Originally posted by lazs2
I am not sure what deads point is. we have no idea what gods plans are, or, if he even has any for us. We have no idea if we are alone in the universe.
My point is why stop there? The uncertainty can continue: we have no idea if gods are there at all.
As to "are we alone in the universe"? I think it's highly improbable that we are "alone". Too much space, too many planets for it not to have happened somewhere else.
Religions, on the other hand, are generally of the opinion that this is the only game in town. Read the myriad creation myths (funny how creationists never want to give equal time to all of them in the classroom): not much scope for other life forms on other planets. Everything tends to be terracentric. Which one can speculate is most probably because ancient people on Earth have made this whole god business up, rather than vice versa.
Props to the Dogon tribe however, for their righteous "Sirius is a binary star and god came from there" thang. Weird stuff indeed, there.
We have no idea how he came to be...those who do not believe in him have no problem explaining that the universe was allways there or.. that it suddenly created itself.
Or indeed if he came to be at all...
I do have a problem with explaining the whole universe origin thing.
Frankly I have no idea, but it's fairly obvious if you chuck in a brand X god and squeal "that's the slag wot done the blag", you've merely put the whole question off. It just begs the question: "where did brand X god come from then?" It explains nothing, and imparts no new knowledge about the process, and in a logical sense is an unnecessary extra layer to "no idea how it happened".
Worse still for the creationists, their particular brand of special G sauce is the mother of all irreducibly complex and highly improbable things,
ergo(so their argument goes) the big G must have been designed. ID is a complicated way of arguing your way into an infinite regress.
We have no idea why every group of man from the first has believed in a god.
Well, there I'm of the opinion that there are a few psychological needs at play:
1. The cosmic parent to smite the naughty, to kiss it better when it hurts and to blame for random "acts of god" (now there's a coincidence!).
2. Life everlasting/better life after death and other cosmic justice.
3. A handy bendy dandy explanation for everything we can't work out.
Add to that the fact that god inc. is a big money-making scheme (God is not an Englishman after all -- turns out he's from Nigeria*), and bingo you have organised religions all over the shop.
You will note however on the fundamentals -- what's god like, what does god want, how many gods are there -- there are profound disagreements.
The idea that god needs to prove himself to those who don't believe in him is ludicrus.
As indeed is the idea that "he" needs people to believe in "him". What's so secial about people believing in you?
To say that the unexplained is simply science not yet reached is very glib... it is in fact... a religion. There is no basis for it other than faith and past performance on some level.
No I say the unexplained is just that: the unexplained. I have no idea if science can come up with explanations for the as yet unexplained.
Science doesn't really come up with explanations at all -- that's religion's job. It's why religion stifled science -- because religions already know everything there is to know.
Science comes up with theories, that only stick around as long as they work as models for how stuff works -- ie they make predictions that come true. Science professes uncertainty, and is open to change. It often takes a long time to change, but science will admit being wrong. Religions do not.
I also note that whilst you posit that saying "that the unexplained is simply science not yet reached is very glib", you seem to be of the opinion that saying that the unexplained is simply god is somehow very profound.
something created the universe and did it in such a way that everything we see is possible.
That's just sloppy thinking -- who says
something has to have created it? Personally, I freely admit that I don't know at all and couldn't conjecture. But it's also not necessary to drag god into it -- as George Carlin says, "god has problems, too: Everything he makes dies."
Some scientists are however thinking about the origin of the universe, and have come up with theories about it, some of which seem to be borne out by the current state of the universe. String theory & zero point energy certainly look like promising avenues of inquiry.
The problem with religions is that saying "god dun it" and dusting your hands doesn't advance our knowledge. When someone then asks for details -- "how did god do it?" -- religion provides another useless answer like "by magic" or "he moves in mysterious ways" or the supremely self-referential "he's god: he just did it". It just doesn't move us forward. It is perhaps no coincidence that the era of the most unquestioning xian faith in Europe was known as "the dark ages".
For many of us.... something has given us strength from time to time that we could not have had on our own... some of us see others with no faith in a god who will lay down and give up.
In that respect... my god is very good for me.
Again, there is no evidence that this is a god. That does sound like the psychological crutch I mentioned before. But [Insert muse here] will get you through tough times just as well. In fact how do you know that it wasn't
just you that gave you strength? I've had some mad fun and "deeply spiritual" moments on mushrooms and that was all entirely me and my brain chemistry (the mushrooms would have no effect on the brain if they didn't act like the brain's own chemicals).
And indeed what is this "strength"? Can you define it all? I ask because it may be crucial to working out if you could indeed not have had it on your own.
And indeed some numbers on those with no faith in god giving up versus those with faith giving up would be nice.
And as such this distnction between those with faith going strong and those without giving up would appear to be at odds with your assertion that atheism is just another faith-based religion. And if indeed you are correct that it is a religion, you would then appear to be wrong about them giving up -- because it's a very early religion (the word itself is circa 500 BC
In either case... god can be what you want. some of you want it to be man and science but we can't put that on the money.
Well god seems to be a social fiction to me. And god doesn't need replacing with man or science or anything else because god didn't do anything, due to being a made up concept, by a minority of terrans.
"In God we Trust" is good enough for everyone...let your god be whatever you want it to be.. the government has not right to tell you what that is....
just as it should be.
Sadly for the atheist, it translates to "In utter pants we trust" Which does at least have the merit of explaining the missing WMDs and other fiascos in Iraq. Whoa! More proof of gods' non-existence off of a dollar bill and US foreign policy?!? Shome mishtake, shurely?
*
Let him that hath understanding count the number of god: for it is the number of a man; and his number is Four hundred onescore less one.