childeroland
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I like the idea of Spinoza's God, if only He/it weren't so deterministic. 'There is no god and we are his prophets' to quote Cormac McCarthy.
I'm somewhat along the lines of Joseph Campbell on my outlook.....
...in that I kinda' like the idea of God, but not the idea of religion.
Or...vice versa......
I'm sure that this has been asked before but I'll ask again anyway.
In light of all of the scientific advances that humanity has made, why do believers still believe so strongly in a deity? So much of what we have learned seems to disprove or at least contradict what religious texts say.
Probably because God and religion means more to their lives than what science can address....and that science has yet to immutably disprove God's existence or the importance of a belief in God for those who do believe.
I think the fact that there are other religions raises more questions as to who's actually got the 'real' story right.
A lot of the conversations I've had with theists in real life when atheism is brought up usually revolve around a couple of main points. There 'has' to be an afterlife. There just has to be. Life is depressing without the idea of an afterlife. What's the point of living? Your life has a purpose.
It's usually emotional arguments like that. What I found very recently when I was talking to a theist girl in real life was that, while our conversation was very civil and even fun, I kinda felt like what I was saying to her was going in one ear and out the other.
She brought up the point that life must be depressing without the idea of an afterlife.
To which I responded - we both have the SAME evidence. That evidence being that as far as we are both currently aware, this life is all we have.
This life is all the more important and every moment all the more precious because its all there is. Its all the more important to enjoy the limited time you have.
She pretty much said, 'isn't it depressing there won't be an afterlife?' not 5 seconds after I said all of that.
The believers of the afterlife that I know often make it sound as if the thought of no longer existing in mind is unfathomable. I don't see why not existing is so unbelievable. What were you before you were born?There is absolutely no evidence for an afterlife. And we actually know what happens when we die. Our bodies decompose.
The very idea of an afterlife is ridiculous and childish. Whether or not it is depressing, is irrelevant. Most realities are depressing.
Which leads me to something else that is on my mind from time to time.
I really do think that religion emotionally and intellectually limits people. It stunts them to an extent.
I constantly see examples of religious people shutting down when presented with views that contrast with their own. They don't like to think outside of their own preconceived world view, so in a sense when they're presented with a conflicting view it really does go in one ear and out the other. They kind of only hear what they want to hear.
I'm bothered when theists, and even some atheists, say that without religion the world would still have wars and would still have problems. Of course it would. But religion definitely makes it so much easier for people to accept and stubbornly hold onto irrational, uninformed view points, and those view points do NOT exist in a vacuum. Those view points affect the world. From contraception and the arguable damage done by the Catholic church in parts of Africa, to the denial of evolution and funding of creationism in the USA, to the support of Israel and zionism, to the anti-Iran propaganda pushing us into war from some very powerful people who are essentially eager to fulfill end times prophecy.
We have an obligation to help others move into the future.
Which leads me to something else that is on my mind from time to time.
I really do think that religion emotionally and intellectually limits people. It stunts them to an extent.
I constantly see examples of religious people shutting down when presented with views that contrast with their own. They don't like to think outside of their own preconceived world view, so in a sense when they're presented with a conflicting view it really does go in one ear and out the other. They kind of only hear what they want to hear.
I'm bothered when theists, and even some atheists, say that without religion the world would still have wars and would still have problems. Of course it would. But religion definitely makes it so much easier for people to accept and stubbornly hold onto irrational, uninformed view points, and those view points do NOT exist in a vacuum. Those view points affect the world. From contraception and the arguable damage done by the Catholic church in parts of Africa, to the denial of evolution and funding of creationism in the USA, to the support of Israel and zionism, to the anti-Iran propaganda pushing us into war from some very powerful people who are essentially eager to fulfill end times prophecy.
We have an obligation to help others move into the future.
But isnt one man's "help others move into the future" another man's indoctrination? Let's say we somehow even manage to make America into a fully secular society? Would we be able to do the same for the Middle East and Asia? Wont many people fight to the bitter end to preserve their religion? Think of what a cost that would be to humanity. Countless numbers killed, untold monetary damage, etc.
Maybe the nonreligious are better off just leaving earth and starting over somewhere else. But even then, they would still be dependent on earth for supplies, at least for a while.
It's true. Humans may never outgrow religion. Humans are fickle. They'll believe just about anything if you teach it to them at a young enough age, and repeat it enough.
Man this thread is a downer.
Having said that, I hear HD 85512 b is lovely this time of year.
Dude, did you see the video where Rick Santorum years ago was at a meeting? Like a...basically Christians who are eager to see the Rapture happen? Yeah, don't need a President like that.
I don't know the name of the YouTube video, but it was a documentary filmed by a Jewish guy I think.
Kinda scary, in a way. I guarantee that if that technology were ever invented, almost overnight people would abandon their religions in droves.