GanoesSavesTheWorld, on Mar 3 2009, 04:52 AM, said:
The problem is, you can't talk about God and/or religion using only evidence and logic. You cannot "prove" that God exists or does not exist. Any discussion of religion has to include the concept of faith and belief.
A couple of points...
i) You can't talk about religion/ a personal God without including "faith" in the equation. Agreed. However, you can discuss the nature of reality independent of whether there is a prime mover or not. You can propose models that include or do not require such a prime mover and offer evidences to support or disprove said models. What Cold Iron is trying here is to present a model/ theory/ whatever that includes a God.
ii) You can also talk about a personal/ impersonal God, his omniscience/ omnipotence/ omnipresence/ prime mover status etc. separately from the question of whether you believe in him/ her.
GanoesSavesTheWorld, on Mar 3 2009, 04:52 AM, said:
Sure, there are all kinds of "evidences", ranging from scientific studies that religion has a positive effect on health, to the many miracles as yet unexplained by science, to the fact that mankind has always searched for a higher power, regardless of race, culture, or time period, to C.S. Lewis "trilemma" argument about Jesus Christ, to physical evidences of the Bible, to the fact that trillions of people throughout history have come to a belief and a personal relationship with God. The list goes on and on.
I consider these evidences. An atheist or someone who swears by science would not. And that is because every "evidence" of God, is inextricably tied to a degree of belief. That is really the point of God, the reason why we are here on earth. He wants us, of our own free will, to come to a decision that we believe He exists and that we want to do what He asks of us, which will make us happy in this life anyway, so that we can also be happy in the next life. Anyone who has to be "convinced" through science or hard evidence that God exists is searching Him out for the wrong reasons, and goes against what God wants of us and for us.
All excellent points, and I do agree that the very nature of what constitutes "evidence" will be questioned by people on both sides of the divide. As someone who straddles the wall in this issue, I find this very amusing (in a non-condescending way if you can believe that).
What amuses me is that in this debate everyone is always
talking and no one ever
listens. To listen is to respect/ allow for the possibility that the other might be right and you yourself might be wrong. When your axioms/ first principles are as opposed as they are on this issue however, admitting that possibility is giving ground on the issue. So the divide widens.
I'm not saying I have a solution to said problem, just saying it is amusing as hell (and slightly tragic, as all good comedy should be), is all.
GanoesSavesTheWorld, on Mar 3 2009, 04:52 AM, said:
I don't hold it against anyone who does not believe in God, that is their right and their choice. I get frustrated with two kinds of people: the ones who belittle religious people for their beliefs, and the religious people who look down their noses at those who are not. I do wish that others could also come to know God, because it has brought so much happiness to my family and I, and I wish others could experience the same thing.
I hope that made sense.
A quest for truth, an inquiry into the true nature of reality and the universe we inhabit, an honest attempt to make sense of it all is never a waste of time. Nor is it ever something one does for solace and/ or to be 'happy'.
To those who are able to accept a personal God (Yahweh, or Jesus Christ, Allah, Ram, Vishnu, Shiva, Ahura Mazda, Ba'al, Buddha, or any other) I say good for you, and I envy you for the peace and fulfilment your decision grants you.
To those in the minority that rave against religion and all the ill it has wrought I say try and dispassionately detach organized religion from personal faith (the two are very different things) and try and focus on the dispassionate inquiry I called the quest for truth.
In the meantime, I (and others like me) shall wait for more civil discussions such as the one CI has going here...
This post has been edited by Skywalker: 09 March 2009 - 06:48 AM
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