Some speculate when the human population on earth reached the millions and cities formed there was a need for organized religion. The book Sapiens by Noah Harrari attests to this. Ofcourse i don't agree with this but i do find this an interesting subject to study. — christian2017
the Big Bang which is said to have occurred 13.8 billion years ago but was only discovered in 1687 by Isaac Newton. It was then reformulated more accurately by Albert Einstein in the 1900's. — TheMadFool
Whether gods exist or not...is not influenced or impacted by whether or not the species known as homo sapiens knows...or even suspects it.
Gods either exist or not.
No way to know...unless they are personal gods and want humans to know. — Frank Apisa
Merkwurdichliebe
752
Whether gods exist or not...is not influenced or impacted by whether or not the species known as homo sapiens knows...or even suspects it.
Gods either exist or not.
No way to know...unless they are personal gods and want humans to know. — Frank Apisa
You don't really believe that, do you? — Merkwurdichliebe
What was anything before we discovered it? What were atoms before we discovered them? Why should God(s) or anything else be any different? — BrianW
Does God exist without religion?
Well, do you exist if someone has never heard of you?
If it's possible anyway, it's possible spiritually. — Shamshir
That's not true. Each religion is a consequence of many close encounters, which have been described in said religions.the God of any particular religion did not exist as far as any human knows until the onset of their respective religion, and even now no one knows if any of said God(s) exists — Maureen
But with God(s), the general implication is that they should have been discovered or that their presence should be known in conjunction with the religion that they represent, in spite of the fact that no one actually does know if God(s) exist. — Maureen
To put it simply, if no humans knew that ducks existed, but then someone was the first person to see a duck and showed it to a bunch of other people and they took pictures of it and so on, — Maureen
In terms of God(s), however, the God of any particular religion did not exist as far as any human knows until the onset of their respective religion, — Maureen
So it's not about existence, it's about human knowledge/awareness of that existence. And since we can act on information regardless of proof, it settles the matter because people can choose to use the information however they wish including using it to create a new reference point for their activities, mental, moral, social, etc, call it belief or whatever.
Humans are not breaking any code of conduct/integrity just by believing, it is when the actions born of that belief become improper that we lose our fundamental bearing as humans who should be masters of their own faculties of consciousness and corresponding activities, instead of being ensnared by them into committing atrocities against fellow life or against the balance of nature/reality.
When we don't know, we just don't know, whether it's about the existence of God(s) before our knowledge of them. And we should be willing to admit that too. — BrianW
Granted this does not automatically mean that the Gods themselves were also just created or made up by humans, but it does beg the question of why it is that Gods only seemingly came about or had any identity in conjunction with the creation of their respective religion. — Maureen
how exactly do you explain the presence of Gods in conjunction with their respective religions when the religions themselves were merely created by humans? — Maureen
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