skol asylum
Footballguy
I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
I don't believe in you.
Atheists are frustrated that politics, laws, and wars are so heavily influenced by unprovable beliefs.That probably is the most logical explanation of why the majority will need religion. And many people realize that. However, even just the hope that the unlikely is true is comforting to many. So why knock it? I never understood why there seems to be a large number of atheist who are hellbent, so to speak, on having people accept their beliefs.I'd suggest that it IS the limit of our minds that is the primary cause for us to "need" to believe in a higher being rather than face the objective reality that there likely is none. Certainly not in the nice, tidy, storybook way that our human religions have created god... Often in our own image.In my opinion, reality is limitless and the human brain is limited, thus Hawking's statement is certainly untrue.This is a pretty key basic assumption which I find very flawed. Much of atheism is rooted in this idea which I vehemently disagree with."In my opinion, there is no aspect of reality beyond the reach of the human mind," Hawking told El Mundo.![]()
Good thing nobody here is.I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
Hi. I'm earth. Have we met?I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
I don't get it. You do know how babies are made, right?I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
There is no analogy. I have the same reasons to believe in Jesus' existence as I have in Thor's (none). Not sure why you are struggling with this.Nothing. But it has a lot to do with why people believe that Yahweh exists, whereas they don't believe that Thor and Zeus exist, which is why your analogy fails.What does this have to do with Yahweh existing or not?I disagree with this. Yahweh, for all his faults, is a positive for the advancement of western civilization and culture.Sure there's a reason. Just not a good one.More importantly, there is a reason that Yahweh is still worshipped by millions but the Greek and Norse gods are not.
Is that not the definition of an atheist?Good thing nobody here is.I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
i defend you quite a bit here, and even I have no idea what your point is. You're saying the why for Yahweh is more (insert your adjective here) than the why for any other deity throughout history?Nothing. But it has a lot to do with why people believe that Yahweh exists, whereas they don't believe that Thor and Zeus exist, which is why your analogy fails.What does this have to do with Yahweh existing or not?I disagree with this. Yahweh, for all his faults, is a positive for the advancement of western civilization and culture.Sure there's a reason. Just not a good one.More importantly, there is a reason that Yahweh is still worshipped by millions but the Greek and Norse gods are not.
Seriously? Is this shtick?Is that not the definition of an atheist?Good thing nobody here is.I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
Hi Earth. I liked you better when you went by Black Sabbath.Hi. I'm earth. Have we met?I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
No, but they ARE fundamentally different, which is why Yahweh has the longevity.Gods have held immense importance to people throughout history. Are you making the point that because Yahweh is an improvement (hence the longevity) over other gods that it's somehow fundamentally different?Also, Matuski, I hate this comparison of the Judeo-Christian god to Thor. I hate it when you use it, or when Richard Dawkins uses it. It's cheap and rather insulting. More importantly, there is a reason that Yahweh is still worshipped by millions but the Greek and Norse gods are not. Whether or not Yahweh is true or fictional (and as an atheist, I obviously believe the latter) He has immense importance to human society whereas Thor doesn't.
Wow.Is that not the definition of an atheist?Good thing nobody here is.I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
In a sense, yes. There is a reason why this particular God has lasted: actually several reasons.i defend you quite a bit here, and even I have no idea what your point is. You're saying the why for Yahweh is more (insert your adjective here) than the why for any other deity throughout history?Nothing. But it has a lot to do with why people believe that Yahweh exists, whereas they don't believe that Thor and Zeus exist, which is why your analogy fails.What does this have to do with Yahweh existing or not?I disagree with this. Yahweh, for all his faults, is a positive for the advancement of western civilization and culture.Sure there's a reason. Just not a good one.More importantly, there is a reason that Yahweh is still worshipped by millions but the Greek and Norse gods are not.
NoAtheism is, in a broad sense, the rejection of belief in the existence of deities.[1][2] In a narrower sense, atheism is specifically the position that there are no deities.[3][4][5] Most inclusively, atheism is the absence of belief that any deities exist.[4][5][6][7] Atheism is contrasted with theism,[8][9] which in its most general form is the belief that at least one deity exists.[9][10]Seriously? Is this shtick?Is that not the definition of an atheist?Good thing nobody here is.I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
Any reasons that in any way increase the likelihood of it's existence?In a sense, yes. There is a reason why this particular God has lasted: actually several reasons.i defend you quite a bit here, and even I have no idea what your point is. You're saying the why for Yahweh is more (insert your adjective here) than the why for any other deity throughout history?Nothing. But it has a lot to do with why people believe that Yahweh exists, whereas they don't believe that Thor and Zeus exist, which is why your analogy fails.What does this have to do with Yahweh existing or not?I disagree with this. Yahweh, for all his faults, is a positive for the advancement of western civilization and culture.Sure there's a reason. Just not a good one.More importantly, there is a reason that Yahweh is still worshipped by millions but the Greek and Norse gods are not.
YikesNoSeriously? Is this shtick?Is that not the definition of an atheist?Good thing nobody here is.I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
Perhaps once we understand that there is no "we", "understanding", or "time".Not necessarily. We know there are things that can never be known yet they exist. For example, knowing both the position and momentum of a subatomic particle is impossible, due to the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. A particle will have momentum, and it will have position, we just are unable to know both at the same time. They're forever beyond the limits of human understanding due to the nature of the universe.Is his statement unfalsifiable? In other words, he's using his mind to conclude that no aspect of reality is beyond human understanding. But it's truly impossible to prove that. (Because the only aspects of reality we can understand are so understood by human minds) I guess though the theist has a hard time speaking to things that 'transcend human understanding.'This is a pretty key basic assumption which I find very flawed. Much of atheism is rooted in this idea which I vehemently disagree with."In my opinion, there is no aspect of reality beyond the reach of the human mind," Hawking told El Mundo.
Please unpack this.YikesNoSeriously? Is this shtick?Is that not the definition of an atheist?Good thing nobody here is.I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
Your physiology causes you to believe your children are amazing and beautiful, and it can be demonstrated. If that response didn't happen, none of us would be here.I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
Of course not.Any reasons that in any way increase the likelihood of it's existence?In a sense, yes. There is a reason why this particular God has lasted: actually several reasons.i defend you quite a bit here, and even I have no idea what your point is. You're saying the why for Yahweh is more (insert your adjective here) than the why for any other deity throughout history?Nothing. But it has a lot to do with why people believe that Yahweh exists, whereas they don't believe that Thor and Zeus exist, which is why your analogy fails.What does this have to do with Yahweh existing or not?I disagree with this. Yahweh, for all his faults, is a positive for the advancement of western civilization and culture.Sure there's a reason. Just not a good one.More importantly, there is a reason that Yahweh is still worshipped by millions but the Greek and Norse gods are not.
Atheist means without theism. Doesn't believe in a theistic view of the world where there is an omnipotent god who knows you and judges you, cares about how you live and is typically defined in a holy book.You can be that and still think it is possible there is some controlling force in the universe we aren't aware of yet.Please unpack this.YikesNoSeriously? Is this shtick?Is that not the definition of an atheist?Good thing nobody here is.I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
I specifically said "no god". That is exactly the textbook definition of an atheist. No god (deity).Atheist means without theism. Doesn't believe in a theistic view of the world where there is an omnipotent god who knows you and judges you, and is typically defined in a holy book.You can be that and still think it is possible there is some controlling force in the universe we aren't aware of yet.Please unpack this.YikesNoSeriously? Is this shtick?Is that not the definition of an atheist?Good thing nobody here is.I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
Religion may be man-made. God, not so much.God is man made. Sorry to shatter your lives! How can you be so obtuse?
I'm sure you make a lot of decisions in your life based on reason and information.I give up. Vulcan logic wins.
Right. You've had a personal experience with "god" just like the thousands before you. You are truly brainwashed.Religion may be man-made. God, not so much.God is man made. Sorry to shatter your lives! How can you be so obtuse?
That sounds like agnosticism, not atheism. Seems alot more logical than just claiming to know beyond a shadow of doubt that there is nothing in the vast universe larger than us.I'm sure you make a lot of decisions in your life based on reason and information.Apparently you have a line where something is so wonderous that you don't care to look at it that way anymore.I give up. Vulcan logic wins.
I don't. And if I can't explain it, then I'm fine not knowing. I don't fill in the gaps with superstition.
I can ask questions I don't think we have the ability to answer. Is understanding a part of something the same thing as understanding everything? Of course not. So while we can know something about God, it doesn't mean there isn't something about him we don't have the ability to know. We can know how gravity effects things and calculate its force, but we don't even understand the mechanism that actually attracts other objects. We can believe that life came from non-life, but science cannot actually figure out how.Obviously the problem is that you can't give an example of anything that is beyond the reach of the human mind- by providing the example, you negate your premise. God, for example, is not beyond the reach of the human mind, otherwise you couldn't believe in Him, because you wouldn't know anything about Him.How can we know what is unknowable? To limit the universe to our ability to understand it puts things in a pretty small box. There is more to the world than our five senses can comprehend and our communication can convey. Just seems really arrogant to even believe nothing is beyond our reach. It sounds like a person who has been praised for how smart he is for so long that he believes he can figure out anything. I think it sounds like a great athlete who thinks he's invincible...until he blows out a knee and learns how weak his body really is.What would your argument against it be?This is a pretty key basic assumption which I find very flawed. Much of atheism is rooted in this idea which I vehemently disagree with."In my opinion, there is no aspect of reality beyond the reach of the human mind," Hawking told El Mundo.
The Bible basically says there is much about God we cannot figure out/know. What we see/know is partial and incomplete. Likely due to either limitations on our current abilities or by God deliberately hiding it from us.
"For we know in part and we prophesy in part, but when completeness comes, what is in part disappears. When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I put the ways of childhood behind me. For now we see only a reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I am fully known." I Corinthians 13:9-12
Far from it. I just choose to be thankful for the gift of life and reject the arrogance of thinking i have all the answers myself.Right. You've had a personal experience with "god" just like the thousands before you. You are truly brainwashed.Religion may be man-made. God, not so much.God is man made. Sorry to shatter your lives! How can you be so obtuse?
Yeah we're done. I'm doing my best to give you honest explanations here.I specifically said "no god". That is exactly the textbook definition of an atheist. No god (deity).Im curious by what you mean by controlling force? Midi-chlorians or something?Atheist means without theism. Doesn't believe in a theistic view of the world where there is an omnipotent god who knows you and judges you, and is typically defined in a holy book.You can be that and still think it is possible there is some controlling force in the universe we aren't aware of yet.Please unpack this.YikesNoSeriously? Is this shtick?Is that not the definition of an atheist?Good thing nobody here is.I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
This in itself does not negate the existence of God.Sucks to think when you die, that it's over. Dirt nap. Thast's reality. You won't know that you're dead.
This should be done regardless of your religious beliefs or lack thereof.Accept reality, and live your life to the fullest!! It's short!
The answer is no. You know this Tim. You are spot on here.This in itself does not negate the existence of God.Sucks to think when you die, that it's over. Dirt nap. Thast's reality. You won't know that you're dead.
But it leads to an interesting question: would Christianity be so popular if there was no afterlife? Suppose everything else was the same: Jesus comes, tells of the way to live, forgives men for their sins, rises from the grave, etc. But there is no promise of afterlife for anyone else. Would this religion have spread?
LOLYeah we're done. I'm doing my best to give you honest explanations here.Just leave the watchtower at my doorI specifically said "no god". That is exactly the textbook definition of an atheist. No god (deity).Im curious by what you mean by controlling force? Midi-chlorians or something?Atheist means without theism. Doesn't believe in a theistic view of the world where there is an omnipotent god who knows you and judges you, and is typically defined in a holy book.You can be that and still think it is possible there is some controlling force in the universe we aren't aware of yet.Please unpack this.YikesNoSeriously? Is this shtick?Is that not the definition of an atheist?Good thing nobody here is.I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
Are you drunk?Nothing like trying to knock down an argument that absolutely no one is making
Not yet.. though reading your posts is getting me closerAre you drunk?Nothing like trying to knock down an argument that absolutely no one is making
Not necessarily. A lot of religions strictly forbid living life to the fullest.This should be done regardless of your religious beliefs or lack thereof.Accept reality, and live your life to the fullest!! It's short!
Not necessarily. A lot of religions strictly forbid living life to the fullest.This should be done regardless of your religious beliefs or lack thereof.Accept reality, and live your life to the fullest!! It's short!
I asked earlier and you didn't reply - you don't believe that Jesus existed?matuski said:There is no analogy. I have the same reasons to believe in Jesus' existence as I have in Thor's (none). Not sure why you are struggling with this.timschochet said:Nothing. But it has a lot to do with why people believe that Yahweh exists, whereas they don't believe that Thor and Zeus exist, which is why your analogy fails.matuski said:What does this have to do with Yahweh existing or not?timschochet said:I disagree with this. Yahweh, for all his faults, is a positive for the advancement of western civilization and culture.joffer said:Sure there's a reason. Just not a good one.timschochet said:More importantly, there is a reason that Yahweh is still worshipped by millions but the Greek and Norse gods are not.
My bet is on Crab People. Hopefully I can smuggle butter into the afterlife.NetnautX said:I specifically said "no god". That is exactly the textbook definition of an atheist. No god (deity).17seconds said:Atheist means without theism. Doesn't believe in a theistic view of the world where there is an omnipotent god who knows you and judges you, and is typically defined in a holy book.You can be that and still think it is possible there is some controlling force in the universe we aren't aware of yet.NetnautX said:Please unpack this.joffer said:YikesNetnautX said:Nojoffer said:Seriously? Is this shtick?NetnautX said:Is that not the definition of an atheist?matuski said:Good thing nobody here is.NetnautX said:I simply cannot comprehend how anyone who has children can tell themselves that there definitively is no God.
I don't believe in you.
Im curious by what you mean by controlling force? Midi-chlorians or something?
China down? Tibet down? North Korea.....Vietnam....former Soviet Union.....Many secular governments have imprisioned and killed Buddhists. There are not enough Buddhists in the US for it to be a concern. Athiest on this forum are by far the worst proselytizers here. It makes no sense from a logical viewpoint, it seems based on emotional hatred. It is a sad thread where Tim is the voice of reason and logic. Athiests should be ashamed.17seconds said:Atheists are frustrated that politics, laws, and wars are so heavily influenced by unprovable beliefs.That probably is the most logical explanation of why the majority will need religion. And many people realize that. However, even just the hope that the unlikely is true is comforting to many. So why knock it? I never understood why there seems to be a large number of atheist who are hellbent, so to speak, on having people accept their beliefs.I'd suggest that it IS the limit of our minds that is the primary cause for us to "need" to believe in a higher being rather than face the objective reality that there likely is none. Certainly not in the nice, tidy, storybook way that our human religions have created god... Often in our own image.In my opinion, reality is limitless and the human brain is limited, thus Hawking's statement is certainly untrue.This is a pretty key basic assumption which I find very flawed. Much of atheism is rooted in this idea which I vehemently disagree with."In my opinion, there is no aspect of reality beyond the reach of the human mind," Hawking told El Mundo.![]()
Religions that don't take it on themselves to influence these areas are less frustrating. You don't see atheists up in arms about Buddhists.
Jesus the god? I have seen no reason to consider it at all. Jesus the man? Seems possible, maybe even probable although I doubt he resembled the Jesus in your head, and completely an aside to the discussion of the existence of a god.I asked earlier and you didn't reply - you don't believe that Jesus existed?matuski said:There is no analogy. I have the same reasons to believe in Jesus' existence as I have in Thor's (none). Not sure why you are struggling with this.timschochet said:Nothing. But it has a lot to do with why people believe that Yahweh exists, whereas they don't believe that Thor and Zeus exist, which is why your analogy fails.matuski said:What does this have to do with Yahweh existing or not?timschochet said:I disagree with this. Yahweh, for all his faults, is a positive for the advancement of western civilization and culture.joffer said:Sure there's a reason. Just not a good one.timschochet said:More importantly, there is a reason that Yahweh is still worshipped by millions but the Greek and Norse gods are not.
I realize this is a minor point in the overall discussion but I need to know whether to take you serious or not.
Christianity was constructed with the central idea of Jesus being Christ, of Jesus; divinity. The followers of Jesus that were more interested in the message were first shouted down and then driven into submission. Most historians seem to believe that unifying the faith despite the sad reality of how it was accomplished was a necessary component for the spread of Christianity. Which, I for one believes muddied and still muddies the "real message".timschochet said:This in itself does not negate the existence of God.Patrick Bateman said:Sucks to think when you die, that it's over. Dirt nap. Thast's reality. You won't know that you're dead.
But it leads to an interesting question: would Christianity be so popular if there was no afterlife? Suppose everything else was the same: Jesus comes, tells of the way to live, forgives men for their sins, rises from the grave, etc. But there is no promise of afterlife for anyone else. Would this religion have spread?