This is a nicely put argument (and of course I agree with it )
http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/all-scientists-should-be-militant-atheists
http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/all-scientists-should-be-militant-atheists
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All purple unicorns should be martians.
Sounds like the author has no clue on more sophisticated theistic/pantheistic beliefs that don't conflict with science.
The evidence that things beyond the physical exist are to me 'beyond reasonable doubt'. Very little that matters can be 'proven'. I have heard no better understanding of reality than what is found in the eastern/Indian wisdom tradition (and that includes materialist-atheism).It doesn't matter how "sophisticated" any theistic beliefs are. They are still speculation and heresay until it can be proven. .
They are still speculation and heresay until it can be proven.
It's always subjetive in essence and left for interpretation.
"To me" is all I needed to assert this was subjective in essence.The evidence that things beyond the physical exist are to me 'beyond reasonable doubt'. Very little that matters can be 'proven'. I have heard no better understanding of reality than what is found in the eastern/Indian wisdom tradition (and that includes materialist-atheism).
Only when approached with a scientific lens, which is inappropriate. Even the author states "...so many people are fixated on the relationship between science and religion: basically, there isn’t one."
When it comes to the physical workings of nature, I go wholly with whatever the current scientific consensus is. Religious behavior involves an individual or group's relationship with a given environment, not the exact nature of the environment itself. The Sun is a giant ball of plasma that has been burning for about 5 billion years, and will continue to do so for about another 5 billion years.
Sun is also a God, because She is honored worshiped as such by millions of people. (Not by me. Me and Sun... we kind of have this little understanding. I stay out of Her sight as much as possible, and She doesn't burn me.).
Hence, you are absolutely correct in this assertion:
However, I don't think of that as a negative thing, but a positive one.
More sophisticated theistic/pantheistic belief??????? More sophisticated than what????Sounds like the author has no clue on more sophisticated theistic/pantheistic beliefs that don't conflict with science.
I too agree with this. Got a quote thereThis is a nicely put argument (and of course I agree with it )
http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/all-scientists-should-be-militant-atheists
"science is an atheistic enterprise" -- Lawrence M. Krauss
I think the title is plain stupid and designed as click-bait. No thanks.
Correct.More sophisticated theistic/pantheistic belief??????? More sophisticated than what????
.......beliefs that don't conflict with science??????????????????
Do you think existence is as simple as that?With two fingers I can prove to you that 1 + 1 = 2. No one can debate this. It really is that simple.
Do you think existence is as simple as that?
It's negative when someone asserts because of their subjective beliefs they have to discriminate and segregate against other life styles. Hence, the main point of the article.
I'd prefer Niel DeGrasse Tyson's view. He is first and foremost a scientist (he has stated his religious views are agnostic, and that he even tried to edit his wiki page to say agnostic instead of atheist, but it got changed back to atheist, and he doesn't find it important enough to fight it), and he just doesn't have the energy or desire to get caught up in religious labels or bickering.