Spirit of Light
Be who ever you want
I can not tell you what you need to look for. The search within can only be done by youI'm all ears.
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I can not tell you what you need to look for. The search within can only be done by youI'm all ears.
Is it worth either of our time for me to ask how you came to assume that "mystical" experiences necessarily come from God?Yes.
Your pride in irrationality is noted as well.Your judgmental opinion is duly noted.
I can not tell you what you need to look for. The search within can only be done by you
I think it is because he expects us to take the first step toward him in faith. It is brilliant, really.
By people thinking the roles are reversed, that the Creator of the universe is required to reveal himself to you, unbelievers set themselves up as god’s.
You mean to say, God must be physical, in order to have existence? Only that which the five senses can register has objective existence?God can't qualify as real, as having objective existence, just by being a subjective experience.
I believe in the reality of God. But I do not believe God exists independently and external to the world. Anthropomorphizing the Divine, imagining things in concrete-literal terms is a device of the mind which is relying on conceptualizations in the absence of experience. Once experience occurs, what the mind had imagined about God previously, tends to become a bit more porous and less with hard sharp defining lines like that.The Psychology Department can take them as examples of religious experiences. However, they'll be no more evidence of an objectively real God than dreams are.
I'm dealing with the claim that God is real, has objective existence, exists independently in the world external to the self.
That all experiences are registering in the brain, does not mean that what one experiences originates in the brain. Saying, it's all just in your head, would not be a useful understanding. As for religious experiences, I would not classify them as "emotional states". Emotional states are quite secondary, if they are even excited at all in a religious experience.If you're not making a such a claim, then should we wish we could talk about religious experiences.
Yes, a range of emotional states from ecstasy to awe to peace and unity. None of that is evidence of a real being, but all of it is evidence for certain traits of the human brain.
If happiness is real, then certainly we should be able to find a happiness tree growing happiness fruits somewhere?If God is real, then a video will be a good start.
Oh, but you're not looking for evidence of God. You're looking for evidence that a mythology, and symbolic language to try to talk about God, is scientifically factual. Isn't that a little like saying, unless science can confirm the idea I have had that the solar system that has the earth at the center, then the sun is not real?It would then raise the question whether the real God in question is a god or not, because, so far as I'm aware, there's no definition of 'godness', the real quality a real god would have and a real superscientist who could make universes, raise the dead &c would lack.
Yet, if we get rid of reading religious texts as science manuals, and allow them to be symbolic, metaphoric, poetic expressions of something wholly beyond definitions and conceptualizations, then we do have evidence of what people report commonly, and that which can in fact be measured as registering in the brain, just like any experience can with unique and distinct characteristics, then it's not just imaginary. Again, confirming one's ideas about God, is not the goal.But first, the video.
Otherwise "god" exists only as a concept or thing imagined in individual brains ─ a notion supported by all the examinable evidence.
As an atheist, I have no evidence that ANY god does "not" exist.
No matter how much we think and experience, the logic is she has to show herself to Know she exist not believe she does.
Completely untrue. A basic understanding of biology (and logic) reveals the fact that everyone must have a mother and father - even if one never met either.
Well, the five senses as supplemented by what our instruments can tell us ─ but yes, that's what 'objective existence' means.You mean to say, God must be physical, in order to have existence? Only that which the five senses can register has objective existence?
I define "real" as existing in the world external to the self, which is the same thing as "nature", the same thing as "the realm of the physical sciences". Things that are real have "objective existence".I believe in the reality of God.
How is that different to God existing only as something conceptual / imagined in individual brains?But I do not believe God exists independently and external to the world. Anthropomorphizing the Divine, imagining things in concrete-literal terms is a device of the mind which is relying on conceptualizations in the absence of experience. Once experience occurs, what the mind had imagined about God previously, tends to become a bit more porous and less with hard sharp defining lines like that.
God-as-emotional-experience fits perfectly with only-conceptual/imaginary, no?Experiences of "God" are not about confirming one's concepts of God, proving the mind's previous ideas about God as an "entity", a finite creature separate from other creatures roaming about somewhere like an elusive Bigfoot.
Since we find supernatural beings in the lore and culture of all human societies, it seems reasonable to think that we've evolved to think in particular ways that encourage us to devise such beings ─ like our curiosity, our discomfort when we don't have an explanation to questions about nature, society, luck, birth, death ─ and to benefit from such ideas because they enhance tribal identity, solidarity and cooperative action (along with eg having a common language, culture / customs, stories and heroes).But they are certainly evidence that something objectively real is going on, even if the idea of discovering Bigfoot God will be an impossible task, since it's looking for something that doesn't exist.
Then God can only exist as something purely conceptual / imaginary, no?God does not exist as a separate entity, like a human person can be understood as.
I don't understand. What do you mean by 'dual' and 'nondual' here?But God can be thought of that way, as a device of the mind using dualist concepts as a bridge, or a mental device to try to approach the nondual. Dualistic language falls apart, creates conceptual contradictions, paradoxes, when trying to use that to speak of the nondual in literal, bounded, defining terms.
No. To be real, God must exist independently in the external world, reality. Otherwise the only thing God can be is purely conceptual / imaginary. That's what 'real' means.Oh, but you're not looking for evidence of God. You're looking for evidence that a mythology, and symbolic language to try to talk about God, is scientifically factual.
No, the sun will remain real. It's the accurate description of its relation to the earth (which is also real) that would be missing.Isn't that a little like saying, unless science can confirm the idea I have had that the solar system that has the earth at the center, then the sun is not real?
On the contrary, dreams will satisfy your definition. (And all over the world, folklore is full of dreamlore.)Yet, if we get rid of reading religious texts as science manuals, and allow them to be symbolic, metaphoric, poetic expressions of something wholly beyond definitions and conceptualizations, then we do have evidence of what people report commonly, and that which can in fact be measured as registering in the brain, just like any experience can with unique and distinct characteristics, then it's not just imaginary.
I arrived at the question by realizing I didn't know what I was talking about when I used the word 'god' ─ and then that no one else did either. (So I was an igtheist before I'd even heard of that word.)Again, confirming one's ideas about God, is not the goal.
This is a "common sense" fallacy. Doesn't work with god.
The point is the child is genuinely ignorant of anything but his own feelings towards a person.
Indeed, H sap sap has evolved to perceive the external world in particular ways, with names, categories, abstractions from those, and so on.
But there are no authenticated sightings of God in that world. God appears to exist only as a concept / thing imagined in individual brains, no?
But if it has objective existence, then the camera, video or other suitable detector / recorder, will have something to tell us about what's out there. Have you any videos of God to show us?
This question of the definition of "truth" keeps coming up. I favor the correspondence view ─ truth is a quality of statements, and a statement is true to the extent that it corresponds with / accurately reflects objective reality. Is that what you mean by "truth" above? If so, what is the statement, exactly?
Again wrong. Biological fact is NOT a "common sense" fallacy. It has nothing to do with feelings. That is atheists domain.
Completely untrue. A basic understanding of biology (and logic) reveals the fact that everyone must have a mother and father - even if one never met either.
You missed my point. Whether god exists or not is irrelevant.
I'm speaking from a child's ignorance of not knowing he has a parent he has not met.
A parent should reveal him or herself to their child if the latter has never met the parent before.
Why "shouldn't" god show himself?
You are confusing understanding with rejecting. I reject your point!
Reality is the logical starting point of analysis, not epistemology. To wit:
Again, I reject the premise of your point. Reality is not determined by the ignorance of a child or anyone else.
I child who does not know if he has parents needs to be educated in biology and logic. The question of this thread, 'Why do God/s "hide" from disbelievers' presupposes the existence of God. It is as relevant as anything is. Indeed, more so.
I think it is because he expects us to take the first step toward him in faith. It is brilliant, really.
By people thinking the roles are reversed, that the Creator of the universe is required to reveal himself to you, unbelievers set themselves up as god’s.
That's your morality. Again, morality is not the beginning of analysis; reality is.
The twisted 'not' in your question implies should - compliance with your moral standards - is the default that one has to argue against AND convince you. This puts you in the position to judge God - to be a god to God, which of course, you are not.
However, there is a reason. There is an answer to your question. The Bible clearly states it is to humble (humiliate) the wise (wise in their own mind).
A basic problem you have is that you are making an argument to someone who has experience.
You're back tracking.
My original point was in order for feelings and experiences to be real
You-you-you...
You're making this personal. It never started out to be personal.
Back tracking is EXACTLY what you are doing by restating your point over and over again. I am re-establishing the scope of the discussion.
By the way-we both have experiences....
since I'm not making this personal, I'd just focus on why god can't reveal himself.