Please don't, I'll wear it with a badge of honor. Every time I make a mistake that just brings me one step closer to the truth. I'll happily make a fool myself now for all the world to see if it means I'll never make those mistakes again.
Quote from: Cadenza on November 30, 2015, 05:44:32 PMReligion is simply a means of controlling people's minds so that they act in a specific way.So 'God' doesn't exist? Because if he does, then 'religion' is more than just 'a means to control people'.
Religion is simply a means of controlling people's minds so that they act in a specific way.
QuoteIdeally, they are controlled to become moral people that support their community and love their family.Sure, but based on your statements above, you don't believe 'God' exists, and that would mean 'religion' is arbitrarily deciding what is 'good' the same way an atheist is.Again, if 'God' does exist, then religion is more than a tool to control people.
Ideally, they are controlled to become moral people that support their community and love their family.
QuoteYou cannot disprove that anymore than you can disprove conversations, that doesn't even make sense.What am I supposed to be 'disproving' here?
You cannot disprove that anymore than you can disprove conversations, that doesn't even make sense.
QuoteFurthermore you can have a religion without believing in supernatural god, for most political views they act similarly to religion but substitute a man for god.I just don't see the point of 'religion' without a deity. It's just... if you concede that religion can exist without a god, then these 'religions' are just as arbitrary as an atheist's sense of morality. If you can act morally without a god, why wouldn't you just do that...? Seems like a ton of work for nothing.
Furthermore you can have a religion without believing in supernatural god, for most political views they act similarly to religion but substitute a man for god.
QuoteI am not at all sure what you mean by:Quoterecognise that eating animals or reproducing is wrong.Could you go into more detail?Sure. Eating animals is wrong and having kids are objectively wrong things to do. I haven't seen a single religion acknowledge or preach this.
I am not at all sure what you mean by:Quoterecognise that eating animals or reproducing is wrong.Could you go into more detail?
recognise that eating animals or reproducing is wrong.
Quote from: DAS FOTZEZERSTÖRER on November 30, 2015, 05:51:34 PMLong story short, he's a vegan and anti-natalist.Humans are parasitic on other lifeforms and birth is both non-consensual and creates suffering and therefore bad.Or something like that...Pretty much. But I'm not going to turn this into a "vegan/anti-natalist" thread. He can either acknowledge that I find both things wrong and argue from that mindset, or he can stop. I'm not going to push my ideas where they aren't welcomed.
Long story short, he's a vegan and anti-natalist.Humans are parasitic on other lifeforms and birth is both non-consensual and creates suffering and therefore bad.Or something like that...
Quote from: Cadenza on November 30, 2015, 06:05:11 PMPlease don't, I'll wear it with a badge of honor. Every time I make a mistake that just brings me one step closer to the truth. I'll happily make a fool myself now for all the world to see if it means I'll never make those mistakes again.If I can offer a criticism that really doesn't have much to do with your beliefs; you write like we're stuck in a Shakespearean play. Like, dude, it's okay to just write down your thoughts as you'd say them normally. Your posts are so dramatic...
If that religion is one devoted to God then yes, in addition to the purpose of making people behave better, it also has the purpose of making them worship God. But if that religion is false then worshiping a false god is just another means to cement control.
A religion should be founded on humanity's innate sense of morality, and that innate sense is derived from god.
A religion should make people act in accordance with that morality, but there can exist religions that do not, they are perversions.
That's my point, you said science has disproved religion but that doesn't make sense since you can't disprove the existence of something that exists.
Conceding that something exists does not mean I approve of it's existence. I believe that those religions are flawed precisely because they lack an absolute morality to base everything on. The only way you could act morally without God is if your morality was logically equivalent to someone who was acting morally with God, which is a contradiction resulting from assuming you can have a morality without God.
Quote from: Cadenza on November 30, 2015, 06:21:10 PMIf that religion is one devoted to God then yes, in addition to the purpose of making people behave better, it also has the purpose of making them worship God. But if that religion is false then worshiping a false god is just another means to cement control.You need to clarify what you mean by this. If that religion (say, Islam) is worshiping a false god, it's another means to control people. But if they're worshiping the 'true' God (like say, Christianity), it's more than a means to control people? How do you decide which religion is true and which is false?
1. A religion should be founded on what your deity says is acceptable.2. There isn't a single deity that hasn't sanctioned reprehensible things, so to say that morality is based on God's is kind of silly. How do we know God is morally perfect when he allows his name to be tied to texts that condone stoning of homosexuals or slavery?
Sounds like a No True Scotsman fallacy to me.
You misunderstood me. When I said "science has disproven religion", I meant, "science has disproven claims that religions make about the world", like the 7-day creation story, or the flood. Those things simply did not happen.
You need to clarify this, also. How do we know which religion is 'true'? Additionally, we CAN act morally without God. 'God' doesn't influence my morality, and I'm the most moral person I know IRL.
It has to do with the moral justification for controlling people, if there is not a good justification behind the control then it should not take place. For a religion to be successful it must have some level of control over it's followers, or else it will loose those followers and cease to exist.Suppose there exists a religion that is false, then for the people leading that religion there are two possibilities. The first is that they are unaware that it is a false religion, their actions may be well intentioned but they are ultimately leading their followers down the wrong path, so their actions are immoral even if they do not realize it. The second option is that they realize their religion is false but continue leading it anyway, in which case the leaders have no moral justification at all, and are being deceptive on purpose. Now if their purpose is to be deceptive then they would wish to succeed at deception, and so every immoral act of control is now available to them, as they do not care about the consequences.In the first case people leading the religion can be forgiven provided they change their ways, but in the second case they are simply con artists acting to trick people. In both cases the religion has no justification for it's actions.
Now for determining the true religion, I do not believe my sense of morality is false, but I know that if I am not careful it can be corrupted however, so the true religion must be one that is consistent with this sense of morality and acknowledges it's potential to be corrupted. I find Islam and Judaism to be inconsistent with my morality, and Buddhism and Taoism to be more consistent, and Christianity to be both consistent and capable of explaining and dealing with the corruption of morality. I am not sure if any of that answered the question, and I feel that using process of elimination isn't enough to determine the truth, but it is the best I can do right now.
In this case God says that morality is acceptable, which is why we all have a sense of it. Specifically I see morality as a natural part of being human, and religion to be, ideally, a means of facilitating that part of us.
All I know is that my sense of right and wrong doesn't stem from physical evolution, as immorality would be far more useful.
I would not approve of an immoral religion, and if that were the true religion then I'm fucked, but I would go against it.
I simply don't believe I'm mentally strong enough to be a good person without something to guide me. If you're capable of doing that then I have to ask how you're capable of doing so, what standard you hold yourself to and where it comes from.
I don't claim to understand the nature of god at all, but I don't feel that evolution or the big bang conflict with the idea of a creator god.
I believe it does. Calvinism is fucking gay.
Just because you share ideas with Christians doesn't mean you should or shouldn't get closer to Christianity.
Just because they have the same result does not necessarily mean they are compatible.
While I have explained why I started to believe, I feel like I should expand upon it by explaining where I've been emotionally and philosophically in recent months, which has played a role in my enthusiasm for these things and may have spurred my shift in attitude in the first place. If anyone is interested I can post that.
I don't see how, unless you're fixed on a strict literalist interpretation of the KJV.
I think it's important to note that the laws of biology would not necessarily apply if god did not want them to.
Quote from: Winy on November 30, 2015, 09:33:30 PMQuote from: Cyrus on November 30, 2015, 09:25:20 PMI think it's important to note that the laws of biology would not necessarily apply if god did not want them to.This way of thinking is honestly dangerous in my eyes.As long as you're not attributing every anomaly to an act of god, I don't see it as being too problematic. It's not my line of thinking, I should note. I believe in natural selection and the geological formation of the earth following the big bang. You're talking to someone who always wanted to be a paleontologist growing up. I just don't necessarily see these notions as incompatible with divine intervention. We can clearly observe that competition between organisms is a natural force. Attributing this force to god's will isn't really problematic.
Quote from: Cyrus on November 30, 2015, 09:25:20 PMI think it's important to note that the laws of biology would not necessarily apply if god did not want them to.This way of thinking is honestly dangerous in my eyes.
Just a heads up though. Be prepared to become the next Rocketman.
Adam's original sin could be seen as a metaphor for man's inherent sinfulness.
Quote from: Ozymandias on November 30, 2015, 08:35:59 PMQuote from: Cyrus on November 30, 2015, 08:16:03 PMI don't claim to understand the nature of god at all, but I don't feel that evolution or the big bang conflict with the idea of a creator god.So how do you reconcile the creation story with evolution? They're incompatible.I don't see how, unless you're fixed on a strict literalist interpretation of the KJV. The Hebrew word used in Genesis can mean either "day" or "age". Even then, biblical creationism being wrong does not necessarily mean that the notion of a creator god is wrong. Evolution is driven by Natural Selection, which is driven by the natural force of competition. Competition is a kind of invisible hand that one could attribute to a supreme being.
Quote from: Cyrus on November 30, 2015, 08:16:03 PMI don't claim to understand the nature of god at all, but I don't feel that evolution or the big bang conflict with the idea of a creator god.So how do you reconcile the creation story with evolution? They're incompatible.
Quote from: Cyrus on November 30, 2015, 08:54:54 PMQuote from: Ozymandias on November 30, 2015, 08:35:59 PMQuote from: Cyrus on November 30, 2015, 08:16:03 PMI don't claim to understand the nature of god at all, but I don't feel that evolution or the big bang conflict with the idea of a creator god.So how do you reconcile the creation story with evolution? They're incompatible.I don't see how, unless you're fixed on a strict literalist interpretation of the KJV. The Hebrew word used in Genesis can mean either "day" or "age". Even then, biblical creationism being wrong does not necessarily mean that the notion of a creator god is wrong. Evolution is driven by Natural Selection, which is driven by the natural force of competition. Competition is a kind of invisible hand that one could attribute to a supreme being.Another explanation I've heard from Christians is that the first part of Genesis is actually a poem. It has an order in how it goes, and it ends with God creating mankind, his greatest creation. Personally my favorite take on it.