Consider me a psychopantheist, universeness — EugeneW
I would say pyramids are a development of the burial cult stage with developments past animism towards paganism.
Some spiritual traits about pyramids: they are built high to bridge the path between earth and the sun (heaven), the bodies are not burned to get closer to heaven, dead pharoahs may become gods if they reach their path (and get haloes which are just suns over your head), embalming is an understanding of the body and which are most important (which influences early surgery).
So a lot of ethical, scientific discoveries are from this. I think it would be hard to define these meaningfully in terms of fear — Shwah
Absolutely not. Even elementary particles — EugeneW
The gods had a reason creating them. That gives love meaning. Await the final word to be told my fellow Earthling! — EugeneW
Flee … he’s probably stoned and here to giggle to himself like an idiot — Joe Mello
It'd be hard to consider those feelings in terms of fear except derivatively for some people. — Shwah
Love would mean nothing without gods having created it — EugeneW
Primal fears are logical or are properly consequential or derivable. I wouldn't say primal fears can meaningfully speak about religions in anything less than a shallow sense though — Shwah
I spent some time here looking for a thinker to interact with. I found only one or two. — Joe Mello
There's some logical reason they believe what they do so — Shwah
side example, your grandma says "I love you, do you believe me?" — Shwah
I'll go a bit further and say everybody uses their logic language of choice, even if they don't know it or contradict themselves, so saying "logic is my epistemological choice" is trivial at best. — Shwah
math cannot be material at least epistemologically. — Shwah
This is an asymmetric relationship where we don't need physics to do math — Shwah
Also physics is very much a philosophical endeavor and was called natural philosophy (as a group name with chemistry, biology etc) until a century and a half ago — Shwah
soon to be revealed on this forum! The world of philosophy, religion, and physics will shake in its foundations.. — EugeneW
You cannot approach theism from an epistemological standpoint or you simply can't ask the questions you did. In that then it's useless to define theism as belief rather than propositional statements. — Shwah
I don't really care to speak about my religion but suffice it to say that many theistic conceptions are naturalist entirely or idealist (spinoza, aristotle are an example of the former and berkeley and, perhaps, hegel are examples of the latter). I will say science, which is concerned with nature in a particular way, can't ever deny supernaturalist concepts because no supernatural objects etc ever go into its domain — Shwah
The conception of a pentaune god does not require the communication nor livingness of said conception of god to exist. I don't have to worship a pentaune god to develop a thought puzzle around this. This applies towards any science or math field as well (e.g. we can theorize gravitons and what they may do if they exist without being forced to base our physics on it or even insert it at all). We also apply ethical conundrums into thought puzzles. — Shwah
In any case the main point is you can't use an epistemological definition for theism to ask this and if you're questioning these things then you necessarily are using an ontological nature to interpret and question these things (you need a framework to do so). — Shwah
That ties more into the point that atheism is not a position one can meaningfully get to without separating atheism from theism and implying atheism is just some random name for a gaming group that has shared likes and dislikes. A huge fall away from all atheist claims and from new atheist claims and from hitchens and all before him — Shwah
Don't tell me you don't fear them cause they don't exist! — EugeneW
a lot like Alice falling down the rabbit hole and discovering all sorts of characters who don't make a lick of sense. — Joe Mello
No, referencing something that my adversaries have constructed is not at odds with my non-belief. — Gregory A
No, you are not going to corner me in with words. And I've never believed anything other than the Warren Commision's finding based on the evidence available. All else unsuported by facts. I'm a non-believer in a conspiracy, consequently I have nothing to say about it. Still don't get it yet? — Gregory A
No problem. I'm embarrassed by your stupidity — Gregory A
There is no escape for atheism. The 'this is what we've been waiting for' thing that they will try and lay on us if science suggests God is a possibility, will not work. That escape is covered. Naturailsm is not a non-belief in God, but is a 'belief' in Nature, a naturally occurring universe. Atheism, as the term suggests, says nothing about Nature. Miracles? You must be talking about religion? What does that have to do with theism really? — Gregory A
You seem to be showing even more how inaccurate saying "theism is just belief" is or you're showing a worse claim "theism cannot be a purely linguistic claim (as it can lead to issues)" but that latter would apply to anything and never manage to supplant the issues/inaccuracies of using an epistemological position for theism (or any -ism really) and it seems circular anyways ("what is theism? It's belief in God", perhaps god-fearingly so) — Shwah
In any case, religion itself is an application of a theistic claim — Shwah
There is possibly, in the philosophy of religion, a pentaune (five-in-one) God with distinct possible derivations and thought puzzles which may intuit issues or benefits in the triune God vs the unitarian God. Keep in mind that no religion of a pentaune God exists. — Shwah
It's just my attempt to calm the disturbance created by the belief/non-belief or believer/non-believer wave machine.That seems so odd to say that 'positive confidence level' idea. — Shwah
No theism has always been about specific God claims. If theism was purely just the non-starter that is "belief" then why would theists ever disagree with each other — Shwah
atheists are clearly antagonistic to theists. — Shwah
There's no disbelief/ambiguity there but even if there was, that metric wouldn't be enough to describe the situations or what those words have been/are doing for all of human history (or even one moment). — Shwah
It is my logic. If x amount of people are on the left, the same number on the right, then given those parameters the Left has only half a chance of being right. The moral of the story, you really should have thought things over before becoming the leftwing extremist that you are. — Gregory A
I don't believe in the Flying Spaghetti Monster. I'm a non-believer in what is an impossibility.
Consequently, I can have nothing to say about this thing I do not believe exists. Got it — Gregory A
But if on the other hand if I should challenge its 'existence' (something only a dummy could do) I would then give credence to the possibility it may exist. I would be bringing myself down to the same level as those who believe it exists. Got it yet — Gregory A
There are many theories and books on the JFK assassination, but only the one assassin, Lee Oswald — Gregory A
, he at least could have answered some of the questions I asked. — EugeneW
The Right has a set of values, the Left a similar but counter set, meaning one thing the Left has only half of a chance of being right — Gregory A
If atheists don't believe in god/s, and atheism relates to theism, then what possibly would an atheist talk about? What would be discussed at an atheists convention (should it exist) if not god/s, something atheists claim to not believe in. — Gregory A
So anecdotal account can serve as proof. What if every human you meet confirms to you that god exists, would you accept that as proof of god? — L'éléphant
So I have already answered your second sentence above but not under the condition of 'every human I meet' but under the condition of 'every human alive.' The existence of so many atheists and the fact that the numbers are growing is part of what keeps my own atheism affirmed.If every human alive stated that god exists then I would not be calling it a fable, because I would believe it too. — universeness
He at least could have answered some thing.. — EugeneW
he at least could have answered some of the questions I asked — EugeneW
I'd chosen mermaids to avoid the 'out' that tooth fairies allow by being super-natural. Your atheism says nothing about mermaids, unicorns, etc, so we need to believe you accept these as real as you do not protest their unlikely existence (up until now that is)? New species are discovered daily by the way. — Gregory A
I mean mermaids are not super-natural — Gregory A
Scientific hypotheses can have faith-based hypothesis for inspiration — EugeneW
If you know the gods you know the universe. — EugeneW
As such, theism is indispensable for science. "How would the gods have made this particle act?" This question stood at the base for my massless matter fields view. — EugeneW
My point of saying that while dreams exist, and people really do dream, we cannot show proof that we're dreaming. Yes, maybe a brain scan of a person dreaming might show some active parts of the brain through imaging, but the imaging wouldn't show the "dream" itself, only that the person's part of the brain is at the moment active. — L'éléphant
