That's because we have only had two or three hundred years to accomplish the task of our self-destruction (compliments of the massive cheap energy of fossil fuels which are now becoming less and less cheap to access). Hopefully we can pull back before it is too late; but I don't think it's looking too promising. — Janus
But what of the nukes? What of the many other things that we thought would be our downfall even before 300 years ago? — TogetherTurtle
does the belief that others should all ascribe to atheism itself necessitate a nonbelief in all things of this nature? — kudos
From my perspective, your argument is this: You can't prove that there is no god and humans can't understand the overarching themes that define the universe.
My argument was that you don't have proof for that either, and on the contrary, we manipulate the laws of nature to our own ends all the time. — TogetherTurtle
I don't believe the answer is more technology, but rather a change of mindset away from advocating and relying upon the kinds of technologies which require vast amounts of cheap energy for their use and development. If we don't stop, then nature will demonstrate its mastery over us by stopping us. I think the very idea of us going to other planets, mining asteroids and so on, is a laughable scientistic masturbatory fantasy. — Janus
I agree that there is no technofix beyond clean, renewable energy. — Noah Te Stroete
We don’t build consumer products to last. — Noah Te Stroete
The argument that 'believing in God is absurd because there's no empirical evidence' betrays a total misunderstanding of the nature of religious faith and experience. Perhaps it is only to be expected in the context of a scientific-secular culture which has little grounding in the religious or spiritual. — Wayfarer
The fundamental difference between science and religion is that while religion attempts to explain phenomenon, science seeks to understand and control them. This leads to a mastery of nature and benefit to the general populace. You can genuinely understand why something happens through science, and that’s why it’s our best bet. Sure, it could all be coincidence and we could really understand nothing, but that’s quite a few coincidences. — TogetherTurtle
Typically first comes an observation, then the process of human imagination thinking up an explanation, and then using sensory data to prove your explanation. — TogetherTurtle
Who started the universe? I think the better question is what. Why does it have to be a sentient being that created the universe? I think it more likely to be a force or natural mechanism of the universe that created existence. — TogetherTurtle
The great irony is that, generally speaking, religions have a more realistic understanding of the human condition than do the "no-nonsense realists". That's why religions go on and on and on for thousands of years, they are aligned with the real world of human beings. — Jake
In any case, notice the entire emphasis on 'mastery' and 'control' of nature - as befits a technological culture. But what is lost in all of this are the original questions of philosophy, which are not instrumental or technological in nature, but are concerned with the question of meaning, in the largest sense. But that kind of questioning is almost unknown in our technological culture, so much so that the question itself is no longer even understood. — Wayfarer
But more to the point, philosophy is neither science, nor religion. It has its religious aspects - or I think it does, although that doesn't sit well with secular culture - but it also takes pains to understand in a way that religious believers don't want to bother with. — Wayfarer
IMO there is a large gap between popular atheism and popular theism, the gap is much smaller between thoughtful atheism and theism. — Rank Amateur
Yes, if we destroy ourselves it will be because we weren't smart enough... — Janus
Sorry about the delayed response, — Janus
I do generally agree with what you say — Janus
but I think the kind of atomistic thinking which underlies the idea that we are separate form the world is an artifact of the Enlightenment mechanistic paradigm and ultimately finds its roots in Christianity with the idea of the individual soul, its salvation and eternal life. — Janus
What is it that you are agreeing with? — Jake
so I don't agree that atomistic thinking is inherent or necessary to thought — Janus
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