godelian wrote: ↑Thu Dec 19, 2024 11:52 am
BigMike wrote: ↑Thu Dec 19, 2024 11:07 am
But what you might not have fully realized is that this very mechanistic nature undercuts the need for the supernatural altogether.
Morality is indeed mechanical.
However, there are other questions that transcend rationality. Examples:
Why does the universe exist? Why does life exist? What happens after death?
Religion is about morality but also about spirituality, which is simply a tool to deal with questions that transcend rationality.
Ah, Godelian, you’ve touched on something deeply human here—those questions that seem to hover just out of reach: Why does the universe exist? Why does life exist? What happens after death? These are the mysteries that have driven humans to wonder, to seek meaning, and, yes, to create religions and spiritual frameworks as tools to grapple with what we don’t yet understand. But let’s take a closer look, because the way we approach these questions tells us more about ourselves than it does about the universe.
You’re right that morality is mechanical—rooted in rules, context, and relationships. But when it comes to these “transcendent” questions, consider this: just because something transcends our current understanding doesn’t mean it’s inherently irrational or beyond the reach of reason. For centuries, questions about the nature of the stars or the origins of disease seemed like mysteries that only the divine could explain. Yet, with time and effort, science unraveled them. What we once attributed to the supernatural turned out to be entirely natural, governed by laws of cause and effect.
Now, the questions you raise—about existence, life, and death—are undeniably profound. But isn’t it possible that they, too, will eventually yield to inquiry and understanding? The fact that we don’t have all the answers yet doesn’t mean those answers are inaccessible. It simply means we haven’t arrived there. Religion, then, becomes a placeholder for curiosity—a way to provide comfort in the face of uncertainty. It’s a tool, as you say, but not necessarily the only or ultimate one.
Here’s the rub: spirituality, as you describe it, isn’t a bad thing. It can be a way to find peace, to navigate the unknown, and to connect with something larger than yourself. But it doesn’t need to be tied to supernatural beliefs. A deterministic universe, where everything is connected by cause and effect, offers its own kind of spirituality—one grounded in awe and wonder at the intricate complexity of reality. Why does the universe exist? Perhaps it doesn’t need a purpose beyond being what it is. Why does life exist? Because the conditions for it emerged naturally, through a long chain of causes. What happens after death? The same thing that happens to all matter and energy—it changes form, continues its journey through the fabric of existence.
These answers may not satisfy the yearning for something more, but isn’t that yearning itself just another product of cause and effect? Our desire for purpose, for meaning, for answers beyond what we can see—it’s part of what makes us human, shaped by our biology and our need to navigate a complex world. And that’s beautiful. But it doesn’t mean the answers are supernatural. It means the questions are part of our story, part of what drives us to seek, to grow, and to understand.
You’ve already admitted that morality is mechanical, that it doesn’t require the supernatural. Now, take that same clarity and apply it to these larger questions. You don’t need spirituality as a crutch for the unknown—you can embrace the unknown itself. Come in, Godelian. The universe is vast and breathtaking just as it is.