Ah! That's why they call god "Father."The existence of god being apparent to me.
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Ah! That's why they call god "Father."The existence of god being apparent to me.
But it could be a mother too, or a second dad in some states.Ah! That's why they call god "Father."
The fact that a creator is not necessary isn't a compelling reason for me to stop believing in god. I understand that it is a compelling reason for you. I have no arguments against that conclusion and no desire to debate it.
If there happened to be a creator that was not divine, however, this would most definitely be a compelling reason for me to stop believing in god. Which is why I stated that in my first post.
To say, "It wasn't god, it just happened on its own." is nowhere near as good an argument as "It wasn't god, it was those guys..." I'm sure you can at least agree with that.
But that's not the way rational people operate.
And that was not the question, so I don't see why I should or would.You haven't presented a compelling reason to believe in a god to begin with.
You're right. I don't.You don't just start believing in anything and everything and stop when you find a reason to,
I disagree. You believe something when you let that belief determine your actions. There can be no more objective evidence of a belief's existence and influence. Critical evaluation is a huge variable from one person to the next, from one field to the next.you don't believe in anything and only start believing when you have good, rational, critically-evaluated evidence that it's actually so.
And what should I do with subjective evidence? Throw it out?If you have no objective evidence, you shouldn't believe in the first place.
I answered this for someone else earlier. In my fallible, human, subjective and mostly arbitrary opinion the first thing that a being must do to demonstrate to me personally that it is divine is to express a desire to be considered as divine.What do you mean by "divine" and how would you demonstrate divinity?
Except me, apparently.See, this is another massive, massive problem that's shared by pretty much all theists.
No, what I did was provide a clear avenue to a rational adoption of atheism. This is the point of the thread. For theists to provide their criteria for adopting atheism, and atheists to provide their criteria for adopting theism. That's what I did.They simply define their deities into existence.
All I did was answer the question as directed.They claim there's a god,
I used the innocuous term divine to mean worthy of worship and added the additional qualifier that it created life on Earth. I don't expect everyone to view divinity in the same way as I do, but this is what I'm talking about when I say god. Thus, this is what I am talking about when I answer the question.then they assign all kinds of characteristics, wants and desires to this supposed deity without ever demonstrating that it's so.
If there is some other definition for divine besides 'of deity' then I am using it improperly and welcome your terminology correction which I assume will be forthcoming.How do you know that your deity is "divine"?
I weighed the options and chose the one I liked the most.How did you come by this information?
I made it up.Where did you get this data?
I haven't.How did you verify it?
I can do both.In reality, it's just what makes you feel good, you're not really concerned if it's true or not, so long as you get that emotional buzz.
My way of thinking is that everyone fills in the blank with anything.I'm saying you can fill in the blank with anything, using your way of thinking.
Yeah. It WORKS for everything."It wasn't god, it was unicorns!" "It wasn't god, it was leprechauns!" It works for anything.
We are both interested in both.Whereas you're interested in getting an emotional high from your beliefs, whether they're true or not, I'm interested in the truth.
Not knowing something creates a DUTY to make something up. First, you observe a phenomena, then you formulate a hypothesis. THEN you test it. Unless you use some other scientific method I'm unaware of.If we don't know how something happened, then we should admit we don't know. Not knowing is not license to just make something up.
What would it take for you to change your mind?
For Non-Theists what would it take for you to start believing in God?
Does it really even matter, one way or the other?
And what should I do with subjective evidence? Throw it out?
I answered this for someone else earlier. In my fallible, human, subjective and mostly arbitrary opinion the first thing that a being must do to demonstrate to me personally that it is divine is to express a desire to be considered as divine.
I think it would be incredibly rude to treat a higher being as a god just because it is advanced and created us. That's a bit presumptuous. So if said creator does not have any designs on a worship/worshipee relationship, then the question of whether or not there is a god is immediately settled as a resounding, "NO." in my opinion.
No, what I did was provide a clear avenue to a rational adoption of atheism. This is the point of the thread. For theists to provide their criteria for adopting atheism, and atheists to provide their criteria for adopting theism. That's what I did.
If there is some other definition for divine besides 'of deity' then I am using it improperly and welcome your terminology correction which I assume will be forthcoming.
Not knowing something creates a DUTY to make something up. First, you observe a phenomena, then you formulate a hypothesis. THEN you test it. Unless you use some other scientific method I'm unaware of.
What would it take for you to change your mind?
For Theists what it would it take for you to stop believing in God?
For Non-Theists what would it take for you to start believing in God?
Have to make this clear. I'm speaking only of the biblical god of the three monotheistic religions. In order to believe in this entity I would need to see an amputee ( a devout Christian, Muslim, or Jew, doesn't matter which) miraculously grow an arm back. Or a leg.
I would need hard phyisical evidence for god. Something akin to the world's functions working in accordance to the philogophy of god. For example if prayer had a meaningful impact on events or if we could communicate with god in a measurable manner.What would it take for you to change your mind?
For Theists what it would it take for you to stop believing in God?
For Non-Theists what would it take for you to start believing in God?
If the entire experience of life was completely inaccessible to me any longer.What would it take for you to change your mind?
For Theists what it would it take for you to stop believing in God?
For Non-Theists what would it take for you to start believing in God?
People have experiences they cannot immediately explain and they arbitrarily assign a cause to it because it makes them feel good. That cause is almost always the same deity that's culturally popular where they grew up, that they had past experience with, etc. You just don't have people who, say, grew up Christian in a primarily Christian area, have an experience and declare that it was caused by Zeus. It just doesn't happen.
But theists who have these experiences seem to, almost universally, refuse to examine them critically. They don't want to look at their experiences objectively and see if their experience has other explanations, or points to other causes. They don't want to because what they believe appeals to them emotionally.
And please tell me when you ever had any kind of demonstrable direct experience with any god where it has done that to you. .... An individual or a being or a thing is real or unreal on it's own, regardless of what anyone says about it. I don't care what the Bible says about the Christian God, I don't care what the Qu'ran says about the Muslim god, I don't care what the Vedas say about the Hindu gods, I care if those gods actually exist in reality.
You, apparently, don't.
I would argue that no one, regardless of deity status, deserves worship, reverence or respect if they do not earn it. I don't care what kind of power they have, I don't care what kind of threats they make, respect is earned, not simply granted.
...you're not willing, at least from what you say, to question your beliefs in divinity. You want them to be true. You have an emotional attachment to them being true. You want people to prove to you that a god is not divine when you have never demonstrated that any gods are divine in the first place, nor have you really defined what divinity actually is.
That's circular though. A deity is divine and anything divine is a deity.
Absolutely and unequivocally not. Do you want the police, if they can't solve a crime, to just make up a criminal and arrest someone off the street because they don't like not knowing who actually did it? That's ridiculous. It has to be put to a rigorous test, it has to be objectively evaluated by multiple people in multiple disciplines and outlooks, it can't just be within your own particular echo chamber, where everyone already has the same beliefs you do. That's something theists are virtually never willing to do. They have an experience, they arbitrarily assign a god as a cause. They never test to find out if that god is actually the cause, they just presuppose that they're right because they want to be right.
Presupposition is not confirmation.
Instead of having 100 1-sentence responses, I'm trying to cut this down to only the major points as I see them. If there's something specific you want me to address that I cut, please let me know.
For Theists what it would it take for you to stop believing in God?
It would have to be demonstrated to me in a compelling way that life on Earth was not the result of a divine creator. This is probably only possible if life on Earth was the result of a non-divine creator.
For Non-Theists what would it take for you to start believing in God?
For Theists what it would it take for you to stop believing in God?
It would have to be demonstrated to me in a compelling way that life on Earth was not the result of a divine creator. This is probably only possible if life on Earth was the result of a non-divine creator.
Cephus said:It would take actual, objective, demonstrable evidence that a god was actually real. Nothing less would do.
How would you know the God of Abraham was responsible?
That's an excellent, excellent question, one I ask all the time. How do people know that their particular god does things? How do they know their particular god created the universe? How do they know their particular god is responsible for miracles? Where does this information come from and how is it attained?
Apparently, it's just blind faith and wild guesses.
The lack of being able to objectively validate something is what makes it subjective, but that doesn't necessarily make it wrong. Do you take issue with most every kind of subjective experience and opinion, or only the ones that are of a religious or spiritual nature?
I don't know that you can blame people for having their minds automatically go to what they have experience with; that's pretty much common to all of us, including yourself, I'd assume. You see something that one culture calls a swan, but you do not know of that word because you are not of that culture... you're not going to suddenly call it a swan. I mean, I suppose there is the absolute smallest possibility that you happen to come up with that word, but, in reality, you're going to call it something similar to what your culture would... like 'water-bird'.
If someone has an experience that leads them to believe the Divine intervened, but within that experience they do not have something like a vision in which the Divine told them "Hey, Zeus here!" or something, they are most likely going to logically assume the deity is a god or goddess that they are most familiar with. In your example, they would assume the Abrahamic god, yes. People assume what they are familiar with, usually. Obviously not always, as many people spend years learning about all different kinds of paths and points of view so that they can choose to go with the path that they feel makes the most sense. But those who stick closer to what they know, I don't think you should blame or look down upon. When you watch an apple fall from a tree, you assume it is gravity at work, without taking the time to actually 'test' and 'validate' that it is gravity, because you are familiar with the concept of gravity and know how it works. Never mind that perhaps a child was in the tree and threw the apple to the ground.
What of those theists that do not feel comforted by their belief in a certain religion or spirituality? What of those who feel nervous, worried, or just generally unhappy about the existence of something divine, though that doesn't change their actual belief? Not all people who have religious or spiritual beliefs get an emotional "high" of comfort and happiness and rainbows and peace. Some, sure, but not all. But just the same, some atheists don't want to examine their opinions critically, because they are happy believing what they believe. It's not a trait limited to theists.
And many, many theists do look at other possible explanations or other causes, and many do realize that something could have been caused by other means, other than divine intervention. But, the fact that other causes exist does not make divine intervention less possible. Plenty of theists shrug things off as coincidence on a quite regular basis, and only consider things 'signs' after a continuous string of coincidences. And no, that doesn't mean they aren't coincidences, of course, but it also certainly doesn't mean that they are.
How many 'critically analyzing' people would look at the apple that was thrown from the tree and stop, move closer, and try to examine if there was another cause? If they couldn't see or hear the child, and the apple wasn't thrown at an extremely fast speed or anything, I expect very few would take the time to question if it really was gravity, if any would at all.
Why would you assume he doesn't care? More importantly, would you assume that a follower of Christianity doesn't care if the Abrahamic god actually exists? I think said follower certainly would. But, just like you cannot prove beyond anyone's doubt that he doesn't, they cannot prove beyond anyone's doubt that he does. That's not to say they can't have their own evidence that is convincing enough for them, and that's not to say you don't have your own evidence that is convincing enough for you.
And a square is a rectangle but a rectangle is not always a square. So? That doesn't make it inaccurate.
I don't think he was trying to argue that it was confirmation; I don't think anyone was trying to argue that. But I, for one, certainly do want the police to make assumptions and make up theories -- that's how they solve crimes. I don't want them to make them up without having some kind of evidence they feel is sufficient, and I want them to continue to collect evidence and be willing to change their assumptions if the evidence starts pointing the other way, but I certainly want them to come up with assumptions and theories along the way. Otherwise nothing would get accomplished.
And there's a difference between objective and subjective evidence that I believe you are ignoring by trying to use such an analogy. Fingerprints and such are very black-and-white. Religious/spiritual evidence is not.
What of love? Can I assume that my husband husband loves me, even though I cannot quantifiably and critically test and prove that? Am I wrong to think love exists, even though I can't quantifiably and critically prove that beyond anyone's doubt?
not always
You are trying to hijack the thread, is what you are doing.
The question does not require me to elaborate on why I believe in the first place, and only asks what would make me stop. So that's all I provided. If you want to know why I believe in the first place, perhaps you can peruse the thousands of threads on that topic that I may or may not have answered. Or, depending on your patience for such things, make your own thread with that as a topic and stack it on the thousands that already exist and hold your breath until I arrive to answer it.