I'm confident you won't agree but, IME, as a passion, or existential commitment, "hope" (i.e. magical / wishful / group thinking ~ make believe) is so much easier than courage (i.e. defiantly joyful living) in the face of adversity (facticity). Disbelief is, and has always been, defiant and never easy conformity like "belief in gods/God". After all, it's the crutch of religion that, in the medium-to- long-term, cripples "the human spirit" (i.e. catastrophizes our histories), even as its homilies pacify our near-term anxieties. To put away childish things for good once childhood ends, Gregory, takes (metaphysical) courage — 180 Proof
Lawrence Krauss however said he would rather not exist if God were real. — Gregory
I never said we weren't part of it. I correctly said we are only a part of it and an infinitesimal part of it with barely a trillionth of a speck of influence on it — Lambert Strether
I've answered all your questions already. That's enough — Gregory
Consider the rise in fundamentalist Islam that has been well documented in the naughties and perhaps the key role of white Christian evangelicals in the crass and lamentable Trump phenomenon? — Tom Storm
You can flip that however, you need the however for a comparator.I enjoy this stuff, yeah! However, there's always a however, eh? — Agent Smith
He cuts through the noise to get at the signal — Agent Smith
:lol: Finally, something! — Agent Smith
And so will the priests. Amen. — Olivier5
The human race has had science since before it was human. It has been using science from the very beginning; for about 5 million years. Somewhere in there, they learned to use fire, altered bones, skins, stones, logs and reeds for their purposes and established settled communities. — Vera Mont
The rate of technical advancement is increasing at a far bigger rate than it did in the majority of the 300,000+ years of the existence of the human race.What will happen in the 50 years that could have happened, and didn't, in the past 6000? — Vera Mont
:grin: Don't worry, that doomsday clock will tick for another billion trillion years of human existence.We are not on the cosmic calendar; we are on the doomsday clock. I'll be out of you way soon enough. — Vera Mont
I would choose to live now if offered to live in any past era. In fact, I would choose to be born in the distant future if I could make such a choice. Our future is not restricted to this planet.Our distant ancestors lived on a far more hospitable and generous planet than our descendants will have. — Vera Mont
I'm really only interested in what we do to each other here and now. :wink: — Tom Storm
1) religious people believe that the world comes from a spiritual source. They all agree on that. Whether they agree or not on religious manifestations (religions) they are not atheists because they believe in the spiritual source. Obviously! So bad argument 1 answered — Gregory
2) you say faith cannot accomplish a miracle. Well prayer is not perfect most of the time and if faith is not strong enough for a specific miracle God still grants more than what is asked for. You can't always see God's work Simple. — Gregory
:lol: How much of your personal time are you offering me?Any other concerns?
@180 Proof, @Agent Smith, @Tom Storm, @Vera Montthe Universe would have no care about earthling(s) — Lambert Strether
Don't worship anything is better advice. Worship is an extreme, irrational, dangerous activity.Don't worship idols, is one of the best advices in all scripture — Olivier5
As soon as we act, we are indeed forced to chose a side, to make a leap of faith. You are correct on this, but we can act without idolizing our intent. We can make money without becoming its slave; we can fight without demonizing our opponent; and we can love science without giving it the final say, always and on every topic. Science is only human. It can fail. — Olivier5
:smile: Is that all you got?or don't have a higher philosophical mindset and aren't interested in truth — Gregory
Science is also failing here. Don't let your anti-religion push you into worshiping or idolizing science. — Olivier5
Humans use these inventions. There is a clear track record of how humans have so far used these inventions.
To believe that next week or next year humans will all come together in a single, benevolent "We" and start using their inventions wisely for the betterment of all is a great leap of faith. — Vera Mont
Believing - contrary to all evidence - that something humans created will solve the human condition. — Vera Mont
God demonstrates his presence to those with faith. — Gregory
How do you arrive at this? What relationship with god/s must one have to make a claim like this? — Tom Storm
How is your embodied or experienced certainty distinguished from the similar certainties of a QAnon believer or a Scientologist or a Hindu? — Tom Storm
So my question asked earlier remains: -
How do you arrive at this? What relationship with god/s must one have to make a claim like this? — Tom Storm
You know all this from experience? — Tom Storm
What is the nature of this experience and how can we tell what is true from what is false? — Tom Storm
My question was:
Why should we accept this experiential knowledge as opposed to similar claims from other theists who, let's say, know from experience that god wants 'fags to burn in hell' and that women are inferior to men?
What is the nature of this experience and how can we tell what is true from what is false? — Tom Storm
How do we determine that the sincere personal experience of one believer is right, while the experience of another is wrong. Is there a process? — Tom Storm
Ok, sounds reasonable, but it also tells us that personal experience of god is no pathway to reliable knowledge. We need to use reason and judgement to determine what views we will accept. — Tom Storm
back to the un-observable - pure potential energy — Benj96
Of course they can. Get every member of any evanhellical church, to enter any hospital or even better, any palliative care based hospice, and pray constantly over every terminal patient in that hospice. Then see how many patients become no longer terminal! We could even restrict it to terminal patients of a fixed age range, so that the theists cant use the excuse that the patients were just 'too old to save.'Studies can't tell if prayer works — Gregory
Believing - contrary to all evidence - that something humans created will solve the human condition. — Vera Mont
Entropy always increases in a closed system. Life is not a closed system - it is interacting with the other parts of the universe all the time. — PhilosophyRunner
Worst case? Truly horrendous. One guy's delusion is that the Jews conspired to thwart his artistic ambition and his nation's aspiration to greatness, so he drags a nation into a disastrous war and genocide... with the resultant creation of a truly problematic new state where all the great global powers are locked in a fifty-year standoff, which eventually explodes in sporadic violence in a number of far-away countries, and a series of small but destructive local wars - all because a nation went went along with, shared in, the delusion.
Another guy's delusion convinced many generations of otherwise decent people that their beloved deity would sentence them to eternal torment for breaking his nonsensical rules.
Most of the time, it's harmless fantasy, with no ramifications. — Vera Mont
The 1986 remake as the classic?
I grieve for my people. — Banno
Democracy itself is more about how rulers are picked than about what they do, though, and so they sort of become representatives empowered by a majority (at least in theory), which is also due to practical matters (some sort of temporary hierarchy if you will). — jorndoe
pmno
— Benj96
Is this a mnemonic? — universeness
Well if humanity is represented as chess pieces I would argue God is the chess board/game Itself — Benj96
True but we could ask ChatGPT to come up with rules for our god chess. What happens when omnigods clash. To quote a line from the film 'Highlander,' 'There can be only one!' Perhaps we can feed the rules of democracy into ChatGPT to help it come up with rules for deciding the outcome of a clash between Zeus and Odin! OR Yaweh and Allah!But such power renders the game useless. — Benj96
