Well, first guys, this isn't a thread about religions and which one is right. Just about whether a deity could/might exist.
skace:
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I'd say the athiest that made life better for millions of people through his/her work in a 3rd world country or an invention is 300x better than the religious person who spends his/her entire life ensuring eternal happiness for themselves. >>
I think god would likely agree that a non-believing good person who worked that hard to help people is better off than someone who helps no-one and looks only to self, even though they claim to believe. But then again, I believe faith without good works is no good.
Elledan:
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What about the large number of existing and extinct religions? What happened to the gods of these religions which vanished? Did they just vanish together with the religions they belonged to? >>
IF a deity exists, our perceptions of it have no bearing on its existance. We can believe in a zillion things, but that does not rule out the existance of anything else, you know?
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There are actually only two logical conclusions to be made:
- There do indeed exist supernatural beings or a supernatural force. At least some religions which have been created on this earth were inspired by this supernatural force, which would explain the concept of a god.
- There are no supernatural elements in this universe. Everything can be explained by science. Things we can not yet explain we'll be able to explain later when we acquire more knowledge. >>
Agreed.
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Fact: Humans have always feared the unknown. In prehistoric times and in some places of this planet till recently, people have assumed that things like rain, wind, sun etc. are gods or are controlled by gods (e.g., the Greek religion).
No one we know of still worships the weather, because we can explain it. We've acquired knowledge and insight. >>
Again, the existance of a deity would be independant of however much humanity ran around in circles thinking the sky was falling. Proving humanity wrong would not invalidate the existance of a deity, just as it does not invalidate the existance of anything else we don't understand.
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Assumption: with the increase of knowledge, Humans will lose their need to explain things they don't understand using metaphysical elements, because the amount of 'unexplainable' things decreases. >>
It is possible indeed that we will come to understand HOW everything works. Debatable is whether we can ever understand WHY. "Why", used in reference to "meaning" could well be the realm of deity. Or not. Point is... we have no idea. Perhaps we will one day discover once and for all that there IS some kind of deity? Or maybe death is that discovery? Reincarnation, an afterlife... all could exist, all could not.
As I said, until we know more, no belief either way is rediculous.
Remember... if there was ever a point where proof of the non-existance of god was possible, I'd listen. Until then, my belief is no more unprovable than any other.
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If the assumption is correct, then one day Humankind will have no need anymore for blind faith and various ideologies, including religions. >>
Ah, but if a deity DOES exist, then we will still seek ways of understanding it. If we can ever proove one likely does NOT (in your example, prove/solve everything else) then we would need no understanding (religion).
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This would also assume that another theory of mine, being that developing civilizations need some kind of (intolerant) ideology to help them structure their society, is correct. >>
Certainly - but a zillion erroneous religions would not invalidate the existance of one right one, if there is a deity and one religion had it right.
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Judging from what we know at this moment, the second conclusion seems far more likely, mainly because it's based on observations and facts, while the first conclusion depends too much on fantastic elements, of which the existance is at best doubtful. >>
Well, you move more into the realm of religions there, but read my theory on the possible existance of god above - the belief that "god" is sentient is more faith based as its not directly observable, but is not far fetched in observations (heirarchy of existance, order from chaos, probibility, cause and effect).
Remember - there is SOMETHING out there, something that we cannot observe, that violates almost every law of physics (cause and effect, omnipotence, eternal, etc).
mithrandir:
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There is nothing in your statements above that would prove offensive or troubling to the agnostic. Surely we cannot understand everything there is to know because we may just be the minutest little blip in the grander scheme of things. But what I simply cannot comprehend is how people migrate this simple, harmless "sentient being" idea into a fleshed-out faith. Something existed before the Big Bang. Sure, whatever, maybe, I cannot say yes or no. But then we get into this Jesus and Mohammad and whomever stuff and it's just too much for me. It's as if humans are trying to understand too much...make up things to help them understand, and then we worry about the details of tangibility (the prophets and the physcial miracles and what not) and start believing AS IF THEY WERE TRUE! >>
Again, I don't want this thread to turn into a
religion debate when the author clearly started a debate on the simple existance of a deity. But if a deity exists then it would have properties that we would seek to understand. A religion is simply an "understanding", or attempt anyway, to understand, a deity.
If the deity wished to be understood, it would have to GIVE this understanding to humanity as we cannot observe it very well.
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Ack, how the heck am I supposed to swallow some of this stuff? I remember CCD classes when the instructor told us how Jesus divided some fishes and bread and fed 5000 people with it. I kept asking HOW is that possible, but the instructor didn't know. Look, I'm not into that kind of stuff. I cannot dive blindly into hokus pokus or whatever you want to call it. I really don't want to shuffle into church and pray when I have no idea what I am supposed to pray to or about. >>
If it bothers you, then something is going on inside your head about it. I'm not trying to get wierd or psycho-analyzing here, but if people don't care, they REALLY don't care. Some posters here on AT don't believe in something yet post in EVERY single thread (I don't mean you). Something doesn't gel there. I don't like wrestling, so I never even open those threads.
And I think the whole "religion is a thread I have to save people from" is an excuse too.
Anyway - I'm not naming anyone, and don't want to start something.
But my pointed question would be "Why does religion take up so much of our thought if its just mumbo jumbo?" Why don't people debate the existance of Santa?
To get back to your point:
Religion happens if you start with a given (God Exists) and extrapolate an understanding from there. i.e. in a very simple version:
God Exists (starting point)
God Created (nature of god)
Intentional Creation/maintenance is likely an act of caring/love (observation)
God is likely a loving deity (conclusion 1)
Man can't directly observe God (observation)
Man was created with a built in desire to understand and seek God (observation)
Therefore God intended to be understood and sought out (intent of action, derived from result)
If God intends understaning, yet man cannot understand, God must reveal itself.
Direct revelation would override Free Will, an observable good.
Therefore God would have to indirectly reveal itself, in a way that could be freely chosen (Deciding God doesn't exist when he's stomping around isn't logical, eh?)
God communicating to any number of humans would have to be recorded to be shared.
Given man's ability to write, such a recording would need to be written.
Given God's intent to communicate, such a writing would need to be kept alive and available to all.
Therefore one of the sacred texts must be correct...
Bam - "religion".
The rest gets extrapolated from there, in the same fashion.
At any point in that process, you can stop and say "enough", but it leaves one without any sense of understanding (our goal). i.e. "OK. so there is a God, but who cares?"
And again, one can certainly deny the original "given".
It's a lot easier when you are non-religious. You don't worry about this stuff. Something happened; some things happen. That's about it.