Correct me if I am wrong, but your personal view seems to be reminiscent of a sort of Naturalistic Evolutionary form of religion - at this point I would point you towards Plantinga's Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism, which I find highly compelling. — alsterling
It would seem deviant, by your standards then, to even affirm any form of Spiritualism, Deism, Atheism or Agnosticism, whereby it does not cohere with the group mentality of a certain society (should that be an Atheist in Rome or a Theist in China). — alsterling
I'm just not interested, that's all. — Jake
I'm might be interested in joining a serious investigation that challenges atheism with the same enthusiasm and determination that S reasonably challenges theism. — Jake
One of the problems with theist/atheist interactions is that they usually don't take the time to sort out the proper use of symbolism in discourse, and plunge into the debate without realizing that they are speaking different languages. — Mariner
You've quoted the wrong instructions — Jake
So, anyway, when are you going to rip my position to pieces, like a ferocious clawed Baby Jesus on steroids? — S
You guys do what you want with this thread. It lacks direction and I'm not sure where it's headed. — Posty McPostface
I think you may be having trouble separating the concepts of spirituality and religion.
— praxis
Me too. I see no significant difference between the two. — Pattern-chaser
As Jake says (above) it [religion] "helps us manage our relationship with reality." — Pattern-chaser
"Reason" (which is code for atheism) — Ram
What point are you making here? I agree with both sentences, but don't understand how they relate to what I wrote:
An atheist who asserts the non-existence of God is occupying a faith position, in exactly the same way that a believer who asserts the existence of God is occupying a faith position.
— Pattern-chaser
The person who asserts the [non-]existence of God goes beyond logic by going beyond the available evidence, and reaching a logically unjustified and unjustifiable position. — Pattern-chaser
It isn't established that words, logic and concepts cover all of Reality. — Michael Ossipoff
Do you have a concept by which you know the smell of mint? Write it down. — Michael Ossipoff
So either killing other human beings is not against an innate moral sense or it's not immoral under particular circumstances. Can you at least outline the circumstances where it's not immoral to kill other human beings?
— praxis
In self-defense, for example. — Ram
God is a concept, which is "thought,"
— praxis
What a strange thing to say. Is this an Atheist defining God for us?
Admittedly praxis has concepts about God. No doubt praxis's God is a concept.
But maybe it would be best for praxis to speak only for himself.
It isn't established that words, logic and concepts cover all of Reality. They describe logic and science, but it's a big leap of faith to believe and claim that they describe and cover all of Reality. — Michael Ossipoff
Bottom line, what works best for a person? If worshiping a concept like God assists somebody in falling in love with life, ok, forget what I said and go for it. — Jake
Theists aren't falling in love with reality, they're falling in love with God, a concept they've learned from their culture, and again, this concept is a step removed from reality.
— praxis
Have you noticed that the God character bears a striking resemblance to nature? Huge beyond imagination, gloriously beautiful, utterly ruthless etc. — Jake
I'll start simple.
Killing other human beings is wrong according to your belief in an innate moral sense. Adherents of theistic religions kill other human beings, in mass in some circumstances. The very notion of Jihad (holly war) is an exemplar of corruption.
— praxis
The first sentence is wrong. — Ram
Can you present a persuasive argument against the thought that theism or religious beliefs in general are not a corruption of this innate moral base that you propose?
— praxis
Persuasive to who? Persuasive to you? — Ram
Can you present an argument persuasive to me that there is no God? — Ram
Humans are born pure and become corrupt. — Ram
So, what makes a good thread a good thread? — Posty McPostface
I agree with you that making reality relatable via a theistic narrative is a step removed from reality, but I don't agree that that's a contradiction. A bit paradoxical maybe, but not a contradiction. — S
Making reality relatable via a theistic narrative is a step removed from reality.
— praxis
Religion is not science. Religion is not about facts about reality. This common misconception condemns most discussions of religion on philosophy forums to irrelevance. — Jake
Many or most human beings will find it easier to fall in love with reality if it is presented in the form of a familiar human-like character. The evidence for this is that the God character has dominated many cultures around the world for thousands of years. — Jake
An atheist who asserts the non-existence of God is occupying a faith position, in exactly the same way that a believer who asserts the existence of God is occupying a faith position. — Pattern-chaser
Religion is about our RELATIONSHIP with reality. — Jake
Knowledge of right and wrong are innate. Humans are born knowing right and wrong.
...
As far as defining morality.... I would say morality is "right and wrong". — Ram
The Bible, for example, sounds every bit like a story developed by human beings, so it’s like God is designed by human beings.
— praxis
Actually, the Jehovah character seems remarkably similar to nature. He's both a gloriously beautiful giver of life, and an utterly ruthless killer of the innocent, just like the real world is. — Jake
My theory is that at some point in human history this "lost in thought" experience became dominant enough that the loss of psychic connection with reality became problematic and we began looking for solutions, and religion was invented. Religion personalized reality in the form of a God to make it more relatable, and the focus became "getting back to God", or re-establishing the connection with reality. — Jake

... our focus became increasingly dominated by the symbols in our mind. This took much of our focus off of the real world, thus seriously diluting a deep psychic connection with reality that animals and previous humans enjoyed. — Jake
Thought operates by a process of division. Understand that, and many other pieces of the human story fall into place. — Jake
It isn't just that I don't believe in God and, naturally, hope that I'm right in my belief. It's that I hope there is no God! I don't want there to be a God; I don't want the universe to be like that. — Thomas Nagel
Darwin enabled modern secular culture to heave a great collective sigh of relief, by apparently providing a way to eliminate purpose, meaning, and design as fundamental features of the world.
The theory I am offering to explain the universal existence of suffering and the universal failure of all philosophies to end that suffering is that the source of suffering is not found at the level of the content of thought, but arises instead from the medium of thought itself, a universal property of the human condition. — Jake
I just didn't use the word "natural". I think a better word would be, "common". It isn't common to fear largeness or otherness. Some people can have a fear of largeness or otherness, and it would be considered a phobia. — Harry Hindu
