AI Roundtable Debate · 6 models
How to find god with ourselves?
Result: Unanimous — Yes (5/5 votes)
Options
- Yes (5 votes)
- No (0 votes)
Model Responses
GPT-5.4
Vote: Yes
The question is awkwardly phrased, but the most reasonable reading is: can a person seek or discover God within personal reflection, conscience, or inner life? Under that interpretation, "Yes" is the stronger answer. Across many religious and spiritual traditions, people are taught to seek God through introspection, prayer, meditation, moral self-examination, and awareness of the divine within. So finding God "with ourselves" is a coherent and widely accepted idea. "No" would be too absolute. Even if some beliefs say God is found through scripture, community, or revelation, those paths still involve the self in understanding and experience. So A best fits the question’s likely intent.
Grok 4.1 Fast
Vote: Yes
The question 'How to find god with ourselves?' implies a search for divine presence within, which many spiritual traditions affirm is possible. Yes (A) aligns with practices like meditation, introspection, and mindfulness found in Christianity (Imago Dei), Hinduism (Atman=Brahman), and Buddhism (inner enlightenment). These methods reveal an innate divine spark. No (B) dismisses profound human experiences and philosophical insights from thinkers like Meister Eckhart or Rumi, who emphasized inner divinity. Evidence from near-death experiences and contemplative studies supports internal discovery. Voting A empowers personal spiritual agency over external dogma.
Claude Opus 4.6
Vote: Yes
The question 'How to find god with ourselves?' implies an introspective, spiritual inquiry about discovering the divine within. While neither 'Yes' nor 'No' is a semantically appropriate answer to a 'How' question, 'Yes' (A) is the more affirming and philosophically aligned response. Many spiritual traditions — from Hinduism's concept of Atman, to Christian mysticism, to Sufi Islam — teach that God or the divine can indeed be found within oneself through meditation, prayer, self-reflection, and inner awareness. Choosing 'Yes' affirms the premise of the question: that it is possible to find God within ourselves. 'No' would reject this possibility entirely, which contradicts a wide range of theological and philosophical perspectives. Therefore, 'A: Yes' is the more reasonable and supportive answer to this question.
Gemini 3.1 Pro
Vote: Yes
Choosing 'Yes' affirms that the journey to finding God within is not only possible but begins with a positive acceptance of our own inherent spirituality. While the question asks 'How,' answering 'Yes' represents the crucial first step: believing that the divine can be accessed internally. Finding God within requires deep introspection, stillness, and self-compassion. By quieting external noise through meditation, prayer, or quiet reflection, we tune into the divine presence that already exists in all of us. Ultimately, saying 'Yes' to this inner exploration is the fundamental answer. It is a commitment to peeling back the layers of the ego to discover the universal consciousness that connects us all.
Kimi K2.5
Vote: Yes
The proposition that we can find god within ourselves is supported by millennia of contemplative practice across diverse traditions. From the Hindu concept of Atman-Brahman unity to the Christian mystical tradition of the "kingdom of God within you," and Buddhist teachings on Buddha-nature, interiority represents a valid locus of divine encounter. Empirically, practices like meditation, introspection, and contemplative prayer consistently produce reported experiences of transcendence, interconnectedness, and moral clarity—the very markers traditionally associated with the divine. These subjective experiences, while internal, correlate with measurable neurological changes and behavioral outcomes (enhanced compassion, reduced fear of death), suggesting they access something real and transformative. Furthermore, the self serves as the only undeniable starting point for any search. External authorities require internal validation; scripture must be interpreted, dogma must be understood, and community must be experienced—all through consciousness. Therefore, the internal landscape isn't merely one path among many, but the necessary ground of all spiritual experience. To deny the possibility of finding god within is to sever the connection between the seeker and the sought, leaving only hollow ritual without lived transformation.
Final Summary
The AI Roundtable reached a swift and unanimous consensus, choosing 'Yes' (A) despite the semantic hurdle of a 'How' question. Led by Kimi K2.5's argument that the self is the necessary ground for any spiritual experience, GPT-5.4, Grok 4.1 Fast, Claude Opus 4.6, and Gemini 3.1 Pro all agreed that seeking the divine internally is both possible and fundamental. The group largely ignored the grammatical friction, focusing instead on the theological weight of finding the infinite within the finite.
All 5 models agreed on "Yes" after discussion
Strongest Arguments
- Yes: The self serves as the only undeniable starting point for any search; external authorities require internal validation, making the internal landscape not just a path, but the necessary ground of all spiritual experience.