You test it through rationality, insight and experience. — TheMadMan
What? — TheMadMan
This is the situation we should expect if God does not really exist: different civilizations making up different stories about God. But it’s also the situation we should expect if God wants to be discovered fresh, by each person: religion gets us started on the path, but eventually we realize it’s fictional. At that point, we arrive at a fork in the road: atheism lies on one side, a personal search for genuine knowledge and experience of God lies on the other. — Art48
Are you saying that prophets ( and I don't mean every so-called prophet) agreeing is problematic? — TheMadMan
Ah, only the True Scots prophets?and I don't mean every so-called prophet — TheMadMan
atheism lies on one side, a personal search for genuine knowledge and experience of God lies on the other. — Art48
Or better, why is the fork here constructed as between atheism and a personal god with wants and needs? What about agnosticism, pantheism, animism, paganism and so on? It's more like, on comming out from under the guidance of mummy and daddy, one beholds a vast open vista rather than a fork in the road. — Banno
This is certainly more plausible. But again, I wll have to ask "What reality?"The idea is that there is a reality that deserves to be called "God" and the human civilizations have made several childish, erroneous attempts to describe that reality. — Art48
Many people wonder what happens after death.
If prophets agree about what happens after death, please enlighten us as to what they agree on.
(You can't do it.) — Art48
Many people wonder what happens after death.
If prophets agree about what happens after death, please enlighten us as to what they agree on.
(You can't do it.) — Art48
You ask me to show you something and then you say "(You can't do it.)".
I'll not bother arguing with someone who has completely made up their mind. — TheMadMan
Another view, would be all "genuine" prophets experience the same Reality, but they express their experience differently, and so sometimes may disagree. — Art48
Those poor ancients. — universeness
I didn't have a problem to solve - at least, no problem in my life has ever involved prophets or prophecy.Sure you can disregard all of them, its up to you. But you are not solving any problem by doing that. — TheMadMan
I have yet to see this demonstrated. What is that "place" the back-tracker finds? The source of all religion? I have heard "God" - with a big G, as if it were a name - touted as the fount of supernatural belief, but all the early religions I know of had multiple deities and otherworldly beings. The only common - only common, not universal - threads I'm aware of are origin stories, hero quest and redemption stories and stories about the loss of innocence. Before that, there may have been a uniquely human sentiments of loss, wishful thinking, awe and wonder that come with the big brain, but that's untraceable, as it predates rock art.In this sense, it can be said that all religions ultimately agree, or ultimately lead to the same place. — Art48
Then, how can you know what reality - or even Reality, though I don't understand the need for a capital - they experience.... assuming you can identify genuine prophets in the first place.So, maybe you and I can agree that all "genuine" prophets experience the same Reality, but they express their experience differently, and so sometimes may disagree. — Art48
But if you mean they experience the same reality, — Art48
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