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I'm a scientist. And as a scientist, I believe if God exists, our knowledge of him is imperfect. Why? Because the stories and myths we have are the products of men, the passage of time. The religion you practice is based on a theory, impossible to prove. Yet you bestow it with absolutes like, "There is no such thing as coincidence."
Haha, what are you talking about? Nobody except Madonna, film writers and teenage stoners treat these theories as "absolute" explanations for the nature of the universe, let alone uses them to derive moral instructions and edicts for living. There are a great many theories out there about how the universe might be structured; some are more or less plausible and most that are recognised as legitimate have some basis in evidence or logic, but none of them are accepted by a monolithic "Science". Often enough they are treated explicitly as fun fantasies, what-ifs, or useful thought experiments for exercising the brain in preparation for its encounters with the almost ungraspable. God forbid that scientists all have different opinions and some propose theories that others find absurd. It's hardly their faults that ideas like multiple universes have been so richly attractive to journalists and spinners of popular tales - both of which have had far more influence in popularising and characterising these ideas than any peer-reviewed Academy beard. In other words, there's a world of difference, you lovably ludicrous man.Yet science likes to depict tales of there being a multiverse, and an infinite number of universes, and parallel dimensions. But these aren't theories of course, they are absolutes purely because they come under the scientific banner.
And the easiest way to make it meaning full is to live by the word of God.
Depends on the Word.also the easiest way to make it full of boring
Haha, what are you talking about? Nobody except Madonna, film writers and teenage stoners treat these theories as "absolute" explanations for the nature of the universe, let alone uses them to derive moral instructions and edicts for living. There are a great many theories out there about how the universe might be structured; some are more or less plausible and most that are recognised as legitimate have some basis in evidence or logic, but none of them are accepted by a monolithic "Science". Often enough they are treated explicitly as fun fantasies, what-ifs, or useful thought experiments for exercising the brain in preparation for its encounters with the almost ungraspable. God forbid that scientists all have different opinions and some propose theories that others find absurd. It's hardly their faults that ideas like multiple universes have been so richly attractive to journalists and spinners of popular tales - both of which have had far more influence in popularising and characterising these ideas than any peer-reviewed Academy beard. In other words, there's a world of difference, you lovably ludicrous man.
Unfortunately, not everyone looks at it like that.
Appeals from either end of the theist/atheist spectrum about our fate after death and how that should affect our waking life are both trite and pointless to me. Both of them rely on some kind of gnostic understanding of existence that (and I'm going to make an empirical statement here, yes I noticed the irony) nobody ****ing has. You don't. I've read and watched countless arguments from theists on the existence of God, and the best proof of their knowledge of God - as opposed to their belief in him/her/it - is always some nicely-worded combination of "he spoke to me" and "just look around you!" These are logically inadequate to present your knowledge to others, the best you can do is merely convince them you might be right. Likewise, the most reasonable atheists I've encountered choose not to speak in absolutes and instead say that they don't believe, or find it incredibly improbable, that a God exists. An agnostic approach to either side is the only reasonable position, because "proving" either belief or non-belief in an empirical sense is practically impossible.
THEREFORE, what happens after death is a crapshoot. Maybe you go to the pearly gates, maybe you rot in the ground, maybe it's something completely different. But for the love of <non-descript deity of ambiguous existence>, please stop saying that the finality of death makes your life pointless somehow. How ****ing shallow is that, really? Think of all your loved ones who've ever died. As far as you know, they no longer exist in any tangible sense. Did that make their lives any less meaningful to you? Would you wish that they were never born, simply because they weren't able to experience something after death? The same applies to your life. You affect those around you, you make your mark on the world, and thus you are immortal, in a sense. It's just not a selfish sense which you're able to live out yourself. Or maybe it is. Either way, deal w/ it.
Anyway I'm not trying to turn this into another religious debate, I just wanted to get that off my chest. :v
Unfortunately, not everyone looks at it like that.
Unfortunately, not everyone looks at it like that.
Get back to me when people are claiming that the multiverse demands we forbid gay marriage.Unfortunately, not everyone looks at it like that.
Keep acting like you guys know what you're talking about. Nobody knows a goddamned thing about what happens when you die. Any idea is as good as the next and it's sans any evidence
More than you give credit to, I suspect.
And not every christian looks at christianity the same as you. What's your point?
only because they're deluding themselves
Get back to me when people are claiming that the multiverse demands we forbid gay marriage.
Bottom line is, it's not absolutely proven fact yet.
The good ol' burden of proof is on you.
No, you made a stupid point that people quite naturally desired to respond to. You can do them the same courtesy or you can prove your snivelling inadequacy with mincing evasions - behaviour which in the politics forum (where engaging in debate is expected) would earn you an infraction.Did a strike a nerve?
Depends on the Word.
I think you are absolutely right. But I think it is important to point out that although yes it might be a crapshoot the odds on afterlife vs no afterlife probably aren't even. And if you bring in specific religions those odds obviously diminish even further. The concept of an afterlife seems nice, but it doesn't make any practical sense and as a result the odds probably aren't very likely.
And what was stupid about saying that not all atheists follow the idea that science doesn't deal in absolutes?
I'm going to reap a good hard loving, I'll have you know.You reap what you sow. You guys are going to reap a bunch of shit
You reap what you sow. You guys are going to reap a bunch of shit