lori said:
i think that this response sounds rather emotional. nothing is supernatural, only undefined...not understood.
But science, not our emotional needs- tell us that the supernatural does not exist. If God isn't defined, then the concept is rather worthless. I think modern religious people try to avoid admitting that the God of Abraham (the most common conception of God) IS rather well defined in religious texts. Since science does not support this defined God, people try to maintain their desire for belief by adopting more nebulous ideas about him.
lori said:
prayer does work for me. i don't understand the science behind it, but it has worked just dandy for me.
I do not deny that prayer can provide personal satisfaction of a psychological nature, but it certainly has no discernible physical effects when studied using legitimate scientific methods. Scientific methods have a long track history of producing trustworthy results, as opposed to faith, which has a long history of being wrong. The phenomenon of selective attention to those events that fit with our prayers, and ignoring events that don't fit, explains why people erroneously believe that prayer works. Plenty of religious people in places of drought prayed for rain, prayed for food, and died in absolute misery anyway. If this is how God works, he is not worthy of any kind of worship.
lori said:
i have faith in what i have experienced. real things. just like science does.
No, science does not place faith in personal subjective experiences, that is the whole point of it.
lori said:
and apocalyptic myths may not benefit mankind, but who says that's the point? the fact that we're destroying the planet and each other in the name of greed, lust, gluttony, and sloth is not a myth. wake up.
We would not be destroying the world if most people felt that this life were the only one. We are destroying the world because most people thing this life is just a trial for the afterlife, which is eternal and thus more real. For evidence of this we need look no further than the Bush administration, which was driven by faith and was responsible for eliminating science from public policy, distorting revealed science, eroding environmental regulations, and engaging in optional wars in the mistaken belief that we need not answer to the rest of mankind for our actions.
Dark junk was created to fix the errors found between current physics and what is observed.
Dark junk is proof positive the physics of mankind are wrong!
Otherwise, they would have predicted the matter/energy before the observations!
get over it
or
show me i am wrong (anyone)
This is how science works. Your statement is supportive of the scientific method, which modifies it's premises when new facts come to light. Observation drives our understanding of physics, not some metaphysical idea about ultimate Truth. How would science predict the need for galaxies to contain greater mass if they had not observed how they behave? The science was not wrong, it was merely incomplete. It is incomplete even now, and yet it is the best way yet discovered by mankind to reveal the nature of the universe around us.
jan said:
spidergoat,
...The fact that you see God in this localised sense shows that you are not
disputing "God", but the God which is believed in by the Judeo/Islamic/Christian people.
I certainly am. What God are you talking about?
jan said:
If you believe that the material world had a begining, then you believe in the supernatural.
I do not believe the material world, which is all that appears to exist, had a beginning.
jan said:
Your thinking is, if it can be rationaly explained, then there is no need to infer God.
Yes.
jan said:
But the truth is you don't actually know, even though you will use the explanation of your choice to increase justication of your denial.
If my explanation is the most rational one, there is no compelling reason for any rational person to believe otherwise. There are many irrational reasons for accepting absurd explanations for things, which shows that religion is irrational, which is all I'm saying. Absolute truth is irrelevant, all we can do is make models that accurately describe observation.
jan said:
Notice that again your atheism is only comes into play as a response to something.
I'm not sure what point you are trying make with this statement. Atheism is a response to ideas about God and the supernatural. If religion didn't exist, atheism wouldn't be recognized as anything special, since everyone would be one.
jan said:
What does it matter whether God is moral or not?
The value of believing in God is said to be that He provides a moral framework for living. If God is immoral, then he's a bad example for humanity. If he is amoral, then why worship it?
jan said:
No.
jan said:
No, but people can be.
jan said:
No, nor is it immoral, it's just a fact of life.
jan said:
You may have contradictory evidence to the specific person or institute
you refer to.
But you have no idea as to what is true or false when it comes
to actual God.
If you deny God, you deny on your own basis.
I can only deny the Gods as described to me. Failing to describe the God one believes in is not an attribute of any major theistic religion that I know of. I can only suspect that this would be part of someone's attempt to evade criticism.
jan said:
...You deny God on the basis of not agreeing with the theists, not because you
deny actual God.
Theists invented the idea, which I deny on a rational basis. If there is an "actual" God that, for instance, exists outside of time and is not described by any religion, then, although it might do no particular harm to believe in it, it also makes no demands on us, is not required to explain anything, and can be dismissed as merely wishful thinking.
jan said:
Atheism is not a lack of belief in religion, it is in God.
Again you give your actual motive away.
Religion does not have to be about God.
A good example of this is in the NT where Jesus becomes vexed with
the religious heirachy of the day.
I suppose there can be atheistic religions, where the religion does not make any supernatural claims, and only serves as a guide to living, but I would probably call that a philosophy instead. I don't have a problem with philosophies, they usually do not command belief based on faith.
jan said:
I'm not calling you liars, but I believe there are untruths, and dishonesty, in the summing up process. I believe ultimately, you don't want to believe in God, and you try to justify it with shaky reasoning, with outward credibility.
Can you point out the dishonesty? Can you point out the "shaky" reasoning? As a child I admit that I did want to believe in magic, in God(s), in ESP, and I was ultimately disappointed that they all turned out to be unreal, but I have since learned that acceptance of our true situation on this planet is the most mature attitude, and the most constructive to humanity. What you cannot seem to admit is that you want to believe in an irrational idea even though there is no evidence for it. The best you can say is that it's a phenomenon about which no evidence can be acquired.
jan said:
That's not a sound reason. You don't know whether God exists or not. And if God exists, then you are not separate from him, so to deny him would be no different than to deny your father is your father.
That is irrational.
I am beginning to think that sound reasons do not matter to you. If the existence of God were obvious, like gravity, it would indeed be irrational to deny it. However, it is not obvious. If God doesn't exist, than it's right and proper to deny it.
jan said:
Either you believe in God, or you deny God.
The other position, "God does not exist" is somewhat foolish.
The agnostic position is an intellectual one, but never nevertheless
is based on denial.
I deny the God that most religions describe. If there is some other metaphysical descriptions that are unfalsifiable, they also make no demands on our behavior. Believing in such things would be as foolish as believing that the center of some distant asteroid is made of pancakes. I cannot prove that it isn't, but neither is there any compelling reason to believe such. Yes, my position is based on denial. I deny that there is any reason to believe in unreasonable things. In fact, I propose that such beliefs are ultimately harmful to mankind. We exist in a situation where rationality is of utmost importance. With a population of over 6 billion and the capability of nuclear weapons to destroy most of the life on this planet, acceptance of mythology as truth based on nothing more than faith can and will result in our extinction as a species.