PureX
Veteran Member
The problem, of course, is in not understanding that the rock is a representation. What it represents is REAL. Even though as a rock, it is not what it represents. If you cannot understand this, then you have nothing of value to say about theism. If a theist does not understand this, then he has nothing of value to say about theism, either. This is why so many atheists and religious theists simply talk past each other, as nauseum, neither of them understanding anything of what the other is saying. Tere can be no understanding, or meaningful discourse until both parties recognize that the term "God", and all the imagery and religiosity that goes with it, is a representation. Because only then can anyone understand or discuss what is being represented, and why it matters.Krishnamurti usd a good example of how religious ideas become valuable. He said if a person goes out and finds an ordinary rock, and then brings it inside and sets it on a table, and then the person worships that rock every day for years on end, at some point that rock becomes very valuable. The value isn't inherent, it is what the devotee has assigned to it. To anyone else it's just an ordinary rock. Objectively it is an ordinary rock. To the devotee it has an incredible amount of value.
Now imagine this devotee goes out and tries to convince people that this rock has value.
Some do and some don't. Most don't at first, but then do later on in life, as they become more aware of the choice. And anyway it doesn't matter. Because we are both our conscious and unconscious selves, combined. And ideas come to us from all kinds of places and sources. We accept or reject them as they resonate or don't resonate with who we are and how we see the world at the time. Theism is just an existential paradigm through which billions of humans choose to sift through and structure their worldview. There are other paradigms, of course, but theism is a VERY common one.Theists adopt ideas for their social experiences and by the presence of these ideas they have been given significance and value, yet the person did not assign it deliberately or consciously.
Some can and some can't, and it doesn't really matter, anyway. Theists are no more or less cognizant or self-determined than anyone else is. We are all both a conscious and unconscious conglomeration of needs, desires, and circumstances.The theist knows they believe, they know it feels good to believe, but they can't explain how they arrived at a place in life that they decided a God exists.
Sorry, but that's complete BS. We all have a 'spiritual' nature regardless of how reasonable or fantastic we are. The fact that you think the human spirit is unreasoned and unreal is stupid and insulting. And it's a bias that you really ought to reconsider.What gets transcended is being rooted in reality and reason. The "spiritual" state means rejecting reason and becoming absorbed in fantasy.
It can be. But so can 'scientism'. We humans can run and hide from reality in all sorts of ways. In fact, it's ultimately inevitable if we look at ourselves through the eyes of an absolutist.Religion offers a way for humans to withdraw into an illusion and believe there is meaning and significance to life that isn't factually apparent.
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