What I hope and what the truth is are two different things. It seems that many people on this forum can distinguish between the two. Which one were we talking about again?Good for you. What about the truth of the finitude of existence, suffering and death? I'm sure you hope that truths didn't exist? — TheMadFool
What I hope and what the truth is are two different things. It seems that many people on this forum can distinguish between the two. Which one were we talking about again? — Harry Hindu
Do you think morality is innate? Are we born with it? — TheMadFool
Well, they seem to have purpose in their lives, — TheMadFool
God comes back again in his usual guise, some really kind and protective bloke with a big beard, mysteriously like the dad we all wanted but never quite had... — Inter Alia
Religious people are obviously not more at peace with themselves, I'm mystified as to why anyone would think that. Religious people abuse children, they then cover-up that abuse, they torture people, murder those who don't agree with them, start wars over a stupid building/wall/relic, subjugate women, ostracise homosexuals, stone adulterers, cut people's hands off for stealing, close their church doors to the homeless because 'god made them poor', jail people for touching another man, blow themselves up in public places, murder innocent children because they went to a pop concert. What on earth makes you think religious people are at peace with themselves? — Inter Alia
Why can't I pick the best parts of all God-beliefs and put them together in a way that makes sense to me. — TheMadFool
Yes, I absolutely believe that, you can see reactions to injustice even in other primates, see the work of Frans de Waal. All tribes have taboos against most of the stuff we think of as immoral and ostracise those who don't share and support the community. No culture in the world condones murder or theft, all consider generosity a virtue, I could go on, but in summary I consider the evidence that morality is innate to be overwhelming. — Inter Alia
Do you think morality is innate? Are we born with it? — TheMadFool
like trying to look at your own eyes or taste your own tongue. Still, that doesn't stop me from thinking about it nearly every day. It's truly the single greatest mystery. — JustSomeGuy
I'm offering this as intellectual advice, not pastoral advice. — Bitter Crank
aren't you doing the same thing (only in reverse) that TheMadFood proposes? You are picking the worst parts of various religious groups and packaging it as "This Is What Religious People Do"? — Bitter Crank
the possibility of a creator, all good and loving, can and does uplift some souls. — TheMadFool
nihilism and bloodthirsty God belief, are, indeed, dismal alternatives. But you don't have to look at atheism or god in those ways. — Bitter Crank
Why shouldn't someone believe in God then, even if such a belief ignores what you call cracks? — TheMadFool
they seem to have purpose in their lives, they believe in an eternal soul. Atheists, on the other hand have to constantly struggle to find a purpose in their lives, their morality is weak, etc. — TheMadFool
Amazing. — Bitter Crank
It's funny how one can mention on this forum that the word of a book that talks about seven-headed dragons and an angry god striking people down with thunderbolts might not actually be true and be met with concern that one might be being a bit harsh, but suggest that there might be some truth in the work of several leading primatologists, neuroscientists and ethicists, with hundreds of years of combined expertise in the field might actually be right and you get met with incredulity. — Inter Alia
Your view of scripture is a literal caricature. — Noble Dust
No, my view of scripture is a literal one, to conclude that it is a caricature requires there to be some objective reason why scripture is not to be taken literally, if so where did this objective knowledge come from. Have I got a missing page in my King James' that says "Oh and by the way, don't take all of this literally"? — Inter Alia
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