Tell me why god doesn't exist and I'll try to provide a rebuttal

Anyways, I've deleted this thread since it's clear we're getting nowhere but I believe your reply deserves a response since you're the only one here who seems to genuinely want to discuss the topic. Firstly, your explanation on the origins and development of the Abrahamic religions, specifically Yahwehism, was interesting. I don't really have anything to rebuttal there because I have little to no knowledge of Yahwehism and Christianity or Islam in general. I will say, however, that an appeal to morality in a discussion on the existence of god(s) is redundant in that claiming how the world "ought to be" is a preference, not a logical basis of reason.

Bot, do you believe that this ultimacy/super-intelligence Omega-point'ish has ever, in the history of this space-time universe, been reached? If so? Any credible evidence or supportable argument?

No, there isn't any evidence for the Omega Point. It's a purely theoretical idea assumed from implications of biological evolution on a higher scale. Chardin argues that in order for such a singularity to occur the O-point must already exist, only then is the state desirable. From my understanding, this would make the O-point meta-syntactic, in that it is both somewhat Platonic and inaccessible from the given state of affairs in order to prevent itself from negating it's own cause. The O-point can be seen akin to levels of intelligence -- those levels must first be able to exist in order to be attained. Another example, being simply that point B must exist before I can set out to reach from point A. The idea is slightly thermodynamic in nature in that the universe is seeking to attain equilibrium with the metaphysical O-point to reduce entropy and cease all forms of alteration, to a state of perfection - a prime, complete state. As Salman Rushdie puts it in his novel Grimus - "That which is complete is also dead.".

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