So what then? Where do we go from here? It seems the philosopher should make a clear minded decision as to what their priority really is. Is it doing philosophy? Or is it in exploring and perhaps meeting the fundamental human need which is fueling interest in God topics? — Jake
Jake - thanks the thoughts. — Rank Amateur
I think the natural tension between philosophy and theology is a good thing. — Rank Amateur
This tension allows us to continually test where the boundary is. This is good as long as the objective is truth. — Rank Amateur
Whether Baptist, Bahá'í, or Baboonism, one can avoid godly discussion with them because you already know that they don't know, can't know, and will never know what they are talking about. — Bitter Crank
I did promise myself that I would not get involved in this kind of nonsense, but I just have to ask, what is this method you're referring to for "exploring and perhaps meeting the fundamental human need which is fueling interest in God topics"? — Isaac
There is literally nothing to say about religion in the language game of a forum like this. — Isaac
Why did religion arise in the first place? — Jake
People are imaginative, curious, intelligent... We like to know what is going on. For the last several hundred years we've been using science (broadly defined) to figure out what is going on. — Bitter Crank
We sometimes feel isolated, alone, alienated, cold, wet, and miserable. A warm dry god comes in handy at times like those. — Bitter Crank
Science (broadly defined) doesn't do a very good job of being a warm dry god. More often than not, science is a cold wind that chills us a little deeper. — Bitter Crank
All it is saying is, there is no argument based on reason that concludes with; therefore we can say this about the nature of such a thing as God, or what such a thing would do or not do. If one finds this argument compelling, that would say most arguments for or against God that rely on any assumption about the nature of God is unreasonable and should be dismissed from a philosophical point of view. — Rank Amateur
That's where I see your line of thought leading. We had a huge God debate hoping to find The Answer, but instead discovered a vast realm of ignorance. We don't like what we found, so we keep pretending we found what we were looking for, so the God debate lives on. — Jake
Though I must admit I find the comparisons between science and religion which dominate philosophy forums to be overblown. The constant comparison is basically an attempt to declare the acquisition of knowledge to be the "one true way" and then measure everything by that standard. — Jake
But because of my insistence on comparing art to science I've been unable to offer any useful commentary on the value of art. — Jake
Yes, and the useful question here is, why do we feel alone? We might shift our focus to trying to better understand the problem which god theories are attempting to address. This seems particularly relevant to those who find they are unable to be involved in religion. — Jake
Jake - I have seen you make this point, and I have tried to see where you are going with this. Sadly you lose me each time you make the point we should proceed to some other place based on the acknowledgment of what we don't know. — Rank Amateur
Why be in such a big hurry to pretend otherwise? Why not stick around a bit to explore and enjoy what we've discovered? — Jake
"Why do we feel alone?" he asks. The religious answer is that man is fallen and that fallen man lost the sense of oneness and unity which he enjoyed in the Garden before the fall. — Bitter Crank
The religious solution to being cold, wet, miserable and lonely is to find reconciliation with God and our fellow cold, wet, miserable and lonely fellows traveling through this world of woe. — Bitter Crank
Because we don't have that luxury. People who believe in certain religions believe that homosexuality is a sin, that abortion is a sin, that women should cover their heads, that adulterers should be stoned... — Isaac
And millions of utterly innocent people were pointlessly slaughtered by explicitly atheist regimes over the last century, a real world fact I see you forgot to mention. — Jake
What if they wish to remain squarely within the realm of reason? — Jake
you have just left the land of reason based positions, and entered into the land of faith based positions, proceed with caution. — Rank Amateur
What if they wish to remain squarely within the realm of reason? — Jake
I am not sure this is possible, certainly there is great empirical evidence it is not. — Rank Amateur
We as creatures appear to have a need to understand why we exist, what is our purpose. — Rank Amateur
Basically it says we as humans have some need to understand why we exist, this question has no answer, this is absurd. — Rank Amateur
I don't think evaluating all ''possible'' options as anti-reason. To the contrary considering God as hyper-intelligent and, therefore, beyond the grasp of the human mind is a reasoned position. — TheMadFool
. So, WHY did God create a universe that has suffering in it? That's the question skeptical atheists have to answer. — TheMadFool
— Rank Amateur
Ah, but if we can meet that need by some method other than answers, the absurdity is removed. — Jake
I want to understand Jake, and I am sure it due to my ignorance, but to me at least you are just constantly describing a state of affairs, but never put forth a complete and coherent idea of how we are to proceed if we accept your state of affairs. Can you be clearer on what you would have us all actually do. — Rank Amateur
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.