You are right not to judge and I don't either. Besides, in way, we all live in some kind of illusion or other! But I know, from personal experience, that most of them --there are exceptions, of course-- usually don't act in accordance with what they say or believe. They live in a conflict. E.g. they speak about "love", "a loving God", Jesus, etc. but in their life they don't show such traits. In fact, most of them exhibit more hate than love. Then, they expect that God will help them in their problems, but alas! they still suffer. And so on, and so on. This is not solving existential problems! And this is not a judgement but simple observation.I don't judge if their solution is right (imo it's not at all).But even with "illusions" , as you say, they still gave some existential answers, to themselves — dimosthenis9
Yes, this is what I also believe; I only expressed it differently!Well my fear is that chaos would be even bigger. — dimosthenis9
Well, as I described above, believing in God (or a "god") does not make someone necessarily religious, in the sense that I descibed above, which is the essence of "religiousness", although dictionaries short-sightedly define the term as "relating to or believing in a religion", i.e. something that has "no bones and flesh" and means very little in terms of human knowledge and behaviour.I get your point,but for me when I say God I mean religions [->religious] also. — dimosthenis9
Right!As most things in life, it is so simple after all indeed. But as most things in life also, the huge difficulty comes from putting that "plan" in action! — dimosthenis9
I agree. (I think I already did! :smile:)That's exactly what I mean when I support that humanity's average intellectual level, make religions still useful nowadays. — dimosthenis9
You seem to be implying that religion has existed though-out humans history and helped to shaped our evolution — praxis
Again, I’m claiming that it’s about strongly binding a community. — praxis
I just think they are brainwashed or similar. Some of the arguments I have according to the books I have read are the following ones:
Religious people often assume that those without a belief in the supernatural cannot find beauty and inspiration in this world. Non-believers know that meaning in this world is of their own making and not dictated by a higher being... (Elisabeth Cornwell, Evolutionary Psychologist, "I Don't Need God to be Inspired," Center for Inquiry - LA, 7 October 2012)
In case I haven't mentioned this before, I'm an atheist. I do not believe there is any mind/body separation. All we are is our brains. We are chemical reactions. We are stuff - Penn Jillette, Presto! How I Made Over 100 Pounds Disappear and Other Magical Tales, Simon & Schuster, 2016, p.125. — javi2541997
Augustine was an self-centered fantasist and an earth-centered ignoramus: he was guiltily convinced that god cared about his trivial theft from some unimportant pear trees, and quite persuaded -- by an analogous solipsism -- that the sun revolved around the earth.
New atheism:
making truth claims about the nature of reality, and are subsequently rejected on the grounds that there is insufficient evidence to support them. New atheism further maintains that religion is not simply wrong, but irrational, pathological and uniquely dangerous. By promoting beliefs and behaviours that emphasize cosmically ordained rules, sanctions and ways of life, religion is believed to foster divisive tribal mentalities, creating prejudice, discrimination and violence — javi2541997
Besides, in way, we all live in some kind of illusion or other! — Alkis Piskas
They live in a conflict. E.g. they speak about "love", "a loving God", Jesus, etc. but in their life they don't show such traits. In fact, most of them exhibit more hate than love. — Alkis Piskas
Well my fear is that chaos would be even bigger.
— dimosthenis9
Yes, this is what I also believe; I only expressed it differently! — Alkis Piskas
That's exactly what I mean when I support that humanity's average intellectual level, make religions still useful nowadays.
— dimosthenis9
I agree. (I think I already did! :smile: — Alkis Piskas
Agreed that of course there are persons who truly believe and care about religion. It is true. But I guess the real target here is the church or episcopal institutions. I totally think that those are simply powerful lobbies that work for politicians (conservative most of them). If you live in a tiny town and somehow you want to be the mayor or council you will need to work or debate with the church in the town because it has a lot of power of influence.
My point here: I respect and understand all the individuals who truly believe in God and they act in this way. On the other hand, I not respect the Church as an entity at all... I guess they should not be part of important things as homosexuality or educational system. This is why it can seen as dangerous by atheist like me. — javi2541997
One can be perfectly and rightly religious just sitting in one's own room, and be religious happily reading the holy scripts, meditating and praying to one's own God. — Corvus
If you gonna make people stop believing in religions then WHAT could replace God? How can you convince people to be "good — dimosthenis9
There's an issue with that though: we do not have any generally agreed upon definition of what is good, and we don't even know whether good and evil exist. — Hello Human
But for the sake of answering your question, let's define good as what is accepted by society. — Hello Human
when one feels empathy, one is not willing to hurt another with the help of emotions like guilt, pity etc. — Hello Human
Equating God with infinite possibility and deriving nothing from a 'personality' imposed upon it is a good place to start. — Proximate1
Education system — dimosthenis9
Well... I guess when you want to be baptized you have to pass through a church or institution. You cannot be part of "God's blessing" if a priest does not make the average "ritual" in the church.
Also, most of the people just go to church in Sunday and hear a lecture.
It is weird to see a person who reads the Bible in their own home or room but... Yes I agree with you that these people can exist. — javi2541997
The difficulty, as I see it, is if religion is presented as an alrernative to science. — TheMadFool
Creationism could be taught as part of Christian, Judean, andMoslem ethics; it does appear to be necessary for the morality of these religions to make sense. The ethics curriculum however would be A1 if other ethical systems like Buddhism, utilitarianism and deontology are included.
Creationism would be taught and it wouldn't be at loggerheads with science. Win-win! :chin: — TheMadFool
You'll notice no people are in constant conflict with their religion's ethical beliefs unless said religion is imposed on them by an authority. People already decide what is good and pretend God agrees with them. It works in reverse as well. If some one dislikes what others are doing, then their God dislikes it as well. It's a trick of the minds executive function to believe we are regularly communicating with anyone outside of our own mind; regarding a super being with a culturally specific ethical agenda.But first I doubt that vast majority of people will ever come to that level and second even if they do, thinking Logically maybe isn't enough at the end at all for convincing someone to be "good". So what else could take God's role to "give" the Ethics that people should follow?? — dimosthenis9
Again, I’m claiming that it’s about strongly binding a community.
— praxis
Ok let's forget morals for a while then. That strongly binding that you admit that religion offers, has no good at all for you?? It doesn't offer anything good in societies? These communities are doing only harm then? — dimosthenis9
You know this, if only instinctively, and that’s why you’re looking to replace God rather than let him die a natural death. — praxis
Yeah as if I have the power to replace anything. — dimosthenis9
People already decide what is good and pretend God agrees with them. It works in reverse as well. — Cheshire
Which is the truth I think the world is missing. 5 minutes before we all fall asleep, we all want the same things. — Cheshire
I'm going a step further and suggesting it is a wide spread phenomena. I haven't found a theist that is in disagreement with God. The day God wants you to do something, you don't want to do is a new experience.I would say "people already decide what is good on their own and pretend that is God's will" — dimosthenis9
The day God wants you to do something, you don't want to do is a new experience — Cheshire
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.