Re: Is the concept of "God" necessary, let alone real?
Posted: Thu May 31, 2018 6:10 pm
Yes, but it is also a personal experience interpreted.
Ah, but you made a choice. I can respect that.Although one cannot know one can choose. I choose unbelief in the transcendent personal God despite that I cannot know.
Been there. I was raised Mormon but quit for the same reasons.I feel disloyal and unloving by so saying. I attribute this feeling to indoctrination by my kindly Presbyterian parents. To be faithful to myself however I need to use reason which was also fostered by my kindly liberal parents.What I am saying is that the god one chooses is a function of who one thinks one is.
Yes, it is, but "transcendent" precludes the possibility that "personal" here means the same thing as it does in our daily lives. And this is where most of the problem lies: we have been so indoctrinated by the anthropomorphization of God that it is clearly impossible for many persons -- atheists, agnostics and theists alike -- to think of God any other way.This conversation lacks definition of "the concept of God". I try to be helpful by defining God as transcendent and personal, which I guess is the popular version of God.
I hate to admit it, but Lacewing does have a point here. While I do agree with many of the the things Nick says, "waking up" cannot be imposed, aroused, stimulated or hastened from the outside. Growth is an inside job.
I totally agree.