, apparently, you don't.
Now back to square one we need an answer still and you can not provide one.
What's the question again?
So this is where your journey ends and since you can not go any further that means you do not know if there is a GOd or there is not, siple as that.
My journey starts with the maxim that we live in a Universe which we can understand and explain, and by then asking the question: "what do we know about the world around us?"
Where we diverge is that I don't concern myself with the supernatural or with assorted fairy-tales from millenia past. Instead I only concern myself with the natural. If you want to worry about the supernatural, then do so, but don't try to pass this off as providing "answers" or being anything other than mystical hocus pocus.
You keep insisting that we need an answer to a burning question - a question that you, inevitably, answer with "goddidit!" But is an answer needed? And if it is, is "goddidit" an answer?
Let's assume, for a second, that the question is valid and that it can and must be answered. What does your answer tell us?
NOTHING. It merely adds another layer of abstraction.
Instead of the Universe having no beginning and no end, in the sense that time is a property of the Universe, now your silly deity doesn't have a beginning and an end. Instead of the Universe not requiring a creator, now your silly deity doesn't require a creator. I could go on, but I trust the point is made:
Your silly myths answer nothing. i think if you were able to think about the idea of god as being completely and totally unrelated to the religions of earth that you would find it very easy to believe such a thing might exist.
[I make it a policy to not answer buffoons, and I have avoided replying to you for this very reason, but this bit was just too good to pass up. So here we go.]
No, I really wouldn't. I need to know what it is I must "believe" might exist. I have seen no cogent, rational and consistent definition of the term "god". And "something completely and totally unrelated to the religions of earth" doesn't really define what this thing might be. There's nothing to even consider.