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Not a religious question
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Nik
(last edited May 10, 2019 09:50AM)
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May 10, 2019 09:49AM

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However, the same does not apply to God. God (if He is) is an entity, and does not create a dimension. You cannot have degrees of "god" - you cannot have more "god", therefore there is no requirement for a negative. Therefore, apart from some TV shows, there is no need for Satan. Neither does that deny Satan. Thus the presence of oranges neither requires nor prohibits the existence of apples or quockles.
Who is winning? Right now, if there is a Satan, I would say the arrow is pointing preferentially in his direction. There is a lot of bad going on. :-(


Devil is evil
You can't have light without dark. There's an inherent dichotomy. How to understand one without the other?

In the process, I've built an entire religious structure, a country that is in effect, a theocracy, founded against the darkness outside its borders and as a refuge for (if you like) the true believers, and a set of scriptures.
And the antagonist/s are evil - quite literally in form, as well as nature.

As it happens, I have also written a novel about a theocracy, but it is a liberal one. Like us, they developed technology and science, and worked out they evolved, BUT not very much, and they had no fossils before about 65 million years ago. They were also dinosaurs, and at first they concluded they were created but got the date wrong, and later they considered they might have been moved there, but what is the difference between a God and a technology so advanced it can re-engineer a planet and move an entire ecosystem?

If a god is truly omni-anything then said god must consequently be infinite. How can an infinite being be described as a single point on axis?

