Reflex wrote:Religion is not about God, but about us.
A human being is the relating of a relation — a synthesis of the Infinite and the finite, Eternal and temporal, and Freedom and necessity — relating to itself and that the work of unifying the synthesis is forever recommencing
How do you know this to be true?
Reflex wrote:These posts are not an effort to establish the fact of God's existence or what he must be like, but rather about formulating a narrative or “myth” consisting of cosmological and moral elements that tell me who I am, where I come from and how I should live, a narrative that is goal-oriented, intellectually satisfying and consistent with science, even if not evidenced by it.
You really don't need to know who you are and where you come from to live goal oriented intellectually satisfying lives. I think we can both agree that neither Obama nor Mark Zukerberg nor Sundar Pichai know where they come from. Yet I am pretty sure their lives are definitely richer than both ours. They have had amazing experiences and done amazing things (maybe even without doing amazing things). You and I would be pretty much in the same boat since we are both here wasting our time instead of achieving something. Yet, I am pretty sure you think you have a goal oriented and fulfilling life just as I do.
The other thing is there is no such thing as "consistent with science even if not evidenced by it."
Reflex wrote:There is plenty of evidence to the point that there has never been a coherent human culture without a religious tradition.
And that was because we did not have sophisticated societies with controls in place. We do now. So we don't need religion anymore. That does not mean I don't appreciate the role played by religion. But like a great player past its prime, religion is past its prime.
Reflex wrote:Religion is not about God, or even what is factually true, but about formulating a satisfying narrative consisting of cosmological and moral elements that tell me who I am, where I come from and how I should live.
Again, you don't need to know who you are and where you come from to know how you should live. You yourself are still searching for the answers. So you don't really know who you are and where you come from, but you definitely know how you should live.
Reflex wrote:No self-respecting critic will opine against something about which he or she knows nothing or without positing a viable alternative.
Yet you opined " A human being is the relating of a relation — a synthesis of the Infinite and the finite, Eternal and temporal, and Freedom and necessity — relating to itself and that the work of unifying the synthesis is forever recommencing"
Reflex wrote:- 1) The power of any idea lies, not in its certainty or truth, but rather in the vividness of its human appeal and
2) it is what one believes rather than what one knows that determines conduct and dominates personal performances. Purely factual knowledge exerts very little influence upon the average person unless it becomes emotionally activated.
1) I agree. But if you are pointing to religion, then are you admitting that it is the appeal rather than the truth of religion that has the power?
2) Agreed. But I will add "unless he sees practically that factual knowledge works in real life."
Reflex wrote:the New Atheists engage with religion purely as a set of ideas[/i][/u][/b] [Gads, how many times have I said the same thing?], a kind of cosmic rulebook for believers. On that basis, it’s easy to point out inconsistencies or contradictions in the various holy texts and mock the faithful for their gullibility.
But what happens then? You’re left with no explanation for their devotion other than a susceptibility to fraud. To borrow Dawkins’ title, if God is nothing but an intellectual delusion then the billions of believers are, well, deluded; a collection of feeble saps in need of enlightenment from their intellectual superiors.
That’s the basis for the dickishness that so many people now associate from the New Atheism, a movement too often exemplified by privileged know-it-alls telling the poor that they’re idiots.
I agree. Any unprovoked, aggressive and insulting stance toward religion is tasteless and does nothing to help their desire to promote atheism though why anyone would wish to promote any "ism" confounds me.
Reflex wrote:When asked about the mysterious parts of their 'working hypothesis,' the atheist invariably responds in one of several ways ― all of which expresses blissful ignorance and the absence of a moral compass:
Now here you are doing exactly what you are complaining atheists do to theists. So you need to tone down your insults if you don't like to get them.
Reflex wrote:- Promissory materialism ― the answer will be forthcoming when science achieves a fuller understanding of the way things are
Correction. The answer MAY be forthcoming....
Reflex wrote:'Why' is a nonsense question ― things are as they are just because. Any supposed answer is an unjustifiable belief.
Not really. Any supposed answer
insisted upon as being correct without any evidence is an unjustifiable belief. You keep ignoring the bold and underlined part every time. It is time you guys considered this as a valid point.
Reflex wrote:I don't know, therefore, no one else does or can
Of course someone can. They just need to give evidence to satisfy us. Anyone at anytime can possibly find an answer to any question. The problem is when no proof is forthcoming and the answer is full of inconsistencies, another thing you keep ignoring. Even without evidence, if the answer was consistent , there would be no reason for people to not believe it or agree with it.
Reflex wrote:I don't know, but not that (God)
Correction: I don't know but the likelihood of that (God) is too remote.
However, the theistic equivalent is:
I too don't know, but definitely and unequivocally that(God)
Reflex wrote:Anything that can happen does (with God being the soul exception), so God isn't necessary.[/list]
I don't know about God being the soul exception because I don't understand what you mean by that. No Atheist would refer to God as such.
But yes, right now, everything seems to suggest that God is not necessary. What is wrong with that? You might not agree. But life works just fine for me without God. It works fine for you with God. What is the difference?