PROOF that GOD Exists......

afrawfraw

Well-Known Member
Indeed many group early pagans into the religion pile. Not so. For many years, seasons, stars, planets, and elements were recorded to teach future generations. They were welcome to question the winter solstice, for example. But claiming crazy ass unheard of shit, and then saying, "NO! No questions. It just is." is another game.
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
Is magic real?

Do reindeer fly?

Can santa jump down a smoke shoot?

when did wizards really exist?

what date were the dragons killed?

If gods real, why aren't any of those lol...............................

Seems pretty plain and simple to me.
If one makes up definitions of gods and then accuses others of believing in that definition, again, there is your Subjective Illusion that you call Reality. You assume we all buy it. You wish to assume, with the other self described Atheists, that these oxymoronic juxtapositions are not just self serving pretzel logic. It's a twisty form of rhetoric that echo the other religions. Yes, to me Atheism is another religion of the outer Subjective. It seeks to deny what is proposed, in a rather zelot portrayal of passion. Not religion nor science have anything to do with the Inner Objective Self.
 

Dr.J20

Well-Known Member
Why do we question everything? It's in our nature.
I'm not so sure i agree with this one,...western philosophy has tended to encourage questioning...from the socratic method's basis in questioning to descartes duality via extreme skepticism, western philosophy has approached understanding through question-and-answer rhetoric, but that is not necessary nor is it inherently natural; children are curious, but they don't necessarily question things the way you're talking about.

i see approaching this by constructing the false opposition "unnatural vs. natural" as unproductive and specious. You jokingly discard plastic as unnatural (via sarcasm) but if you trace its processing through the various human manipulations, you find it came from petrol which was produced by the compression of certain geological features over millions of years.--side note, would you consider plastic natural if it came from hemp oil?-- is man not part of nature? are not his efforts, executed within the scope of nature, not subject to and thus part of nature? So basically what I'm saying is this separation of man from and above nature is the result of some very close minded, repressive, imperialists.

be easy
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
Indeed many group early pagans into the religion pile. Not so. For many years, seasons, stars, planets, and elements were recorded to teach future generations. They were welcome to question the winter solstice, for example. But claiming crazy ass unheard of shit, and then saying, "NO! No questions. It just is." is another game.
You are claiming many changes of subject here. And still with the unknowable and broad generalizations. I'm really doubting that you have ever looked into it.

So, here's a little story. I got to thinking that there must be some evolution to organized religion. Since Al Gore and I invented the internet :) I got busy. Very, very busy. You have no idea where the most modest search terms will lead. But, I had super fast computers and got past all the hatred of the muslins vs hindu and all the opinions of modern religiousness, with dismay. I was looking for when a belief in One God began. And, I am not religious. I know the Inner Objective. I have time on my hands, what can I say. I searched for many months and got too exposed to hate. But, I found there is no time when there was not a sure acceptance of One God. I can go back as far a 2500 BC when the Aryans invaded the Indus, also in the three rivers area, now China. The sad mistranslation of Heaven for God, in Imperial Chinese is an anti-wog expression of the British.

I turned to anthropology and the study of oral traditions. Guess what? The concept of the Sky God above all other spirits is as old as there is old. We cannot say, that religion is unnatural, unless humans are unnatural.

In fact, the animism, paganism, Baalism, and worse, including all -isms, up to today, are imposed. The natural state seems to be an assumption of Oneness with Self and nature at all levels.
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
I'm not so sure i agree with this one,...western philosophy has tended to encourage questioning...from the socratic method's basis in questioning to descartes duality via extreme skepticism, western philosophy has approached understanding through question-and-answer rhetoric, but that is not necessary nor is it inherently natural; children are curious, but they don't necessarily question things the way you're talking about.

i see approaching this by constructing the false opposition "unnatural vs. natural" as unproductive and specious. You jokingly discard plastic as unnatural (via sarcasm) but if you trace its processing through the various human manipulations, you find it came from petrol which was produced by the compression of certain geological features over millions of years.--side note, would you consider plastic natural if it came from hemp oil?-- is man not part of nature? are not his efforts, executed within the scope of nature, not subject to and thus part of nature? So basically what I'm saying is this separation of man from and above nature is the result of some very close minded, repressive, imperialists.

be easy
I will agree with the one narrow point that religion being natural or unnatural seems to a be a non-sequitor. I'm not understanding the point, or seeing what difference it makes.
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
the late George Carlin said Maybe the earth wants plastic and thats why it created us
“God made mud.
God got lonesome.
So God said to some of the mud, "Sit up!"
"See all I've made," said God, "the hills, the sea, the
sky, the stars."
And I was some of the mud that got to sit up and look
around.
Lucky me, lucky mud.
I, mud, sat up and saw what a nice job God had done.
Nice going, God.
Nobody but you could have done it, God! I certainly
couldn't have.
I feel very unimportant compared to You.
The only way I can feel the least bit important is to
think of all the mud that didn't even get to sit up and
look around.
I got so much, and most mud got so little.
Thank you for the honor!
Now mud lies down again and goes to sleep.
What memories for mud to have!
What interesting other kinds of sitting-up mud I met!
I loved everything I saw!
Good night.
I will go to heaven now.
I can hardly wait...
To find out for certain what my wampeter was...
And who was in my karass...
And all the good things our karass did for you.
Amen.”
― Kurt Vonnegut, Kurt Vonnegut's Cat's Cradle
 

Dr.J20

Well-Known Member
The natural state seems to be an assumption of Oneness with Self and nature at all levels.
just to take up this point a little further: Take a look at Jacques Lacan's theorization of the mirror stage of development: the point in your existence when you recognize yourself as a distinct physiological entity: for his purposes, distinct from your mother with whom you, until reaching this stage, believed yourself coterminous. Hence, until you make this recognition, your "natural" state is one which functions from a presumption of connectedness, not difference.
 

Dr.J20

Well-Known Member
I will agree with the one narrow point that religion being natural or unnatural seems to a be a non-sequitor. I'm not understanding the point, or seeing what difference it makes.
point being, you can't argue that the natural state is irreligious or areligious; the response i was making was to someone who had said that it makes sense to be an atheist because this is your "natural" state; thats contentious at best. if religion isn't "natural" then how did it ever start? I mean, it must have some roots in the natural because it comes from man who assimilated knowledge from his empirical experiences of and in the natural. And, therefore, discounting religion on the basis that it is "unnatural" would seem wrongheaded to me.
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
I will agree with the one narrow point that religion being natural or unnatural seems to a be a non-sequitor. I'm not understanding the point, or seeing what difference it makes.
It was claimed to be unnatural, we are discussing that. I certainly am not makng a point about it or saying it makes a difference.

It is a typical claim that I took the trouble to refute for myself. And it has to do with the nature vs nurture question. And if there can be a natural, yet, un-indoctrinated state of man. Obviously, no, there cannot be.
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
point being, you can't argue that the natural state is irreligious or areligious; the response i was making was to someone who had said that it makes sense to be an atheist because this is your "natural" state; thats contentious at best. if religion isn't "natural" then how did it ever start? I mean, it must have some roots in the natural because it comes from man who assimilated knowledge from his empirical experiences of and in the natural. And, therefore, discounting religion on the basis that it is "unnatural" would seem wrongheaded to me.
Yes, and I was agreeing with that. ;)
 

Heisenberg

Well-Known Member
It was claimed to be unnatural, we are discussing that. I certainly am not makng a point about it or saying it makes a difference.

It is a typical claim that I took the trouble to refute for myself. And it has to do with the nature vs nurture question. And if there can be a natural, yet, un-indoctrinated state of man. Obviously, no, there cannot be.
I believe atheism is the natural state in the sense that we are born atheist, sort of a default. If you haven't heard the theist's argument, then you are an 'innocent' atheist. But I believe this is a problem of semantics, as atheism is a confusing word that shouldn't exist as a title.
 

Dr.J20

Well-Known Member
I believe atheism is the natural state in the sense that we are born atheist, sort of a default. If you haven't heard the theist's argument, then you are an 'innocent' atheist. But I believe this is a problem of semantics, as atheism is a confusing word that shouldn't exist as a title.
you might be interested in some of the anthropological work done on the "blank slate" theory of our natural infancy, as Jonathan Haidt mentions in his ted talk on the root of our moral psychology...the ted talk touches the discussion going on in these forums so i've added a link for everyone interested

www.ted.com/talks/jonathan_haidt_on_the_moral_mind.html
 

drive

Active Member
I believe atheism is the natural state in the sense that we are born atheist, sort of a default. If you haven't heard the theist's argument, then you are an 'innocent' atheist. But I believe this is a problem of semantics, as atheism is a confusing word that shouldn't exist as a title.
Perhaps....
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
I believe atheism is the natural state in the sense that we are born atheist, sort of a default. If you haven't heard the theist's argument, then you are an 'innocent' atheist. But I believe this is a problem of semantics, as atheism is a confusing word that shouldn't exist as a title.
And perhaps not. There is no default. An imprint of some kind may be necessary for survival. And of course, for protection, something must be done. We can turn to thought experiments.

Two babies. No three. One is the "control" if such a term is possible for this. One is raised by technicians, who are carefully trained to act as Mom and Dad, but no language is taught or spoken.

Two is cared for in secret, to him, and in a neutral environment, but alone.

Three, is cared for in secret, to him, and in a natural environment, out in the open, exposed somewhat to the elements and with animal babies, birds, reptiles, etc.

The kids are raised until 7 years when they are all taught a synthetic language (no human clues there) and quizzed in it.

Well, the point of all this is to show that it is impossible to design an experiment like this. Even in our minds, it can never be truly double blind.
 

mindphuk

Well-Known Member
My point is exactly this: if religion, spirituality, metaphysics, and theology all require belief in order for them to be true--a point which i would contend, as well I would contend the conflating of these as not really fair but anyway-- and you thereby relegate these as less valuable than science and math, then where do you place art? I mean, you don't have to believe in art at all, nor does it have to be true, is it therefore exempt from the system of hierarchical valuation in which you place math and science above religion, metaphysics, theology, and spirituality?
IMO, art is a non-sequitur or red herring. Art does not even pretend to answer questions. You may as well say, what about furniture? Philosophy -- whether theological, scientific, political, metaphysical, or whatever-- is an attempt to answer certain questions about the nature of reality or aspects of our life. Out of all of the philosophies man has come up with, science is the only one that has actually given us answers that can be confirmed and has been demonstrated to be accurate time and again. Art is not a philosophy so does not belong in the category of question answering and therefore is a weak attempt to distract from the actual discussion.
 

Zaehet Strife

Well-Known Member
IMO, art is a non-sequitur or red herring. Art does not even pretend to answer questions. You may as well say, what about furniture? Philosophy -- whether theological, scientific, political, metaphysical, or whatever-- is an attempt to answer certain questions about the nature of reality or aspects of our life. Out of all of the philosophies man has come up with, science is the only one that has actually given us answers that can be confirmed and has been demonstrated to be accurate time and again. Art is not a philosophy so does not belong in the category of question answering and therefore is a weak attempt to distract from the actual discussion.
I was working on that... but you said it much better than i. Great job, this is amazing literature ^ and a great idea . Thanks man.
 
Top