A: We need God? Why?
B: To give us hope for a better life. Here, we suffer pain and disease and war.
Without God, what would you tell a mother who just lost her child?
To give us hope for a better life. Here, we suffer pain and disease and war. We lose loved ones. Without God, what would you tell a mother who just lost her child? And for justice. — Art48
The same reason we need art – "in order not to die of the truth." ~F.N. — 180 Proof
Characterizing an argument to dismiss it is not the same as addressing it, especially since there are 2000-year-old, traditional explanations still being accepted and discussed today.This is the old, traditional explanation atheists have used to explain the purpose of god. God as white lie. So? — Tom Storm
Je n'avais pas besoin de cette hypothèse-là (I had no need for that hypothesis) — Pierre-Simon Laplace
Thus, the atavistic prevalence of group / wishful / magical thinking (i.e. faith) over defeasible thinking (i.e. truth-seeking); the cognitive priority of just-so stories over sound inferences.We are survival machines, not truth machines ... — Agent Smith
Characterizing an argument to dismiss it is not the same as addressing it, especially since there are 2000-year-old, traditional explanations still being accepted and discussed today. — Art48
Thus, the atavistic prevalence of group / wishful / magical thinking (i.e. faith) over defeasible thinking (i.e. truth-seeking); the cognitive priority of just-so stories over sound inferences. — 180 Proof
Personally, I'm committed to moral realism. And this led me to theism, or the belief that God exists to explain moral realism. Of course, there are those who become moral anti-realists because they realize that moral realism may require theistic belief, and theism is "too high of a price" to pay for moral realism. The moral arguments for the existence of God are the most compelling to me. — Paulm12
I don't need God to act "morally" in the sense that I think plenty of people who don't believe in God act morally. But personally, I need God as an explanation (or justification) to why objective moral values exist and that our faculties (rational and emotional) correspond to the existence of these values. It may be strange to say but JL Mackie (and his argument from queerness) actually pushed me towards theism as an explanation to why our moral intuitions could track true or false statements. — Paulm12
I need God as an explanation (or justification) to why [ ... ] — Paulm12
Of course not. "God" is the ultimate "mystery" (according to Abrahamic (& Vedic) traditions) and a "mystery" does not explain anything. "Mystery created it", "Mystery commands it" – beg cosmological and ethical questions, respectively, and therefore cannot answer them.Is there anything about this universe that requires the existence of God for an explanation? — Agent Smith
Of course not. "God" is the ultimate "mystery" (according to Abrahamic (& Vedic) traditions) and a "mystery" does not explain anything. "Mystery created it", "Mystery commands it" – beg cosmological and ethical questions, respectively, and therefore cannot answer them. — 180 Proof
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