But with the right attitude it can on the road to understanding ─ the postulating of testable hypotheses, for example.
Yeah, you should be a climate scientist or expand on evolution theory. Where speculating is truth if you postulate it right...
Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
But with the right attitude it can on the road to understanding ─ the postulating of testable hypotheses, for example.
In the thread Why is God Invisible and Where does he Live? the idea that God lived in another dimension was proposed.
That idea has been around since the latter 19th century, following popular explanations of the maths of Bernhard Rieman (d. 1866) of n-spaces. By 1884 Edwin Abbott had successfully published Flatland, a story of Mr Square who lives in a two-dimensional universe encountering Lord Sphere, a 3D being. This was the age of Spiritualism and astral planes &c and god as a multidimensional being was discussed even more generally as a vindication of belief &c.
I don't think that works, but I'm interested to hear other views.
My point is that people have no reason to worship what they understand. If god is simply a multidimensional being then that brings him into the realm of physics and under the microscope (or over the telescope, or as the case may require).
He may be a superscientist, but who wants to worship a superscientist? Respect, fine, but worship? No, the thing you do with a superscientist is ask her for her knowledge, and if she won't tell, then to find out by all available means.
Note how no one does that with gods. I don't know a single religion with a department dedicated to the science ─ the nuts and bolts ─ of performing miracles. If I thought the supernatural was out there, I'd be investigating it very hard and very thoroughly, to use that knowledge for humanity and the sheer joy of knowing (aware that commerce and defense (=attack) wouldn't be far behind).
No, to worship something, it seems to me you have to think it's beyond understanding of this kind. It can do magic, it can make worlds just by wishing, it can answer my impossible prayers. The moment you truly understand it is the moment all the magic drains away and we're back in the real world.
Perhaps it's an example of the 'no man is a hero to his valet' principle.
Fear what? I worship Kali. In the end, She devours us all and I look forward to this.
Yeah, you should be a climate scientist or expand on evolution theory. Where speculating is truth if you postulate it right...
Its called Kaballah.I don't know a single religion with a department dedicated to the science ─ the nuts and bolts ─ of performing miracles.
Just in case u did not know. This person thinks that the academic world and UN are secretly Allied with the Catholic Church in a giant conspiracy organized by the anti-Christ to obscure the true God and His word.If you think those things are based on speculation you got no idea how science works or at least you're not aware of the hard evidence behind those two.
wurt?Just in case u did not know. This person thinks that the academic world and UN are secretly Allied with the Catholic Church in a giant conspiracy organized by the anti-Christ to obscure the true God and His word.
Yep. Kemosloby has said as much several times earlier.wurt?
Cristians in general, not just Catholic Church, and I am not surprised.This person thinks that the academic world and UN are secretly Allied with the Catholic Church in a giant conspiracy ..
Since the Bible tells us that our reality is a created one, it should be obvious that God doesn't reside in our reality. It is kind of like when a programmer creates a virtual game world. He is not in it, but can interact with his creation. His creation may be able to interact in a limited way with their programmer, depending on the setup and programming.In the thread Why is God Invisible and Where does he Live? the idea that God lived in another dimension was proposed.
That idea has been around since the latter 19th century, following popular explanations of the maths of Bernhard Rieman (d. 1866) of n-spaces. By 1884 Edwin Abbott had successfully published Flatland, a story of Mr Square who lives in a two-dimensional universe encountering Lord Sphere, a 3D being. This was the age of Spiritualism and astral planes &c and god as a multidimensional being was discussed even more generally as a vindication of belief &c.
I don't think that works, but I'm interested to hear other views.
My point is that people have no reason to worship what they understand. If god is simply a multidimensional being then that brings him into the realm of physics and under the microscope (or over the telescope, or as the case may require).
He may be a superscientist, but who wants to worship a superscientist? Respect, fine, but worship? No, the thing you do with a superscientist is ask her for her knowledge, and if she won't tell, then to find out by all available means.
Note how no one does that with gods. I don't know a single religion with a department dedicated to the science ─ the nuts and bolts ─ of performing miracles. If I thought the supernatural was out there, I'd be investigating it very hard and very thoroughly, to use that knowledge for humanity and the sheer joy of knowing (aware that commerce and defense (=attack) wouldn't be far behind).
No, to worship something, it seems to me you have to think it's beyond understanding of this kind. It can do magic, it can make worlds just by wishing, it can answer my impossible prayers. The moment you truly understand it is the moment all the magic drains away and we're back in the real world.
Perhaps it's an example of the 'no man is a hero to his valet' principle.
Note how no one does that with gods. I don't know a single religion with a department dedicated to the science ─ the nuts and bolts ─ of performing miracles. If I thought the supernatural was out there, I'd be investigating it very hard and very thoroughly, to use that knowledge for humanity and the sheer joy of knowing (aware that commerce and defense (=attack) wouldn't be far behind).
If you think those things are based on speculation you got no idea how science works or at least you're not aware of the hard evidence behind those two.
When you are following a faith/religion, you don't question.[/i]
That is, I think, there's such a thing as being in a religious mindset, which doesn't include analysis of the assumptions, only the working out of those assumptions.
And fair enough, though there are many paths to atheism.That is how I view atheism...a conclusion after you evaluate your beliefs.
Yes, grief is one of the faces of love.My grandmother died a little over two years ago, and it rocked my world as an atheist, then. I couldn't make sense of loss and grief without faith, back then, so I soon went back to it. Now that I've healed from her death, I'm again looking at it objectively and coming back to that same conclusion towards atheism.
basically Jnana is the yoga of realizing that through intellectual understanding.
Jnana yoga - Wikipedia
Maybe not a department, but a scriptural acknowledgement that when science has proven something to be true that contradicts religion, then science trumps religion.
I think you are selling Dharma a bit, short, @blü 2 . It is not nearly as similar to Abrahamism as you seem to believe.
Mainly, it is capable of pragmatic as opposed to dogmatic sustentation, and it does not really need belief proper as a core element of the practice.
Harsh! How was I to know you don't like testable hypotheses?Yeah, you should be a climate scientist or expand on evolution theory. Where speculating is truth if you postulate it right...
In the thread Why is God Invisible and Where does he Live? the idea that God lived in another dimension was proposed.
That idea has been around since the latter 19th century, following popular explanations of the maths of Bernhard Rieman (d. 1866) of n-spaces. By 1884 Edwin Abbott had successfully published Flatland, a story of Mr Square who lives in a two-dimensional universe encountering Lord Sphere, a 3D being. This was the age of Spiritualism and astral planes &c and god as a multidimensional being was discussed even more generally as a vindication of belief &c.
I don't think that works, but I'm interested to hear other views.
My point is that people have no reason to worship what they understand. If god is simply a multidimensional being then that brings him into the realm of physics and under the microscope (or over the telescope, or as the case may require).
He may be a superscientist, but who wants to worship a superscientist? Respect, fine, but worship? No, the thing you do with a superscientist is ask her for her knowledge, and if she won't tell, then to find out by all available means.
Note how no one does that with gods. I don't know a single religion with a department dedicated to the science ─ the nuts and bolts ─ of performing miracles. If I thought the supernatural was out there, I'd be investigating it very hard and very thoroughly, to use that knowledge for humanity and the sheer joy of knowing (aware that commerce and defense (=attack) wouldn't be far behind).
No, to worship something, it seems to me you have to think it's beyond understanding of this kind. It can do magic, it can make worlds just by wishing, it can answer my impossible prayers. The moment you truly understand it is the moment all the magic drains away and we're back in the real world.
Perhaps it's an example of the 'no man is a hero to his valet' principle.