kneemos wrote: » With all due respect the height of critical thinking I've ever heard from an atheist is I can't see him therefore he doesn't exist.
kneemos wrote: » No harm to have an open mind,unless you believe everything we know is all there is to know. To be rather aggressively cock sure that God doesn't exist just has a hint of a teenage rebellious tantrum.
kneemos wrote: » That a universe can pop into existence out of nothing is as bizzare as it gets.
kneemos wrote: » According to the science boffins there are ten or eleven dimensions.
kneemos wrote: » People suffer because freewill exists.
Nikki Sixx wrote: » You could show them near death experience videos on YouTube. You will even find hardened criminals, who following their n.d.e. became preachers.
Nikki Sixx wrote: » If life is so meaningless/ pointless, you could always throw yourself off a bridge.
Nikki Sixx wrote: » I find it too hard to believe that say the seasons, the way animals hibernate each year and the dependence of flowers on honey bees to complete their life cycle, is all an accident. But I’m sure I’ll be regarded as simple for saying that.
splinter65 wrote: » Atheism. The superstition that everything came from nothing.
Nobelium wrote: » I get all this, but instead Fry's reaction wasn't to complain about some of the illogical claims of some believers/religions, but instead a full on emotional and angry rant at an entity he claims he doesn't believe even exists. Not very convincing of non belief. I'd be more like "meh . . so what else it true . . .and not true"
Pauliedragon wrote: » It's called faith and it keeps a lot of people happy in their lives so let them be.
Pauliedragon wrote: » I know plenty of people who will say there's no proof of a god so it doesn't exist but ask them if there's extra terestrial life out there they'll say of course there is we can't be the only planet out of billiions that's inhabited. Why need proof of one and not the other?
smacl wrote: » Ah yeah, but water into wine though. Who wouldn't want a mate like that at a party?
sbsquarepants wrote: » Outdated - these days it would have to be flour into cocaine to impress anyone:D
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » As a man better than I once said..... if it was JUST making them happy then that would be fine. Alas so many of them can not seem to be happy until we believe it too.
Bannasidhe wrote: » For me this is the crux of my response to the thread title - why do you need to convince people god exists?
Bannasidhe wrote: » For me this is the crux of my response to the thread title - why do you need to convince people god exists? What difference does it make to a person's belief in a god if other people don't believe?
Bannasidhe wrote: » The failure of Jews to instantly convert to his 'true' interpretation led to Luther incorporating serious antisemitic view points in his theology - which was to have serious repercussions down the line in Germanic societies as we know.
robindch wrote: » The Religion as Selfish Meme theory of religion explains why propagation is such a necessary part of many religions.
Nobelium wrote: » I get their point than circumstances might not alter someone belief / non belief, but the pic isn't very convincing. They are in a barracks, in barracks uniform, with a whiteboard, under a shady palm tree.
Nobelium wrote: » Yeah but ranting at a so called God that is indifferent at best to the interests of humanity isn't actual atheism. I can't get emotionally worked up into having a hypothetical rant with something I genuinely believe doesn't even exist, and even if it turned out to . .I would actually know nothing about what is true and not about it, or what kind of entity it even was.
kneemos wrote: » If you want freewill and experience the full range of emotions you're going to have suffering.
sbsquarepants wrote: » This one always baffles me. One of the main "arguments" for the existence of a god is "something this complex surely requires a creator" So I assume this creator being quite complex and all must also have been created? "No, don't be stupid - he was just always there" :rolleyes::rolleyes:
smacl wrote: » Apart from not being a Dawkins fan, the issue I'd see with religion as a meme is that if it were true, religion would essentially spread through the masses of its own accord whereas its spread seems largely dependent on the external control mechanism of an active church hierarchy.
robindch wrote: » A proselytizing church hierarchy just provides additional vectors by which a religious meme can control and direct its own reproduction
igCorcaigh wrote: » In that sense of the word ^believe^. Sure. But that means, strive.
Nobelium wrote: » no not in that sense, in the sense you have to believe alien life has a probability of existing out there somewhere, before to commit to spending billions searching for it.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » As I pointed out to another user though when we are discussing gods and alien life we are not comparing like with like. Mainly because in terms of credibility at least we DO have some supporting evidence for the latter than we do not have with the former. US. WE are evidence life exists in our universe. So in that stake discussing OTHER possible life in the universe does not suffer from quite the same credibility issue the existence of a god does. The god claim having zero actual precedent to work with.
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » Our resident Theoretical Physicist would disagree with you there. All those extra dimensions exist in pop culture like Star Trek sure.... but apparently it is not current Scientific Thought at all. But while I am above the lay average when it comes to the subject of Physics..... that level of it is well past my pay grade. He might wander in shortly and set you to rights.
smacl wrote: » A pantheist might reasonably argue that we are also that one god
Dean Broad Mound wrote: » Perhaps it's just a matter of perspective for the angry atheists, once the blinkers (to very limited senses) come off? Atheists Found "God" or "Ultimate Reality" After Taking Psychedelic Drugs:
nozzferrahhtoo wrote: » What is interesting to me is that this is something theists are proud of rather than embarrassed by. After all what they are saying is that people move from rational atheism to faith based theism...... when their cognitive faculties have been compromised physically or chemically or emotionally in an extreme fashion.
smacl wrote: » Early religions also depended on drugs, i.e. entheogens, in order to get the full religious experience. Huxley similarly talks about achieving sacramental visions on peyote in 'The doors of perception', so drug induced religious euphoria is hardly anything new. Unless there was a permanent change to the brain chemistry, one would expect most rational atheists to return to atheism once they've finished tripping.
smacl wrote: » Unless there was a permanent change to the brain chemistry, one would expect most rational atheists to return to atheism once they've finished tripping.
Dean Broad Mound wrote: » As above, the study reported 25% were atheists before their experience, versus only 7% percent (after, and when limited/default senses are restored).