It is a reminder and caution to those who elevate science over its purpose to a religion. And outside of fact or reason, by faith alone believe it can and will answer all human questions. — Rank Amateur
So personally, I would advise direct observation of reality, as free from thought as possible. — Jake
My point was that we shouldn't be expecting religion to deliver accurate facts about reality. That's the job of science.
Religion's job is to help us manage our relationship with reality. This is something very different. Religion should be judged by whether it helps people build a positive relationship with this place we find ourselves in. — Jake
The metaphysics that I’ve been proposing doesn’t have or need any assumption — Michael Ossipoff
But that's because you don't know what science is. Of course there are assumptions, and they're usually known to be, and offered as, assumptions. — Michael Ossipoff
I think you may be having trouble separating the concepts of spirituality and religion. — praxis
A religion cannot comprise of the simple notion that 'God exists'. — praxis
Conversely, an entire [unscientific] meaning system could be behind the person who believes in the non-existence of God. There are non-theistic religions. — praxis
An atheist who asserts the non-existence of God is occupying a faith position, in exactly the same way that a believer who asserts the existence of God is occupying a faith position. — Pattern-chaser
I haven't tried to justify the conclusion that there is no God — S
There is compelling evidence to not believe in God, and that consists in the absence of compelling evidence to believe in God. — S
If the conscious mind is just familiar physical particles then physicists have detected it... — litewave
But such a mind wouldn't survive the death of the physical body. — litewave
At least from the Fundie Agnostic perspective, the discovery of ignorance (on questions the scale of theist and atheist claims) isn't an obstacle to overcome, but a gift to be embraced. — Jake
I find your position lacks rigour. — Pattern-chaser
I'm not confident you actually understand my position. — S
There is compelling evidence to not believe in God, and that consists in the absence of compelling evidence to believe in God. — S
There is compelling evidence to not believe in God, and that consists in the absence of compelling evidence to be believe in God. — S
The next step in being logical would be to look for ways to make constructive use of the ignorance we've discovered. — Jake
By observing the soul I mean observing the effects of the soul's interaction with physical particles and thus ultimately with physicists (who interact with the physical particles by observing them). — litewave
Your theory might be possible. There are other theories that might be possible too. How shall we choose between them? I see no obvious criteria that we could usefully use. Can anyone else? — Pattern-chaser
What other theories? The theory should be consistent with known physics and explain how the soul can interact with the physical body without being detected by physicists. — litewave
As for faith, it has an obvious link to religion, and a greater link to religion than atheism. — S
This misunderstanding is why I keep making the comparison. — Jake
most people believe in God through either faith or erroneous reasoning. — S
how does this soul interact with the physical body while eluding the observation of physicists — litewave
So I have searched for a different possible mechanism of interaction between the body and the soul and have come up with a combination of weak force and resonance: the soul might interact with matter via a very weak force and that's why it has not been detected even in precise observations in particle accelerators, but it would be able to influence the brain in a significant way via resonance. — litewave
The problem is that no one is being consistent, which just means that concept ("god" or "gender") is meaningless. — Harry Hindu
You seem to just be more resentful of those who have worked harder than you have. — Agustino
You couldn't get away with that in the UK, you'd be slaughtered in the media. — Baden
If you see criticism of belief as personal attack — S
I have done so, but you let yourself be distracted by my choice of terms — S
It was whether the words themselves have inherent meaning... — MindForged
But whatever, carry on cheerleading and taking cheap shots at me indirectly. — S
If all you can see is someone hellbent on insulting for the sake of insulting, then look harder. — S
Separating the creations of man from other natural products (artificial vs natural) stems from the notion that humans are separate from nature. We aren't. — Harry Hindu
there isn't one bit of evidence for the existence of god that can't be explained better without invoking the word, "god". — Harry Hindu
My only issues are, do not say as a matter of fact that God is not. And do not directly or indirectly with the oft used " fairy tale" "spaghetti monster" "Santa Clause" type language say that theism is unreasonable. — Rank Amateur
The Hitchens- esk smugness and sarcasm of the pseudo intellectual atheist is trying. — Rank Amateur
Life is a creative act, for a human. Is that dreaming? We live our lives immersed in Kanye and Rihanna, Trump and Putin, Big Brother and America's Next Top Model. Are these not fantasy worlds? — Pattern-chaser
isn't this all so childish and mundane an activity that anyone with a competent mind can see through this whole charade? — Posty McPostface
Yes, I have a combative and critical style. Get over it. If your thoughts and justifications for religion can't withstand that kind of exposure, then they can't be of much worth, philosophically. — S
This is not the place to speculate about malicious intent. In future, please either keep those kind of thoughts to yourself or at least express them somewhere more appropriate. Thanks. — S
I think the "mindlessly" is unhelpful. — Pattern-chaser
But is it accurate? Yes, sadly, for a large segment of the population, I think it is — S
Why are we all trying to escape from reality, responsibility, and other realistic goals? Is this some form of coping or what? — Posty McPostface
[Religion]'s real value is as a philosophy, and it ought to be treated as such — S
...it ought to be treated as such, and compared to other philosophies as though on a level playing field, not mindlessly worshipped or placed on a pedestal — S
The essential or primary purpose is to provide a system of meaning that can bind a community in common values and purpose, like a kind of glue that holds a tribe together. — praxis
The "purpose" of religion is to provide a context for consideration of the other, beyond the self, and an inter-subjective understanding of our place in the world. — Relativist
Religion is the appeal to the ineffable for answers to questions not otherwise answered. — tim wood
I think it’s an early attempt at building a metaphysical model of the universe — Devans99
Despite all of the evidence that there is no a totality of visual experiences within the brain -- you are coming back to your hypothesis... :)
Now, give us a proof that the totality of visual experiences is hidden somewhere in the brain... :) — Damir Ibrisimovic
atheists cannot prove that god doesnt exists — 0cards0
I dunno, maybe I've missed something but this move of essentializing (it's a real word, fight me) the meaning of some word doesn't seem to really move the debate along at all unless all parties involved already agree on the same meaning. — MindForged
Meanings are too slippery, too inherently viewpoint-dependent, to be concretely defined. So words are just ways to limit the scope of possible understandings to the point where they can be usefully shared.
To use words properly, you need to be willing to do two things. Accept they do intend to narrow the scope for interpretation to some habitual conceptual essence. And then also show tolerance or charity for the vagueness that must always remain. — apokrisis