Before I reply to the OP directly, I paste the link below to an old post replying to you on a related topic last year, just to add some context to a later post that illustrates those "other possibilities" you suggest.I am raising the area between theism/ atheism, but also other possibilities, including pantheism and the various constructions of reality which may be developed — Jack Cummins
I am trying to explore what does it mean, philosophically, to argue that God does or not exist? — Jack Cummins
For me god/s have no explanatory power. — Tom Storm
If you read the right philosophy you will see that the concept of "God" actually has great explanatory power. — Metaphysician Undercover
I suspect it will come down to whether one is susceptible to those arguments. — Tom Storm
But to be frank - I am not really in the explanation business. It's religions which seem to want certainty. — Tom Storm
It was also when I saw some of the negative impacts of religious beliefs, especially guilt, and so many contradictions. — Jack Cummins
. If anything, I do query why people get fierce arguing for and against God when it is difficult to prove one way or not. — Jack Cummins
The issue of guilt is central to Christianity, especially with the idea of original sin. I definitely struggled with guilt at times, but I am not sure that guilt is the main problem in life and wonder if as Schopenhauer and Buddhists argue that the hardest aspect of life is suffering. — Jack Cummins
Once upon a precocious youth I'd been a Catholic teen apostate, an undergraduate negative atheist and then postgraduate positive atheist. Decades on, finally I suspect, I am an antitheist in theory and practice.I pray to God to make me free of God. — Meister Eckhart
More than thirty years later, though my arguments have been significantly refined, my realist position, enriched by life experience and greater understanding, remains substantially the same. Still, when I take her to Mass (most Saturdays), waiting in the car for her and before she goes into church, I remind her to "pray for me" and she nods, and sometimes squeezes my hand, with a quiet "Always". :flower:I'm a realist – whatever is shown to be real is all that matters to me, so i don't believe in much else. If anything, I believe in evidence and sound arguments. i don't believe in anything that's only subjective or imaginary; therefore, I'm neither religious nor spiritual. "God" just isn't my drug of choice.
I have to admit that it does still niggle in the back of mind as one of the toughest questions. — Jack Cummins
Do you also consider the existence of Zeus or Hormaz or Shiva as one of the toughest?
I think you see my point. The reason this question is especially relevant to you— understandably — is because you have been raised in the Christian faith and live in a predominantly Christian culture. — Xtrix
When you speak of Zeus and Shiva, they are images of what greater reality may exist. — Jack Cummins
The only thing which has to be remembered is that even science is models, and like the images arising in religious perspectives we are still left with models and representations as approximations. — Jack Cummins
My own mother died last September and was extremely religious right until the end, although she was so extremely afraid to die. — Jack Cummins
Most of my friends in real life are theists. — Jack Cummins
I was often surrounded by African Christians and they really were inclined to preach. — Jack Cummins
What are "the shallow aspects of atheism"?180 Proof
Your own development of ideas, includingpantheism[pandeism], is interesting in the sense that it goes beyond the shallow aspects of atheism. — Jack Cummins
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