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To quote a song by Tool.
"My Gods will becomes me.
When he speaks, he speaks through me.
He has needs like I do.
We both want to **** you."
That verse seems to place a very signicant value on the subjectivity of god. Is that what you hoped to point out by quoting it?
How does beauty exist in nature, apart from our cognitive experience of it? And how does our cognitive experience if it happen without our faith in it as an existential ideal? The answers are that it doesn't. Because beauty is not a physical phenomena, it's a metaphysical phenomena. It's a cognitive experience OF a physical phenomena. It's not a physical phenomena, by itself.Really?
I have to disagree with you: ALL THESE THINGS exist already in nature, if you sit quietly and don't impose "Oh, we have to have a Big Guy God creating and ruling over this, to give it meaning."
Every human culture that has ever been observed has notions of love, beauty, justice, compassion, perfection, etc. And, careful and open observation of animals suggests that other creatures also have notions of many of these concepts as well.
Really: no love, beauty, justice, notions of perfection, etc., etc., without the Abrahamic Omnimax creator deity? Bull.
If you think that's really true, please demonstrate it.
And sometimes, perhaps, from the 'divine spirit' within the human source?When I read scripture I am always struck by the humanity that I find in there. Sometimes it displays the best of humanity, sometimes the worst. But for me there can be no doubt that it comes from a human source.
Honestly, I don't even know what that means. But I have seen nothing in any scripture that could not have come from humans. I see humanity in these documents, not "divintiy" (whatever that is).And sometimes, perhaps, from the 'divine spirit' within the human source?
My point would be that it all comes from we humans. But that doesn't negate the occasional manifestation of divine wisdom and/or insight.Honestly, I don't even know what that means. But I have seen nothing in any scripture that could not have come from humans. I see humanity in these documents, not "divintiy" (whatever that is).
Thank you for the clarification, because in post #5, you said:How does beauty exist in nature, apart from our cognitive experience of it? And how does our cognitive experience if it happen without our faith in it as an existential ideal? The answers are that it doesn't. Because beauty is not a physical phenomena, it's a metaphysical phenomena. It's a cognitive experience OF a physical phenomena. It's not a physical phenomena, by itself.
So are the cognitive experiences of love, and of justice, and of perfection, and of infinity/eternity, and of "God".
Also, I did not state nor imply that we cannot experience any of these metaphysical phenomena unless we believe in or experience the metaphysical phenomena we call "God". I'm simply pointing out that they are the same kind of phenomena. And that they are not "physics". They are cognitive human experiences OF physics.They are a 'second order of reality'.
Apart from faith-based experience, there is no evidence of "God" at all. But then apart from faith-based experience, there no evidence of love, or of beauty, or of justice, or of perfection, or of any number of such metaphysical phenomena.
I hear men (& women & others) say stuff attributed to a god or gods.My position is that it was truly recorded to be both God's and man's words.
I hear men (& women & others) say stuff attributed to a god or gods.
But I never hear it directly from the horse's mouth.
All words are 'mans words'. Not even the most devout christians or muslims will dare claim their god wrote anything itself. It's always 'divinely inspired' or 'dictated by some magical creature' which, even if accepted as true in either case(fat chance), still leaves a flesh and blood man doing the writing (and interpreting).
In a sense, yes.Here's one for you, LaVey was an autotheist so would that make the Satanic Bible a religious text that actually was written by God?
If you "can't hear Him," why would you pick the Bible over any other religion/sacred texts? Or any "sacred" texts at all?And yet, other people do.
But if you can't "hear Him", you can always refer to the Bible.
That certainly is a good question.If you "can't hear Him," why would you pick the Bible over any other religion/sacred texts? Or any "sacred" texts at all?
Why should ANYONE accept ANY words attributed to God/s, that inevitably come through other people?
Indeed, why should anyone accept any words that seem to be coming to them directly from God?
Various religions -- as well as numerous religious individuals -- make claims that they are passing along intelligible messages from their god(s). e.g. "The scriptures of our religion contain the word of God." Or, "God spoke to me and said...." But are there any reasonable grounds, apart from faith, for believing that these messages are actually "god's word"? If so, what are those grounds? Or are there more reasonable grounds, apart from faith, for believing these messages are actually "man's word"? If so, what are those grounds?
Someone is at odds with reality.And yet, other people do.
But if you can't "hear Him", you can always refer to the Bible.
Someone is at odds with reality.
The one who hears something?
Or the one who doesn't hear something?