In Bulgakov’s Master and Margarita, the devil meets Berlioz and Bezdomny in a Moscow park and asks if they believe in God. Told No, he questions them about the “Five Proofs” of God’s existence.
No less than 96% of U.S. citizens polled believe in God, according to a survey by George Gallup. Pollsters also asked the 96% what they thought was the most convincing argument for God’s existence.
The cosmos cannot be the source of its own existence. The cosmos is not a necessary being. In this regard, David Hart rightly remarks that “the contingent can only exist derivatively, receiving its ...
Inductive proofs; the concept of ‘a posteriori’. Cosmological argument: St Thomas Aquinas’ first Three Ways – (motion or change; cause and effect; contingency and necessity). The Kalam cosmological ...
"Endeavoring to avoid these and other like faults, we shall try, by God's help, to set forth whatever is included in this sacred doctrine as briefly and clearly as the matter itself may allow" [1].
Encyclopedia Britannica describes God as "... supreme supernatural or preternatural being that is the creator or sustainer or ruler of the universe and all things in it, including human beings ..." It ...
In his letter ["Provide Proof on Religion," Oct. 22], Troy J. Beardsley complains that the religious people he talks to have been unable to give him proof of the existence of God, and they tell him ...
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