As an atheist myself since the age of about 7, I simply do not understand how theists can trust in a God given this argument. — scientia de summis
need to stop freaking out about religion and start being more considerate of others, and you have my permission to remind me of that. — Athena
faith has wonderful psychological effects, but it can also be the worse source of evil we have. — Athena
The Christians I know attempt to resolve every problem with prayers and they have complete faith that God/Jesus will answer their prayers. Obviously, if that is what one believes, God, will take care of everyone and all we need do is pray. Those who survive the hurricane, flood, landslide, or whatever, will be reassured God takes care of them — Athena
We cannot have infinite regression, so it’s more logical to say that we were designed by a all truthful [thing?]. — Franz Liszt
The reasons it cannot be aliens is because we would have to know they are all truthful too, but then they would need something all truthful. — Franz Liszt
In any case, what I presented above does not point to Christianity in the slightest, let alone ‘God’. — Franz Liszt
am beginning to think that I took too far a assumption based off of some other responses I have received. If we need our logic to be true, is there another explanation you can think of? — Franz Liszt
Placing God as that scaffolding is just another way of saying that don't know what accounts for our confidence. — frank
f we are just loads of chemicals grouped together through a random procces, then everything we experience may well be wrong. How do we know that our logical thoughts would actually show any truth in this universe? The answer, if we are just a bunch of chemicals, is that we can’t. Using this logic, science is just an illusion, so is logic. However, we have used science and logic to come to these conclusions, which becomes a paradox. — Franz Liszt
My point is that hardship will be easier to overcome if the person is prepared for it. And that without such a preparation in advance, a person is less likely to overcome hardship. — baker
I accept there are other ways of knowing and being, that Niikolas and others are referring to - that it's not just made up, but refers to something real. Real, but off the beaten track of mainstream culture. — Wayfarer
It's easy to read about them or imagine that you might realise them, but in practice it's very difficult. — Wayfarer
to experiencing the wholeness of human being in relation to its origin or what Plotinus called the ONE? — Nikolas
Do you believe that all the ancient traditions initiating with a conscious source exist at the exoteric level and devolve into opposing opinions. — Nikolas
I think we speak of the same things differently.We speak of different things. — Nikolas
My question is if anyone can explain why they would believe this, and how it’s okay for morality to be subjective. — Franz Liszt
Forget Plato's Cave. If you want to chasing after shadows, try spirituality.the shadows on the wall? — Nikolas
humanity as a whole lacks the conscious ability to understand and instead become enchanted with the shadows on the wall? — Nikolas
The only people I know who were in favor of separating children from their families at the border were Christians. — Athena
And secular culture has no way of differentiating the two! — Wayfarer
First - not really comfortable with the word 'truth'. How do you understand it ? Is it about getting things right or the reaching of a specific goal, a solution to a problem or knowledge of how the world is ? — Amity
So, a different pathway - things that inspire geniuses from the subconscious. — Amity
It's an unspoken truth that Karl Marx is one of the most influential philosopher in my view of modernity. — Shawn
Very much appreciate your courtesy and interest. — Wayfarer
What evidence is there for that? — Wayfarer
Young earth creationists have no evidence, obviously — Wayfarer
what would it take to convince Richard Dawkins that it’s real? — Wayfarer
The respected researcher making 120K might feel greatly superior to the billionaire. — norm
Are you familiar with the replication crisis? How do you reckon that would play out in respect of this question? — Wayfarer
Science is an ideology, not a religion. — T Clark
But leaving that aside, naturalism also methodologically excludes the possibility that there might be alternative cognitive modes or ways-of-knowing about which the sensorily-grounded methods of empirical science can detect nothing. — Wayfarer
Our willingness to accept scientific claims that are against common sense is the key to an understanding of the real struggle between science and the supernatural. We take the side of science in spite of the patent absurdity of some of its constructs, — Richard Lewontin
One of the things I think it says is that, to all intents, for this kind of thinking, science *is* a religion. Hence, 'the religion of scientism'. — Wayfarer
I think anyone on a spiritual path has a sense of trying to navigate to a higher destiny. — Wayfarer
St Augustine said that 'miracles are not against nature, they're against what we understand about nature'. — Wayfarer
If I were to say to you that you should not foist your view on others by not procreating other people who will have to take on the human enterprise who may not find this good, what would you say? I used an example of bowling for example. Just because I like bowling, should all of humanity bowl now? Why is the whole human project of having to exist and follow the structures of society be any different? — schopenhauer1
Jesus is a real historical figure. — schopenhauer1
Well, the antinatalist foists nothing on no one. Their political statement of "NO" to life, creates no forced dealing with participating and being forced to deal with the social-economic-cultural superstructure.
The procreation sympathizers do indeed foist their view on others, whether they can evaluate it negative or not. Their solution is these people better get with the program that they think is "good" or kill themselves. — schopenhauer1
don't think Wayfarer was talking about supernatural phenomena. We'll let him respond. — T Clark
What is being made worse by making the political statement that one should not perpetuate the socio-economic-cultural project? Why is this necessary to perpetuate? — schopenhauer1
he fact is, we as humans can evaluate something as negative while we are doing those things. We don't just "exist" but we know we like or don't like something as we are doing it. Why would we want to foist an existence where one not only has to survive, but can evaluate a negative value to this very act of having to survive? — schopenhauer1
This leads to all sorts of problems. Is there another way, sure - look at the world, forgive me, holistically. As one unified system. There are sciences that do things that way - ecology, geology, evolutionary biology, hydrogeology. Observational rather than experimental sciences. — T Clark
Why is a movement against perpetuating the package of social structure and negative evaluation of human activities needed to survive condemned off the bat — schopenhauer1
Self-reflection. We can evaluate what we are doing in these social structures, and come to conclusions that we do not like doing these things while we are doing them. — schopenhauer1
Since when is the ‘scientific method’ not itself a worldview.? — Joshs
just scientism speaking — Wayfarer
Delusion and self-deception are certainly pitfalls in any spiritual path. It doesn't mean that there isn't a path to follow. — Wayfarer
There are ways of knowing the world that do not require an objective reality. — T Clark
There's a good argument to be made that objective reality is a human construct which boils down to that which can be perceived, conceived, and understood by humans. — T Clark
"Truth" is generally defined as congruence with objective reality. — T Clark
