For example, many environmentalists will use fear-based tactics in order to cause many people to panic. This causes a wave of people using metal straws and buying reusable water bottles.....They have been feared to make desperate and not logical decisions. — stressyandmessy
But they do not understand that this action will not truly help the environmental situation. — stressyandmessy
Although the person will believe in God they are doing so because of fear and not because they believe in the values that God provides. — stressyandmessy
For example, many environmentalists will use fear-based tactics in order to cause many people to panic. — stressyandmessy
the greatest flaw is that the logic is built on fear. — stressyandmessy
the person will believe in God they are doing so because of fear and not because they believe in the values that God provides. — stressyandmessy
The reason why this is problematic and an issue is because the belief is not genuine and instead of believing in God for the values that they offer. — stressyandmessy
Making a decision based on fear is a common and rational reaction — T Clark
Sometimes I think we can. People have tried to rationally justify a belief in God at least since the ancient Greeks. — T Clark
Sometimes I think we can. People have tried to rationally justify a belief in God at least since the ancient Greeks.
— T Clark
Raitionally justifying belief can help you if you're seriously consider the belief. — Dawnstorm
I could, for example, decide on a fake-it-till-you-make-it approach, — Dawnstorm
I'm an atheist, and I can't make enough sense of the concept of God to motivate myself to even think "yeah, I should belief." — Dawnstorm
Pascal’s wager is flawed because there are more options than believing in the Christian God there are also other religions that we would have to take into account. But the greatest flaw is that the logic is built on fear. The possibility of going to hell incites people to believe in God it is all fear-based. — stressyandmessy
I'm an atheist, and I can't make enough sense of the concept of God to motivate myself to even think "yeah, I should belief." Pascal may talk about infinite gain and infinite loss, but it's all so abstract and alien to me that I just can't feel the loss, not even — Dawnstorm
We are not satisfied with the Ife we have in ourselves and our own being. We want to lead an imaginary life in the eyes of others, and so we try to make an impression. We strive constantly to embellish and preserve our imaginary being, and neglect the real one. And if we are calm, or generous, or loyal, we are anxious to have it known so that we can attach these virtues to our other existence; we prefer to detach them from our real self so as to unite them with the other. We would cheerfully be cowards if that would acquire us a reputation for bravery. How clear a sign of the nullity of our own being that we are not satisfied without the other and often exchange one for the other! For anyone who would not die to save his honour would be infamous. — Pascal, Pensées, 806, translated by A.J. Krailsheimer
I intend this as a serious question and not at all as a criticism of what you've written - If that's how you feel, why get into this particular discussion at all? Most atheists here on the forum have a bone to pick. You don't seem to. — T Clark
I think the idea of god/s are incoherent too. Above and beyond all the arguments in both directions, I lack a sensus divinitatis so belief is not really possible in my case. — Tom Storm
It would be an empty meaningless universe without gods. Now that's proof. — EugeneW
So we need gods so that people can go to war about which is the true god and give the universe meaning — Sir2u
Before you can make this statement, I think you should submit some proof that the universe either should have, needs, or is somehow dependent on having a meaning. — Sir2u
I find it fascinating that something that feels like obvious nonsense to me can be believed by so many people. I think to get to bottom of it, you'd have to peel back your world-view, but the more you peel back the less is left to do the peeling. It's not really just about God, it's just the most prominent and most frequent topic. I feel similarly about topics like "free will", for example, but the topic doesn't have as much real life relevance. — Dawnstorm
All those proofs of God? I think they're incomplete if you only consider the logic of the argument. There's always something behind this; something you either live or don't, some sort of intuition. — Dawnstorm
No, we don't. All gods are true gods. But if people wanna fight about it, it's up to them. — EugeneW
The universe can't exist because of natural laws only. — EugeneW
And I suppose that the benevolent gods sit on the sidelines cheering their team on as well. But I suppose you answer that the gods gave them free will to do as they please. — Sir2u
And how exactly do you now this? Maybe you could share the evidence you have, I am sure that many of us here would love to see it. — Sir2u
The gods play their own game, not worrying about the games played here. — EugeneW
The fundamental laws of nature and the stuff acting conformly to them contain no recipe how they came into being. — EugeneW
Just because something has not been explained does not mean that there is no explanation for it. It just means ignorance still exists. — Sir2u
Jackpot! And if the gap is closed, we can nothing but conclude that the building blocks of the universe had to be created. — EugeneW
Modern man is on its way to destroy the beauty that evolved from it. By building railroads, energy plants, factories, etc. — EugeneW
It is also interesting that you used the word evolve to talk about a creation, but we can let that slip unnoticed I believe — Sir2u
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