nativeastral
fluffy future
Ooh another new word. Excellent
Are holders of this world view called "scientists"?
s.
no they're the philosophers who cannot function or string two words together without reference to the g#d of science
Ooh another new word. Excellent
Are holders of this world view called "scientists"?
s.
no they're the philosophers who cannot function or string two words together without reference to the g#d of science![]()
Hello again PoO,Of course we must remember that the words are only labels or symbols to communicate as concisely and accurately as we are able. I use atheism because it is accurate enough to convey what I feel I am. I do not believe that the gods, deities or the expression of supernatural cause and effect is anything more than a creation of the human imagination. And I do that based on what I have observed. But I did not set out to reach that conclusion, rather that conclusion made itself so powerful in its evidence that I had no choice but accept it.
Atheists on the whole don't form gangs of 'like minds' to proseltyse their thinking. A handful do make a decent living off it and some use it negatively too. As a support for racist eugenic thinking for example. But most atheists wish religion would just go away quietly without them noticing.
The religion is to my mind irrelevant. No matter the religion when it gets down to the individual it is precisely that, individual.
Each and every person that believes in supernatural causes and effects and that they are the result of some being or pseudo-human sense of justice and good has simply not looked honestly at all the available critical evidence to the contrary. And it is vast.
And as an anthropologist I find it difficult to fathom that you have not seen a fairly potent body of it.
Yet as long as you cling tightly to that you see as precious and good you wont see it. You are incapable of being neutral when you have belief.
No, not for everybody, but as a mass effect it is divisive, prejudiced and counter to being able to meet the needs of the global village we have evolved.
We all have several lenses we use to make sense of things but the religious one will always be that bit different for it is a deliberate distortion of reality. It creates a fuzzy image that, like seeing faces in a cloud or a pattern in the tea leaves in a cup, are actually meaningless.
Wishful thinking imposed on randomness. There are now mountains of observational tests that all show there is no supernatural causation to any of the claims of those that profess them.
A long look at all belief throws up many traces time and time again. So much so that I can only conclude it a creation of the imagination.
Survival within and with the group.
Evolution clearly defines how we evolved. Animistic societies are sometimes looked at through a rose-tinted, yearning nostalgia. Where tribes of isolated peoples still practice animism, and we observe, we see very many ridiculous ideas, and a few genuinely founded ones that are real aid to social cohesion and survival. The well founded and the unfounded are all twisted together. Inseparable. And modern belief systems are still just as confused.
Atheists of my variety love, are charitable, compassionate and far more liberal (not in the American pejorative tense), than someone who has given belief little or no thought.
They both carry a lens through which to perceive a crafted vision. Not a real one. That lens can be removed, and I have.
What unbending faith in science do I have? I judge each bit of scientific evidence on its own merit. I do not have a wholesale faith in any science to ultimately define anything and sincerely hope I never will have.
And when you do look for evidence you see nothing but delusion, self-delusion and too often fraud.
Their results are unambiguous in that not one has produced a result that does not fit into the idea that there is no god/supernatural phenomena to be observed.
Its for all the world like you cannot accept I have no belief. Of course I have my views formed only by what little I learn. I cannot have a view on something I have no information about. But I have plenty of information about belief and have tested it in a life long rolling project.
It does not make me 'special', I still love, cherish and value all my relationships with people. I hurt and bleed and yearn and need just like everybody else. You do not need belief to be human.
I went yesterday to the Lake Shrine Temple, and interfaith temple in LA that has gardens dedicated to Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism as well as some of Ghandi's ashes enshrined. It was beautiful and peaceful.
as Snoopy says,
as Snoopy calls it,
as Snoopy argues.
The cocktail of cause, manifestation and meaning when that individual practices their belief always means that not two people share exactly the same belief for exactly the same reasons.
You are incapable of being neutral when you have belief.
In fact my belief is religious belief does far more harm than good.
No, not for everybody, but as a mass effect it is divisive, prejudiced and counter to being able to meet the needs of the global village we have evolved.
So much so that I can only conclude it a creation of the imagination.
They both carry a lens through which to perceive a crafted vision. Not a real one. That lens can be removed, and I have.
Belief is the constant application of a mental illusion to the human interface with reality. That blurred lens again.
Science can be and is used to study the arts, humanities and social sciences. But I am not a scientist. That religion falls under the remit of humanities in our secular educational establishments actually confirms quite succinctly all I say.
I have put every religious/spiritual/supernatural claim through the sieve of many observations and found them all leading back to having their cause and manifestation solely in the human imagination.
Science is the best tool we have for deciding if something is real or not real.
I do not 'intuit' there is no god, spirit world, afterlife, angels etc...... I just see that there is not a shred of evidence for them.
Psychology, neurology, anthropology, indeed very many ologies can do and have studied belief. Their results are unambiguous in that not one has produced a result that does not fit into the idea that there is no god/supernatural phenomena to be observed.
This last paragraph makes me feel so misunderstood. Its for all the world like you cannot accept I have no belief.
Of course I have my views formed only by what little I learn.
I am a human being. Humans are important to me. Humans 'do' religion but everybody has their own version. I wanted to know what religion is why people invest in it and so I looked. I cannot help what I find. Being an atheist like me is not supplanting one lens with another. It is, as I have said all along, about throwing that lens away altogether. It does not make me 'special', I still love, cherish and value all my relationships with people. I hurt and bleed and yearn and need just like everybody else.
You do not need belief to be human.
I am just a curious man trying to know what is or is not real. Materially real. All my life I have been surrounded by the literature, conversation and paraphernalia of belief.
Yes but no but yes but no but.... I use every method of thinking I find useful including subjectivity and objectivity. My learning is from the same sources available to anyone here. My experience of and indulgence in learning is not the same as anyone else and the same is true for every one of us.
But our brains did not evolve to give life to the gods!!
Oh, I just can't cope with all these references, PoO!
...especially when it's not me that said this stuff
s.
I guess what I'm saying is, I would be more likely to belief your lack of any belief system if you felt no need to defend yourself.
.............
This is evidence of your belief system. Have you polled "each and every person" and can you say that you understand exactly what goes on inside them? Can you see how that is an extraordinary claim and illogical? How it is self-deceptive and dishonest? You make sweeping claims like this that are just like what religious people say, with different group affiliation............
Looks like the same thread that I derailed before, or was convicted thereof.path_of_one said:"Smorgasbord" Religion, Being of a Faith, and the Personal Journey
I should thank you for having that inconsistent logic in me, that suspension of reason, evidence, and logic, as you prefer to call it. I slept well and enjoyed the breakfast and conversation. I find that it is by similar suspensions of logic, as you prefer to call it, that I have seen a bit of interaction with some omni-present, interacting force. Things like: confession, being honest when it was to a disadvantage, hiring someone from the side of the road, travelling somewhere even when threatened, giving to someone, rebuking an undesired behavior. You surely have faith, Tao, and demonstrated it to me. That does not mean we believe or know the same, or have the same experiences. It means that you have the faith and placed the faith that is valuable to me. Thank you.inuk said:Yet they will continue to use such an illogical argument no matter how hard you attempt to point out its inconsistent logic. And that is what faith is. A suspension of reason, evidence and logic.
I see that many here like the idea of a non-community, because community involves an interaction and a joint ownership. Blue Man Group interaction. Am I wrong? I am purposely derailing your thread, and I am purposely not derailing our thread. Or is this the site owner’s thread and a moderator’s garden? Well now, just whose courtyard are we really in… in this life? If being something is important, then I would recommend being honest, with faith, and mercy. I discussed a method to take the wishy-washy out of those words. If you want community, I submit that: "Smorgasbord" relationships, Faith in Being, and a Communal Journey... is a good path.path_of_one said:The thing is... I wish sometimes I could just be something. I like the idea of a community.
I've been reflecting a lot on that question of "what am I?" religiously. Personally, I don't think it matters (in terms of salvation or what have you), but as an anthropologist that looks at issues of identity and community a lot, I can't help but engage in self-reflection.
I've been thinking about what I hear a lot from various people- first, this discussion of "Cafeteria" religion and the "wishy-washy" folks. I agree with many that religions and traditions should not be just appropriated by anyone without careful study, and should not be used to deceive others or missionize to others. But I suppose what I wonder about, is what to do with people like me who have long been on a personal spiritual journey, and later find that what they believe and experience resonates in some ways with this, other ways with that, religion.
I was raised a Christian, but an odd sort of Christian, with little or no emphasis on doctrine and the basis of faith in a personal relationship to the Divine (essentially, Christian mysticism). The other big parts of my conditioning were cultivating compassion and service for others, social justice, and experiencing God through nature- God as in and through the universe, the earth, and her creatures.
Over time, I tried in various ways to connect to a sense of religious community. As a kid, my friends were mostly Baptist. So I tried good 'ole conservative Baptist church for several years in elementary and junior high, and it didn't fit well with my own experience or beliefs at all. I tried the non-denom Christian mega-churches in junior high through part of college, which not only didn't fit with my experience or beliefs, it didn't fit with my personality or sensitivity to crowds and noise, either. I became interested in other cultures and religions early on, and starting around 9 or 10 began reading what I could about indigenous shamanic religions and Taoism- I think it always struck a chord but I didn't have the courage to explore until high school. Once I got into college, I minored in comparative religious studies and majored in anthropology- soaking up all I could.
What I found was interesting. The beliefs I'd developed on my own were quite Buddhist. Except that I had this personal mystical relationship with God (which I experience as both this infinitely incomprehensible Being) and Christ (which I experience as a personal comforter, teacher, and yes- deliverer). Most other stuff in Christianity made little sense to me, and most of my ideas about God, Satan, and whatnot seemed more Jewish than anything else. And I found modern Druidry, which is not a religion for me at all, but more a community to learn more about mysticism and shamanism as it relates to Earth-based spirituality. I'm intuitively shamanic- it seems to be part of my baseline personality type and is part of my life as far back as I can remember- so this nature-based mystical practice resonates too. But I can't get my head around polytheism.
So... I'm a smorgasbord, right? But an informed smorgasbord? I go to an Episcopal church, think Buddhist ideas, do Druidic ritual and meditation in grove of trees, and believe the grace of God manifested itself in the form of Christ (at least, it did to me). Sigh.
The thing is... I wish sometimes I could just be something. I like the idea of a community. It just doesn't seem to work very well. I can't rid myself of cognitive dissonance enough to be mainline Christian. I can't give up Christ enough to be Pagan or Jewish. And I can't give up the experience of God enough to be Buddhist. The thing is, I am profoundly committed to a sense of communal service and humanity becoming more spiritually aware. And I feel the type of support one would get from retreats, classes, etc. would be very helpful, but the non-religious Druidic ones are too far away (UK, anyone?) and Christian ones make me feel like an imposter, to be honest. Maybe the Buddhists would welcome me. Though they're far away too (but not half a world away!).
Long story longer, I'm interested to hear about how you think about your own religious identity. Do you feel like you found "home" and believe what others believe, do what they do, etc.? Or do you feel slightly out of place? What value you do see in being of a particular faith, and how does it relate to your spiritual journey personally? How does a sense of community relate to your vision of "the other shore" toward which you're floating/rowing/being pulled?
If you feel out of place in your religion, because you have beliefs or practices or experiences that don't quite mesh with "orthodox" or "mainstream" views- how do you view that? How do you handle it? Do you see that as imperfections in you- that is, you need to change to what the community norms dictate? Or do you see that as imperfections in the community? Or just differences arising from varied experience, conditioning, and so forth?
I often feel a bit like an imposter in Christianity. I sincerely love Christ and follow his teachings. I experience him personally. But beyond that, I have not much in common. So I sometimes feel like I'm something else in Christian clothing when I go to a Bible study or retreat. At church, it doesn't matter much as it is a liturgical church and the point is common prayer. But otherwise, the more personal groupings of Christians, I feel like I'm either rocking the boat or being reserved. Reserved is fine, but to most Christians reservedness is taken for passive agreement, and then I feel like I'm lying by default.
So... thoughts? What do you or would you do in a similar situation?
Science is the measure of something. Something finite. Whereas nothing is infinite. Math reports that there is an infinite quantity of nothing, but science can't measure it. So it seems like science and religion both report that people are something.We are nothing, pretending to be something.
inuk is in good company with you on this sentiment. Does a religion refer to a textbook, or those who read the textbook or document, or to those who claim to follow a textbook or document? I have no fear of being manipulated by a textbook or document, but the people who claim to follow one can sometimes be a little scary.IMO all religions have more to do with control of the masses than they do with liberation/enlightenment of the individual.
IMO all religions have more to do with control of the masses than they do with liberation/enlightenment of the individual.
So one must be a cut a paste artist at the buffet of belief which we find ourselves in.
I don't believe in adoration or reverence of spiritual figures such as teachers and prophets and such as the best teacher is a finger pointing the way and becomes transparent so as to allow a better view of the Divine they are talking about.
We are nothing, pretending to be something.
IMO all religions have more to do with control of the masses than they do with liberation/enlightenment of the individual.
So one must be a cut a paste artist at the buffet of belief which we find ourselves in.
I don't believe in adoration or reverence of spiritual figures such as teachers and prophets and such as the best teacher is a finger pointing the way and becomes transparent so as to allow a better view of the Divine they are talking about.
We are nothing, pretending to be something.
Man's main task in life is to give birth to himself, to become what he potentially is. -- Erich Fromm
Cogito cogito ergo cogito sum (I think that I think, therefore I think that I am.) -- Ambrose Bierce, The Devil's Dictionary
I think it was . . . actually . . . me.![]()