Autodidact
Intentionally Blank
To me, the YEC and the atheist say and believe the same thing--that if God existed, we would be able to see specific evidence of that in the natural world. For example, evidence that there was a flood, evidence of creatures poofing into existence fully formed, evidence that the earth is 6000 years old, evidence of the tower of Babel, etc. There are two different ways to deal with the reality that there isn't any such evidence, and the evidence is to the contrary. One is to become atheist, and the other is to become a deluded and confused liar who denies what's right in front of him or her.
A third option is to adopt a theology that allows for the atual evidence. This means you have to reject the God literally and specifically described in the Bible (or other books) in favor of a true creator God, way beyond our understanding. This requires faith that God really did create the universe and everything in it, so that, for example, if ToE is correct (which it clearly is) then God must have set everything up so that ToE would work. Such a God is not threatened by science, because anything whatsoever that science could or has discovered would have been created and provided by God. I think this is the only theology that is remotely rational.
One problem with such a theology is that it doesn't let you go very far in controlling other people's lives. You can't say, "I know that God doesn't want you to..." because of course you don't know any such thing. Any such God would be so far beyond, or maybe before, our tiny understanding, that there is no way you could know any more about what such a God wants than I do. In fact, if you think you do, you're more wrong than I am.
For that reason, I consider such a God to be irrelevant to my existence, and so I am justified in treating Him as non-existent, in an Occam razorish kind of way. I don't have a problem with people who have faith that there is such a God, as long as they don't lie to me and tell me that they know that his name is Yahweh or Thor, that he had a baby boy named Jesus or Krishna, that they know what happens when we die, or any baloney of that sort.
A third option is to adopt a theology that allows for the atual evidence. This means you have to reject the God literally and specifically described in the Bible (or other books) in favor of a true creator God, way beyond our understanding. This requires faith that God really did create the universe and everything in it, so that, for example, if ToE is correct (which it clearly is) then God must have set everything up so that ToE would work. Such a God is not threatened by science, because anything whatsoever that science could or has discovered would have been created and provided by God. I think this is the only theology that is remotely rational.
One problem with such a theology is that it doesn't let you go very far in controlling other people's lives. You can't say, "I know that God doesn't want you to..." because of course you don't know any such thing. Any such God would be so far beyond, or maybe before, our tiny understanding, that there is no way you could know any more about what such a God wants than I do. In fact, if you think you do, you're more wrong than I am.
For that reason, I consider such a God to be irrelevant to my existence, and so I am justified in treating Him as non-existent, in an Occam razorish kind of way. I don't have a problem with people who have faith that there is such a God, as long as they don't lie to me and tell me that they know that his name is Yahweh or Thor, that he had a baby boy named Jesus or Krishna, that they know what happens when we die, or any baloney of that sort.