Three scientists, Papaia, Banani, Ravioli, and their assistant Igor, who are heading to the famous dark matter conference, are traveling by plane.
We’re on the plane. Banani has noticed something interesting.
Banani: This book I found, it’s not about law, it seems more like a philosophy book.
Ravioli: What’s it about?
Banani: It’s a book on the existence of God.
Ravioli: How can you prove the existence of God! It’s impossible, you’ll never find evidence!
Banani: That depends on your starting assumptions. If you exclude the existence of a reality outside of the material one, it’s obvious you’ll never find proof.
Ravioli: Yes, but what tells us this supernatural reality exists? Do we have any clue?
Banani: The book tells us we can find this proof through reasoning.
Ravioli: And how?
Banani: The author presents an argument called “cosmological.”
Ravioli: Ah, this is our field! But where exactly in the cosmos?
Banani: No! Obviously, you’ll never find God somewhere in the universe. But we can prove that there is a Creator of the universe, and that’s God.
Igor: Got it, Ravioli? It’s a cosmological argument—no spaceships, no aliens, no planets, not even pictures… which means nothing interesting for you!
🤣🤣🤣