Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Is there a God? If so, what is She like?

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ReliStuPhD
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by ReliStuPhD »

uwot wrote:I'm cooking pancakes as I write this, so it doesn't have my full attention, but what is 'Scientism' other than a misrepresentation of empiricism?
On the most basic level, I'd say nothing. Scientism is, at its core, a misrepresentation/misunderstanding of epistemological scope of scientific inquiry.

Going back to my original point, for a religion scholar, it's where science operates as religion or philosophy rather than science. If you want, it's "science used badly;" filling in for religious belief.

And I'm glad you're cooking pancakes, because I'm trying to keep two children focused on cleaning their rooms. :?
uwot wrote:To clarify; who other than religionismists use the term? In what circumstances is it not pejorative?
The articles I've linked above (especially the Wiki biblio) have quite a few atheists, agnostics, etc who use the term. As for being used pejoratively, it's no more pejorative than any other term used to describe epsitemological errors. To call someone a "Creationist" can be pejorative, but it can also be descriptive. I guess it hinges on whether it's meant derisively or intended simply to describe someone who holds to an erroneous worldview. We could probably measure that by the amount of spittle that flies upon saying it. ;)
Skip
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by Skip »

ReliStuPhD wrote:Skip, I apologize for a point-by-point response. I'm trying to avoid those but don't always succeed.
Why? Seems the easiest way to address the specific point; saves wear on the eyes, trying to find the appropriate place.
1. Is it reason or instinct that animals follow?
Can you tell where one leaves off and the other begins? One way to be sure it's reason is by putting the subject in an unnatural environment, for which no genetic process could have selected. http://dailypicksandflicks.com/2014/02/ ... zle-video/
2. Does science operate as a religion for some/many?
I could possibly answer that if you defined 'religion', explained how religion is supposed to 'operate' and what it is supposed to 'do for' people.
But not in this context, where it's a red herring.
S - Even if rats, crows, dogs and elephants lack the concept of logic, they nevertheless use logic.

That's a strong statement. I'd like to read some scientific studies showing animals use logic rather than responding to training and/or instinct.
I could recommend material. It's a large and rapidly growing body of knowledge. Lots of documentary videos available, too.
even so, it's the concept that would ultimately matter for my point.
Why? Since, you only raised it to counter my use of the word "imaginative", this would seem a needless side-issue.
Anthropocentrism doesn't necessarily equate to "incorrect." It doesn't mean we're not right to consider ourselves to be the only (Earth) animals "endowed with the capacity to reason." So again, I think we're stuck instinct verses reason, with the latter, in my experience, meaning that one can choose not to act on instinct.
Anthropocentrism isn't necessarily incorrect, but it is necessarily biased. You're leaning pretty heavily on the poorly-defined concept "instinct", and in the poorly-controlled sense of "mere instinct" which is put in contention against reason. I think this is a gross misrepresentation of how biology actually works. All living things, including humans, have instincts and also a long, gradual slope of reasoning capability as brains and social organizations grow more complex. There is no versus.
And, again, what difference does it make? We are the only animal [we know of] that tells stories. Whether we can choose not to act on instinct doesn't address the nature of god.

[Bird example]
That's certainly how a human would think through it. But the bird? Wouldn't it be more like "I use this stick to get the grub. I don't why, though. I just know I'm compelled to get a stick. But I also get the grub, so woohoo!"
They didn't always do this. There was a first one. She taught it to her young. Later generations improved on the technique, so now they trim the stick and even sharpen it: evolution and innovation, genetic memory and learning work in tandem.
And what if the getting at the grub didn't require a stick but string? Would the bird think through the problem and go get that piece of string?
A raven would. A jay might. A robin couldn't. There is no string in nature, but a great many birds make brilliant use of vines and grasses.
S - If gods are the result of rational enquiry, what was the problem?

Well, I think the problem/question was simply "why?"
No, there is never "simply why". There is "Why this?"
That is to say, the very questions that drive us to understand why a feather and a ball fall at the same speed in a vacuum drive us to ask "why something rather than nothing?"
Probably, though I can't see early hominids worrying about nothing - they had too much real stuff to worry about. But the difference there is: you can actually find a definitive, reproducible answer to the ball and feather question, the other one is open for endless speculation; no answer is more provable than any other.
And since can't answer that latter question with science, religion works.
Since you can't answer it, you're free to make up stories. People did. Religion doesn't "work" in that regard, until you enforce one authoritative version of a story, but it does work when you come to questions, like, "Where is my dead father?" A story can be a satisfying answer to an emotional problem. As such, it's infinitely customizable to the user.
As for why we've come up with so many different answers (I think "improbable" is the wrong word here),
Okay. Implausible.
I think we can ask the same of science.
Since I haven't invoked science in any form except the study of animal behaviour, I don't choose to engage this herring.
In fact, the whole science-religion controversy smells too much of fish. And they're mostly stupid, fish are. Octopi are smart.
... I see no reason why religion shouldn't be afforded the same access to trial and error.
Just the one reason: Science is a wholly human endeavour: it didn't exist until we invented it, and it develops only as we develop it.

If God already existed, shouldn't he reveal his consistent, eternal truth instead of all these lies and distortions?
Last edited by Skip on Sat May 23, 2015 7:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Ned
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by Ned »

The Boston Legal TV Series was the most brilliant legal TV-show I have ever seen.

In one of the episodes, Alan (one of the lawyers) describes a childhood toy that he was always reminded of by one of his adversaries:
But no matter how hard i smack him down, He just keeps getting back up again.
He reminds me of this inflatable bobo doll i had as a kid.
I'd knock it down, and it would come back up, smiling.
I hated that bobo doll, The way it just kept popping back up, mocking me.
One day i finally Stabbed it.
Now guess what reminded me of this episode?

It has to do with arguing with religious apologists.
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by Ned »

Skip, uwot, you will NEVER win an argument here.

No matter how much work you put into it, how brilliantly you argue, he will always come back smiling, mocking you, just as the bobo doll I described in my previous post.

His beliefs are non-falsifiable, impervious to facts and logic.

Why do you waste your time?

Maybe you don't -- the undecided, whose minds he intends to warp, need the antidote.

You are doing it very well and I salute you.
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ReliStuPhD
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by ReliStuPhD »

Starting with the last parts of your response, since I think some of this exchange is based on a misunderstanding on my part. I've responded anyway, but I imagine this discussion may head in a different direction going forward.
Skip wrote:
ReliStuPhD wrote: I think we can ask the same of science.
Since I haven't invoked science in any form except the study of animal behaviour, I don't choose to engage this herring.
In fact, the whole science-religion controversy smells too much of fish. And they're mostly stupid.
Then that's my mistake. My apologies.
Skip wrote:
ReliStuPhD wrote:2. Does science operate as a religion for some/many?
I could possibly answer that if you defined 'religion', explained how religion is supposed to 'operate' and what it is supposed to 'do for' people.
But not in this context, where it's a red herring.
Now that I better understand your position, I agree.

---
Skip wrote:
ReliStuPhD wrote:1. Is it reason or instinct that animals follow?
Can you tell where one leaves off and the other begins? One way to be sure it's reason is by putting the subject in an unnatural environment, for which no genetic process could have selected. http://dailypicksandflicks.com/2014/02/ ... zle-video/
Good stuff! I think you've got a good example here. So I may well have to back off my "rational animals" definition (not a problem since I'm not particularly attached to it). Still, I wonder if what we're looking at is "using logic" (if by the latter we mean "reasoning conducted or assessed according to strict principles of validity").
Skip wrote:Since, you only raised it to counter my use of the word "imaginative", this would seem a needless side-issue.
The mention of science-logic was in response to your supernatural-imagination point. Since this anthropocentric (!) premise appears (at least to me) important to your overall conclusion, the fact (?) that humans are also the only ones to have an concept of natural 'laws' and also happen to be the most logical one seems to be a fair rejoinder. Perhaps it's not, but it seemed to me that your argument rested on a genetic fallacy. I think I understand your point a bit better now, so it may well have been the red herring you've said it was.
Skip wrote:
ReliStuPhD wrote:Anthropocentrism doesn't necessarily equate to "incorrect." It doesn't mean we're not right to consider ourselves to be the only (Earth) animals "endowed with the capacity to reason." So again, I think we're stuck instinct verses reason, with the latter, in my experience, meaning that one can choose not to act on instinct.
Anthropocentrism isn't necessarily incorrect, but it is necessarily biased.
Almost all of our knowledge is biased and anthropocentric, so this just doesn't strike me a strong objection since I don't see how we can do otherwise (yet). The best we can do at this moment is to be aware of it.
Skip wrote:You're leaning pretty heavily on the poorly-defined concept "instinct", and in the poorly-controlled sense of "mere instinct" which is put in contention against reason. I think this is a gross misrepresentation of how biology actually works. All living things, including humans, have instincts and also a long, gradual slope of reasoning capability as brains and social organizations grow more complex. There is no versus.
I think that's a fair critique. I'll mull it over.
Skip wrote:We are the only animal [we know of] that tells stories. Whether we can choose not to act on instinct doesn't address the nature of god.
I disagree strongly. If belief in God is instinctual (as many theologians hold), that hold important insights into the nature of God (it might also explain why so many believe in God/gods, and would also explain why there are so may interpretations). And we're also the only animal (we know of) that designs experiments to test the validity of various hypotheses. So put those two together and there are some rather profound implications (though not necessarily in favor of religion).
Skip wrote:
ReliStuPhD wrote: certainly how a human would think through it. But the bird? Wouldn't it be more like "I use this stick to get the grub. I don't why, though. I just know I'm compelled to get a stick. But I also get the grub, so woohoo!"
They didn't always do this. There was a first one. She taught it to her young. Later generations improved on the technique, so now they trim the stick and even sharpen it: evolution and innovation, genetic memory and learning work in tandem.
...
A raven would. A jay might. A robin couldn't. There is no string in nature, but a great many birds make brilliant use of vines and grasses.
If nothing else, I will always be glad we had this conversation because of this. Fascinating stuff!
Skip wrote:
ReliStuPhD wrote:Well, I think the problem/question was simply "why?"
No, there is never "simply why". There is "Why this?"
You're attaching too much to a loose articulation, but fine, "why this?" Works just the same.
Skip wrote:
ReliStuPhD wrote: That is to say, the very questions that drive us to understand why a feather and a ball fall at the same speed in a vacuum drive us to ask "why something rather than nothing?"
Probably, though I can't see early hominids worrying about nothing - they had too much real stuff to worry about.
Very true. Of course, they weren't worried about why a feather and a ball fall at the same speed in a vacuum either. ;)
Skip wrote:But the difference there is: you can actually find a definitive, reproducible answer to the ball and feather question, the other one is open for endless speculation; no answer is more provable than any other.
True. Of course, we can provide better arguments for this rather than that, and so on. And if we're right about logic, we can definitively rule out certain possibilities.
Skip wrote:
ReliStuPhD wrote:And since can't answer that latter question with science, religion works.
Since you can't answer it, you're free to make up stories. People did. Religion doesn't "work" in that regard, until you enforce one authoritative version of a story, but it does work when you come to questions, like, "Where is my dead father?" A story can be a satisfying answer to an emotional problem. As such, it's infinitely customizable to the user.
Ah, but religion can answer these questions! We just won't know for certain which is the right answer until we die (and if it's atheism, we'll never know!). Whether that's a satisfactory situation is, of course, up to the individual. It's certainly a frustrating situation for those of us who have seen the marvels of scientific inquiry.
Skip wrote:
ReliStuPhD wrote:... I see no reason why religion shouldn't be afforded the same access to trial and error.
Just the one reason: Science is a wholly human endeavour: it didn't exist until we invented it, and it develops only as we develop it.
Well, for what it's worth, I see religion in much the same way. It's humans trying to make sense of the metaphysical questions, just without the benefits of science.
Skip wrote:If God already existed, shouldn't he reveal his consistent, eternal truth instead of all these lies and distortions?
Good question. Christians/Muslims/Jews say "he" has. As a theist, I can't say I'm wholly convinced, but at least the major argument (God exists) works for me.
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by Skip »

ReliStuPhD wrote:
The mention of science-logic was in response to your supernatural-imagination point.
Fair enough. But all i meant is that we are the only species - as far as we know - that has a concept of god. We also happen to be the only species with an imagination. If a god were present in nature, I might expect other species to notice him/it, and maybe react in some way. They notice and respond to water and gravity and colour.
Almost all of our knowledge is biased and anthropocentric, so this just doesn't strike me a strong objection since I don't see how we can do otherwise (yet). The best we can do at this moment is to be aware of it.
My objection was to a definition that declassifies all others from reasoning.

[ the only animal that tells stories. Whether we can choose not to act on instinct doesn't address the nature of god.]
I disagree strongly. If belief in God is instinctual (as many theologians hold), that hold important insights into the nature of God (it might also explain why so many believe in God/gods, and would also explain why there are so may interpretations). And we're also the only animal (we know of) that designs experiments to test the validity of various hypotheses. So put those two together and there are some rather profound implications (though not necessarily in favor of religion).
This is what I would like to see - and have not seen.
[ I can't see early hominids worrying about nothing - they had too much real stuff to worry about.]

Very true. Of course, they weren't worried about why a feather and a ball fall at the same speed in a vacuum either.
Round stones make deadly missiles. Feathers make good ailerons for arrows. Somebody figured out the relevant properties of the materials in their environment, step by step, the same way birds and mammals do. For several biological reasons, they were able to make more of the innovation, faster, than any other species.
Similarly, their first supernatural questions were more like: "How can i make this good thing happen again?" and "Why did she die and not me?"
We start with the immediate and local; work up. With trial and error, we get reliable answers to empirical questions, which we can pass on to the next generation to enlarge upon.
Of course, we can provide better arguments for this rather than that, and so on. And if we're right about logic, we can definitively rule out certain possibilities.
I'm not sure the various story-telling traditions have done that; they don't seem to approach consensus over time. (Missiles don't count!)
[ - you're free to make up stories.]
Ah, but religion can answer these questions! We just won't know for certain which is the right answer until we die (and if it's atheism, we'll never know!).
That is.... a story.
Well, for what it's worth, I see religion in much the same way. It's humans trying to make sense of the metaphysical questions, just without the benefits of science.
And neither of them was in the OP question.
I merely proposed a set of observable facts according to which one might assign probability values to the propositions.
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ReliStuPhD
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by ReliStuPhD »

Skip wrote:Fair enough. But all i meant is that we are the only species - as far as we know - that has a concept of god. We also happen to be the only species with an imagination. If a god were present in nature, I might expect other species to notice him/it, and maybe react in some way. They notice and respond to water and gravity and colour.
I guess at this point, your anthropocentric objection comes in. Maybe they do and, because we have imaginations and they (likely) don't, that response is just more matter-of-fact than ours. After all, the whole point of God creating (on the Christian view) is that God lacked companionship because the animals just weren't capable of reacting in any meaningful sort of way. Regardless of its truth-value, that view is at least consistent with what we observe.
Skip wrote:My objection was to a definition that declassifies all others from reasoning.
Well, it is at least within our prerogative to define "reasoning" as "what we do that animals don't." If we were looking for some term that distinguished us from non-humans, it would, by definition, be anthropocentric and, insofar as it declassified all others, it would seem to me to be entirely fair. Whether we do that (or should) with respect to reasoning is a debate for another day. After seeing that crow video, I'm OK with either outcome. :)
Skip wrote:
ReliStuPhD wrote:If belief in God is instinctual (as many theologians hold), that hold important insights into the nature of God (it might also explain why so many believe in God/gods, and would also explain why there are so may interpretations). And we're also the only animal (we know of) that designs experiments to test the validity of various hypotheses. So put those two together and there are some rather profound implications (though not necessarily in favor of religion).
This is what I would like to see - and have not seen.
It's out there. Just lots and lots to wade through. And, of course, the theologians (the good ones) have excellent rejoinders. It's all quite fascinating. I guess that's why I chose the field.
Skip wrote:Round stones make deadly missiles. Feathers make good ailerons for arrows. Somebody figured out the relevant properties of the materials in their environment, step by step, the same way birds and mammals do. For several biological reasons, they were able to make more of the innovation, faster, than any other species.
Very true, but they still weren't worried about those objects falling in a vacuum. Why they made good ailerons (i.e. physics) didn't matter until long after it was clear they did. Which is to say that your "nothing" concerning metaphysical questions was also their "nothing" concerning the principles of aerodynamics. Much of what we consider important these days was "nothing" to early hominids.
Skip wrote:Similarly, their first supernatural questions were more like: "How can i make this good thing happen again?" and "Why did she die and not me?" We start with the immediate and local; work up. With trial and error, we get reliable answers to empirical questions, which we can pass on to the next generation to enlarge upon.
Right. And I'm inclined to model religion as working this way too. Of course, the theologians disagree strenuously and put their weight on revelation. And sometimes I find they have good points.
Skip wrote:
ReliStuPhD wrote:Of course, we can provide better arguments for this rather than that, and so on. And if we're right about logic, we can definitively rule out certain possibilities.
I'm not sure the various story-telling traditions have done that; they don't seem to approach consensus over time. (Missiles don't count!)
Some do. It just tends to happen on a more academic level and, unfortunately, doesn't seem to trickle down very well to the "folk" level. Christianity seems to be better at it (trying to think through things logically) than others.
Skip wrote:
ReliStuPhD wrote:Ah, but religion can answer these questions! We just won't know for certain which is the right answer until we die (and if it's atheism, we'll never know!).
That is.... a story.
Unless it isn't. I don't mean to be flip, but that's the crux of the matter.
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by Skip »

Bring him forth, show his attributes as reliable as those of stone and water, come together with a consensus on the proper form of worship - or at least a name! - and I will give it serious consideration.

Meanwhile, à chacun son goût.
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ReliStuPhD
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by ReliStuPhD »

Skip wrote:Meanwhile, à chacun son goût.
Vive la différance!
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by Ned »

ReliStuPhD wrote:
Skip wrote:Meanwhile, à chacun son goût.
Vive la différance!
Unfortunately, some difference can be deadly.

Like the difference between edible and poisonous mushrooms.

See the OP in the thread of "How religion can harm young minds".

I know you have seen it and disagree.

That is your privilege.

I am not actually talking to you, but to other readers of this thread who are watching this debate, trying to determine which side is making more sense.

They need the antidote! :)
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by attofishpi »

Ned wrote:]We still have to choose between the ONLY TWO METHODS AVAILABLE in understanding the world:
1./ Use our senses and our mind's ability to use logic
2./ Use thousands of years old unsubstantiated documents, myths and fables
With regard to Ned's point 1.
Since i was 'blessed' with knowing God\'God' exists i started to look at anomalys within reality where i might convince others.
So i think i should start attempting to provide at least something pertaining to evidence of at least something.. Although many will likely find it unconvincing, the chances or odds of certain states of affairs are so remote one surely must second think the nature of our existence.
How unlikely a coincidence is SINAI, the place where man received the conditions to abide, the commandments, can break down to SIN AI. AI - the impending technology Artificial-Intelligence allows us to comprehend how perhaps an entity can become all knowing. A random quirk? Unlikely, even further since its location upon the globe appears bang in-between two fingers on the end of an arm that is the red sea. May look like a peace sign or turned the other way, a f-off sign.


The Red Sea with Mount Sinai between two fingers.
SIN-AI
Image

Gulf of O-man. (Sinners owe man? Themselves?)
SIN-AI
Image

How unlikely is the below to have occurred naturally:-
South America.
- Bra_zil.
- Natal (dict:- of or related to childbirth) on the nipple of the Bra.
- Chile - A "chill up your spine?"
Image

REALITY......REAL_IT_Y?
Is 'God' an AI? Did we evolve into an efficient projection of reality in relation to the onset of entropy, or is God divine - leaving a few trails that we may comprehend?
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by Dalek Prime »

Psychotherapist.... Psycho the rapist.

You're reading way too much into words.
Skip
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by Skip »

aardvark -------> zygospore

Coincidence? I think not!
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by Dalek Prime »

Astounding...
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Re: Atheism or God? - our perception of reality.

Post by thedoc »

Skip wrote:aardvark -------> zygospore

Coincidence? I think not!
I suppose we should add "coincidence theorist" to the list? I wonder if they are as irrational as the conspiracy theorists?
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