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Religion: If You Don't Believe In It Why Does It Bother You? |
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Religion: If you don't believe in it why does it bother you?
Religion: If you don't believe in it why does it bother you?
Sylph.Tigerwoods said: Leviathan.Chaosx said: Sylph.Tigerwoods said: Leviathan.Chaosx said: Trebold said: Sylph.Tigerwoods said: Actually, we weren't from apes, lol Hence the crazy, religious person voice saying it. I *think* he means that it's chimpanzees not apes, but idk. We're not directly from them, but we're along side them, with a common ancestor. Pandemonium.Spicyryan said: Asura.Jetzabel said: I don't hate either religion. I love all religions (keep in context, I'm not saying I love Satanists). Whats wrong with satanists? Some simply believe in doing whatever they feel like? Granted that can go too far, but they be no worse than anyone else. The ideals of Satanists are too hurt and maim. My personal beliefs are a little different to most people.
As far as I can see it, science has explained nearly everything back to the big bang and can estimate some of the future (star life cycles, expanding universe etc). But there are still a lot of un-answered questions, the biggest of which is; ‘What caused the big bang’. Now scientists are trying to figure that out, but all we know for sure is it happened. Chaos theory is great and all, but I struggle to accept that the universe just popped into existence because it could. Something started that big bang, there was something before the big bang and whatever did ‘cause’ the big bang is the closest thing we have to a god imo. I often wonder if our universe is in some way inside another one (think Russian dolls) where our universe makes up 1 atom (or 1 proton) of larger universe, and our atoms are universes in their own rights. Shiva.Flionheart said: Pandemonium.Spicyryan said: Asura.Jetzabel said: I don't hate either religion. I love all religions (keep in context, I'm not saying I love Satanists). Whats wrong with satanists? Some simply believe in doing whatever they feel like? Granted that can go too far, but they be no worse than anyone else. The ideals of Satanists are too hurt and maim. Not quite Flionheart. There are many sects of Satanism, much like there are many sects of Christianity or any religion for that matter. A few Satanic sects are actually atheistic and simply view Lucifer as a symbol. I won't say there aren't individuals or groups of Satanists that hurt and maim, but even then, most rumors and stories that are blamed satanic cults turn out to be urban legend, or not committed by Satanists. Generally the ideals of true Satanists comically don't differ much from most of the desires of the atheists and agnostics in this thread, it's about the pursuit of knowledge to better understand your existence, and about taking control and responsibility over your own life, leaving your success (and failures) as no one's glory but your own. "Religion: If you don't believe in it why does it bother you"
Because someone who blows up the *** bus I sit in because of religion sure as hell bothers me. Asura.Bartimaeus said: Some say Science is a religion... :) Definitions from Wikipedia. One could argue as to Wikipedia's reliability as a source of information but feel free to compare those to the ones found in official dictionaries. Religion: A set of beliefs (...). Belief: The psychological state in which an individual holds a proposition or premise to be true. Science: A systematic enterprise of gathering knowledge about the world and organizing and condensing that knowledge into testable laws and theories. It looks pretty difficult to me to call science a religion while agreeing to those definitions. It also looks difficult (to me) not to consider them based on a completely opposite model of thought. Valefor.Argettio said: I struggle to accept that the universe just popped into existence because it could. Something started that big bang, there was something before [...] and whatever did ‘cause’ the big bang is the closest thing we have to a god imo. I put two of the words you mentioned in italic. Please think about what science really is based on. Science is not asking you to accept something. It will not pretend to be right about something, unless it can be demonstrated by many people, using many different methods. If you can provide evidence that some scientific knowledge is incorrect, "evidence" will humbly be brought back to the rank of "theory" (without needing to wait 4000 years for scientists to admit their wrong). If you can improve a theory by demonstrating concepts that a previous model wasn't able to explain, your model will be used until someone else comes out with a better one. Science is an ever-improving collective effort because it relies on testable laws and theories. You're not supposed to accept science, you're supposed to help science by testing its limits and trying to prove it wrong. Science is a reliable methodology that I think we should all try to use when we reason. I always think that the best approach to religion is that blind faith and blind doubt are equally as stupid.
That thought only really represents my concept of divinity and deities etc. Religion as ideology for living your life is just baffling to me. I mean religious types knock science but you have to consider that progressive, contemporary sciences conduct experiments in search of insight and the majority of results favour inconclusion. Science isn't afraid to say "we don't know". Isn't a system based on *belief* quite worrying when it claims to have the answers all of the time? Trebold said: Arguing people about religion is simply too difficult to do from a "godless" point of view. (...) they'll shutdown or just assume you're some heathen and have that be the end of discussion. Sorry but I think that's a judgment. It's also a pretty destructive stereotype, perhaps true about many, but not very useful to point out. You should remember that religious people are still people with a brain. They have the ability to reason rationally, only, because of indoctrination, they have been conditioned into believing that an answer can be true to them without being demonstrated. They'll often use similar rhetoric: "It's true to me" or "I know it in my heart" ... However, by assuming that they CAN'T reason, an atheist is not respectful to their intelligence. Even though it is extremely difficult for indoctrinated people to accept evidence that contradicts their beliefs, it is possible. If there was a reason for them to start douting, because of some events in their live making them disagree, there's a reasonable chance they would see atheism as a positive alternative instead of looking for a new set of beliefs. Pandemonium.Spicyryan said: Bismarck.Bloodbeat said: I always think that the best approach to religion is that blind faith and blind doubt are equally as stupid, Hardly, there is more probability that god does not exist than there is that they does exist if you must go that route. Incorrect.If it is not subject to testing it cannot be measured, ergo cannot be statistically criticised, ergo cannot reject its own null hypothesis. There are lots of scientists who have religious believes that they do not find mutually exclusive to their scientific backgrounds. As for me, I don't know nor care. That's the best agnosticism you will find for free :P Pandemonium.Spicyryan said: Bismarck.Bloodbeat said: Pandemonium.Spicyryan said: Bismarck.Bloodbeat said: I always think that the best approach to religion is that blind faith and blind doubt are equally as stupid, Hardly, there is more probability that god does not exist than there is that they does exist if you must go that route. Incorrect.If it is not subject to testing it cannot be measured, ergo cannot be statistically criticised, ergo cannot reject its own null hypothesis. There are lots of scientists who have religious believes that they do not find mutually exclusive to their scientific backgrounds. As for me, I don't know nor care. That's the best agnosticism you will find for free :P So are you denying the sentence or are you arguing with the video? Lol I CBA with the video tbh. I will look at it though... dooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooosh
This type of video kinda bugs me. It's a very arrogant, condescending delivery of analogies that don't really have any substance.
Critical statistical analysis teaches you early on that association and causation aren't mutually inclusive so using the inverse of decreasing probability isn't really going to work. Then stupid crap like 'a mosquito in a room' The probability of success of getting a succinct outcome in an open system on a random variable using an unreliable method... do I need to go on? I mean you could even excise god and just say "can you measure for an unknown variable in an open system without a definitive model of detection?" -No- :3 Garuda.Mabrook said: Btw that question I asked was completly wrong ><; I meant to say a clone for humans. I did it off my iPhone; I'm still reading though when I can! But just because we haven't succeeded doesn't mean we can't. If you could go back in time, and predict the weather, you could easily be considered the Weather Forecasting Prophet of God. We're capable to prevent raining, nowadays. It was done for the Beijing Olympics. We're also able to calculate approximately how old dinosaur fossils are... it's not 5000 years. Bismarck.Bloodbeat said: This type of video kinda bugs me. It's a very arrogant, condescending delivery of analogies that don't really have any substance. Also, here's a quote I love: "I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours." ~ Stephen Roberts @Odin.Trelan
I have not read all prior 37 pages of this thread, but somehow I stumbled upon this post and I want to respond to it specifically with my thoughts. Enjoy. Odin.Trelan said: Either the universe was always here (is eternal) or the universe came into being at some point. This has to do somewhat with the Big Bang theory, which claims that the universe came into being several billion years ago. Odin.Trelan said: 1) It was self-caused. This doesn’t make any more sense that saying the universe was uncaused. How can something that doesn’t exist cause itself to exist? Odin.Trelan said: 2) It was caused by something that was caused by something that was caused by something, etc. In other words, an infinite regress of contingent causes. Again, this doesn’t really explain anything. There must be something at some time that started it all, a first cause. Odin.Trelan said: 3)The universe was caused by and eternal, non-contingent being. Odin.Trelan said: This gives us very basic, but very important, information about God. Namely, that he is eternal and uncaused. Odin.Trelan said: Where there’s design there must be a designer. Odin.Trelan said: Romans 1.18-20 The wrath of God is being revealed from heaven against all the godlessness and wickedness of men who suppress the truth by their wickedness, since what may be known about God is plain to them, because God has made it plain to them. For since the creation of the world God’s invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that men are without excuse. Perhaps also a little revelation for the original men. In the Bible's case, Adam and Eve. Throughout the ages there has always been some mythology involving a God or Gods (which is equally just as plausible.) It would be strange to think that mankind made up something that so many people have born witness to. It's easier to think that God revealed that he exists to one person and that guy spread a rumor around that got muddled in the process and changed depending on the persons needs. I suppose that would be like the concept of God evolving. Which falls in line with the model of mankind's existence. Odin.Trelan said: Some people think this argument is disproved by the theory of evolution, which replaces intelligence with mere chance. It’s possible that dumb luck could produce all the order that we see in the universe. The question is, how likely is it? Which makes more sense? When people thought the universe was eternal, the odds for evolution weren’t that bad. Given an infinite amount of time, chance could produce a lot. But now that no one believes the universe is eternal, evolution and chance don’t provide a very good explanation for the order we see in the universe. On top of that, there’s still no reason to think that completely natural processes could ever create even the simplest life-forms from non-living materials. Odin.Trelan said: Moral Argument This argument moves from the existence of an objective moral law to the existence of a moral Lawgiver. 1. Objective moral law requires a Moral Law Giver 2. Objective moral law exists. 3. A Moral Law Giver must exist. Odin.Trelan said: Almost everyone agrees that if objective moral laws exist then there must be a supernatural explanation for it. Odin.Trelan said: There’s nothing in biology, psychology, genetics or anywhere in nature that can explain why we would all share concepts about what is right and wrong. It has to be something supernatural. A supernatural law from a supernatural Lawgiver. Odin.Trelan said: Since no one has come up with a decent challenge to the first premise, the only thing unbelievers can do to refute this argument is to deny the second premise. And that’s just what atheist philosophers have done from Nietzsche to Skinner. They’ve denied that there is any such thing as objective moral values. There is no right or wrong. Odin.Trelan said: Yet in the last couple of years, it’s been hard for anyone to try and convince people that there’s no such thing as good and evil. Odin.Trelan said: Since a group of men hijacked four airplanes and crashed them into buildings, killing thousands of innocent people, you just haven’t heard anyone trying to say that good and evil don’t really exist. Odin.Trelan said: Everyone knew that what happened that day was the result of the evil intentions of some very disturbed and manipulated people. Odin.Trelan said: We don’t think it’s wrong because morality just a human invention or an adaptation to aid our survival. Odin.Trelan said: We don’t believe it’s wrong just because that’s what society tells us. Odin.Trelan said: What happened that day was really, objectively evil. Odin.Trelan said: And the firefighters and police who died trying to save as many people as possible with no regard for their own safety, they really were doing something morally good. Odin.Trelan said: If an unbeliever still refuses to believe that morals are real in the face of historical evidence, then it’s not difficult to show him that deep down, he himself believes they are real. I could go hear an atheist philosopher give a speech on why there is no such thing as right and wrong, but if I walk out into the parking lot and smash his windshield with a sledgehammer, what will he say when he sees it? He’ll say “That was wrong! You should pay for that!” Wouldn’t that make a good episode of Judge Judy? I got ripped off about $1,000 by Gold's Gym and did not take it to court. It happened because I was stupid and I accepted the consequences of my actions. In your scenario the aethist caused you to have a reaction which in turn caused you to damage his property. The athiest is aware that his words will cause some offense, and should be willing to accept the consequences. Anything beyond that is society fluff. I had a $600 sound system in my car. They got stolen one day after I had this luxury for about a year. I will admit, I was depressed for about 4 days over it. But you want to know my honest, initial reaction to what happened. The moment I walked to my car in the morning and saw the driver side door slightly ajar. My heart beating a little fast and my mind full of confusion. "Why did I leave the door slightly ajar?" Then as pull the handle and the door doesn't open because it's locked. I look through the window and see that my stereo is gone. Here was my first thought, "I wonder what drugs it is that they are doing that makes them want money so bad as to steal a car system?" I knew the risks I was taking having a sound system in my car. I knew one day that it would get stolen. My system got stolen because I provided the perpetrators with the opportunity to steal it. I did not have a car alarm installed in my vehicle to deter them, etc. Odin.Trelan said: Here’s an example from real life. I was exchanging some emails with an agnostic friend of mine and I was using a form of the moral argument to explain to him why I believe in God. Here’s what he said: “Any claim to objective morals leads to intolerance, injustice and tyranny.” What’s wrong with this statement? He makes the assumption that intolerance, injustice and tyranny are objectively wrong. If they are, then he does believe that objective morals exist. If they’re not objectively wrong, then why does he think they’re such bad things? Odin.Trelan said: Have you ever heard this: “There’s too much suffering in the world for God to be real”? Many people have denied that God is real because of the cruelty, injustice and evil in the world...You can show them that God is the only plausible source of objective moral values." Odin.Trelan said: And above all, these three arguments point to the fact that God exists, he is real. Knowing this makes us want to learn more about him, and to see if he has revealed himself more specifically at any point in history. Odin.Trelan said: Faith begins with the understanding that God exists, but then it grows into something more than abstract logic and philosophy. It becomes a relationship. Thank you for your time, hope you enjoyed reading, sorry for the super long post. Goodbye. P.S. I do not support terrorism and am not a registered voter in the U.S. Ragnarok.Psyence said: Bismarck.Bloodbeat said: This type of video kinda bugs me. It's a very arrogant, condescending delivery of analogies that don't really have any substance. Also, here's a quote I love: "I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours." ~ Stephen Roberts I'm well aware of Richard Dawkins but I don't respect his methods either. He has an agenda to crush religion and he warps the science around getting to that end. I think he needs someone to pull him to one side and teach him about impartiality or, at the very least, remind him what a null hypothesis is lol. I think this debate has projected me as a pro-god, pro-religious person when I'm really not. I personally agree with Einstein's account of morality being the product of sentience, a human concern and nothing backed by divine influence. I'm also of the belief that religion should be personal, or at least kept within its community. It is meant to be about the devotion and not the promotion. I personally disagree with several elements posed by religions and rather than have those feelings stimulated and reciprocate. I'd sooner the relgious folk and fellow science folk could just get on with things. And before someone comes back and says "science is always speaking out" remember you're using a computer. Say 'thank you' to science before you berate it :P This thread came up today on the most recent so I started reading some of the posts. I will readily admit that I did not read all 40 pages @.@. I also want to make the comment that it is good to see people talking about something of value and importance on these forums.
My question to all of you who debate science verses religion is what if neither is completely wrong or right? What if they are not in juxtaposition to one another but actually confirm and compliment one another? Judea-Christian beliefs say that God created man in his own image. Technically that Satan was an adversary who lead Adam, Eve and from certain accounts Lilith out of the proverbial Garden of Eden by eating fruit from the tree of knowledge. What if God was a race from another planet; the leader of a project to find out their origin. What if Satan and the 1/3 of Angels thrown from this concept of Heaven were merely scientists who wanted to give humans knowledge they felt would give them an advantage during this project? If ignorance is bliss this concept would hold true. Especially if you read the current versions of biblical stories. As for Satan and his 1/3 of followers. It is then stated by Judea-Christian Biblical account that they spent 1,000 years upon the earth before God created "hell" and cast them into it. It was during this phase of human existence that mythologies became rampant. Several religions having similar and the same "Gods" came from all ends of the earth. Mayans, Romans, Greeks, Egyptian, Norwegian and Asian cultures which had no ways of communicating with one another all managed to come up with religious mythologies that mirror one another. Are we so simple to believe that this was a mere act of coincidence? What if indeed their beliefs were based on these greater beings who assisted God that had been cast aside? Beings that probably had knowledge of genetics, chemistry and other sciences. Beings that had no sense of obligation to order. Why is it so hard to believe that they might have used that knowledge to make animals that would not be seen anywhere else in history? Or super humans with powers unattainable by most during that period in history? Or to create land marks using advanced concepts of engineering and design that would out last the test of time as well as natural disasters? It is then so hard to believe that in order to maintain the integrity of his project God would then create a cataclysmic event such as a flood to erase any damage that had been done after eliminating his adversaries from this realm? That Atlantis might have been a real place - the home to these beings. That in flooding the Earth depicted in the Biblical stories of Noah and his Ark would serve to remove all psychical evidence of these beings in an attempt to get the earth back on course. We are all aware that there are areas of our own planet so buried under water that we have no access to them and very little knowledge about their contents. Then the world goes on for thousands of years, progressing slowly in technology and advancing at a rate normal for our species without incident as we flash forward to the late 1960's. The reports of Aliens landing on the planet. The creation of Area 51. It is at this point in our existence that we go from technology advancing at the pace of a snail to that of a cheetah. We go from black and white television to broad casting pictures from the far depths of space in the time span of less then 50 years. When prior our advancement had been minimal at best over hundreds of thousands of years. If we hold true to the concept that God created us in his image to find out the roots of his own origin and we couple that with the reports of Alien abduction as well as the prior evidence - Is it so hard to believe that both the religious views of God as well as some of the scientific concepts of our creation aren't in fact one and the same? If God created us to be like him/her/it - is is so hard to believe that God would have a vested interest in us as a collective, in our well being, care and maintenance? Is it also such a far stretch that our own concepts of science would be so far from that of our creator(s)? If we are doing an experiment we monitor it's progression. Sometimes from a distant level based on desired results and sometimes with physical analysis which requires us to be present and to interact with our test subject. We are electro-chemical beings. Even the concept of a spirit can be assimilated to the knowledge that energy can not be created or destroyed it merely changes form. What if just as there is on earth an energy source from which all souls or (energy forces) come from. It is so described in Jewish mysticism as "The Guff of Souls" also depicted in the movie The Seventh Sign. If we do in fact have a source of energy that gives each one of us life the concept of ghosts, reincarnation, past lives, heaven and, hell as well as the concept of life after our earthly existence is probable. What if the determination of the transformation of our energy is based on the chemical reactions and actions our bodies produce during our time here? What if just as we have control in our lives here - once we die our beliefs actions and desires dictate what our energy transforms into? I chose to take human experience as evidence when making a basis for my own decisions about my creator. When you look at not just religion or science but at the history of human experiences as a whole, a lot of different aspects of our lives have common threading that intertwines across all boarders. And so far in my short time here I believe that religion is the corset to the soul, that it was created by earthly leaders to control the masses. The concept of be good now and get a reward when you die just sounds like one of those email scams from South Africa. Just a little to good to be true and not something I am willing to buy into. I am also saddened by the fact that religious beliefs have killed more people through out history then any other reason for war combined. But it does not negate the thought that I do believe that some greater being created me or that even though I am very much an ant upon this spinning rock to most, that occasionally I am a blimp on God's radar. That I couldn't possibly know all there is to know about life and/or death. But that is me, those are my thoughts, I am an individual and how I find God is different from the way the other 8 billion people on this earth do. Many people need religion, they need the sense of structure it provides as well as the community. Yet many other people need the comfort and security of tangible evidence in order to place their trust in any thing. It is this individuality that makes us amazing creatures. Ghandi said it best, "God is an elephant in a dark room, a Jew may touch his tusk and say that God is hard and smooth, a Buddhist may touch his skin and argue that he is rough and dry and yet a Christian his tail and tell the others God is soft and fluffy. They will sit around this room and dispute that they are right and the others are wrong when in fact it would be more prudent to celebrate the fact that they each found God, all in their own way." However one thing we should focus on is that we have been given the gift of life. If there is a greater being responsible, big bang, or even if it is just our parents who are the reason we are here we should be thankful for that blessing and the opportunities it provides us all. :) |
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