Steven Hawkins considered one of the few people in or beyond Eintstein's league. Author of the Breif History of Time.
The author of A brief history of time was Stephen Hawking.
Steven Hawkins considered one of the few people in or beyond Eintstein's league. Author of the Breif History of Time.
spiritual_spy said:Ever here of somthing called the crusades? or the old testament sluaghters? or the israel-palestine wars? What about WW2 in the pacific? What about the catholic-protestant conflicts? You know what the main cuase of all these were? Some form of a god. Athesim may have had its backlashes but god has cuased more bloodshed than any other idealology. Billions have died and are still dying as a result of god.
TW Scott said:An atheist has to believe there is nothing more than what is here. He has to believe that this moments is all we have. They actually have to believe in so much more than I do.
Leo Volont said:What a silly thread.
TheHeretic said:Without god christians have no reason to live, everything the believed to be true would be false and the shock of the matter would just devistate them, so they will defend their religion to their death because they are to afraid to believe their whole reason for existance is false. This is just by opinion so dont crucify me!
staples disconnected said:...Religious people limit their beliefs because of a faith based belief that does little to explain anything. Atheists have no restrictions on what they believe. It is really a sweet thing
Diogenes' Dog said:Religious belief itself is a choice, it's not restrictive unless you let yourself be restricted by it. Atheists who confine themselves to materialist goals, values and explanations would find themselves similarly restricted.
staples disconnected said:Yes that is true, but I also stand by what I say. Many of my religious friends preclude even considering some of the ideas I bring up. It is simply a matter that they don't think about them because, for instance, god created man, therefore the point in studying evolution is moot. I admit that I am making a blanket generalisation, but I think it sets parameters on what people believe, and it therefore limits them. My opinion, disagree if you will.
staples disconnected said:By materialist goals/values are you meaning actual materialism? There was a thread a little while back that debated two forms of materialism. If you do in fact mean materialism, I find it interesting that America, being one of the most religious nations in the world, is also the most materialistically goal oriented and value driven. What does that say? I don't know, I'd need to think about it more first. I myself find little solace in buying crap that I don't need.
As for materialist explanations, I'll take what I can get, but part of my beliefs is knowing that I can't know everything. Science after all cannot give us all the answers, and by nature it would be impossible to know everything anyway. However, I will not use 'god' as a stop gap to explain anything. Mystery, accepting that you can't know/don't know something, that's good stuff.
Surely, you must realize how sadly mistaken that statement is?ggazoo said:Many skeptics think that Christianity is for people who do not want to think. Christians are often characterized as people who believe whatever they are told by the church. Faith is thought of as something that one believes blindly - with no supporting evidence. However, this viewpoint does not represent biblical Christianity. In contrast, to what many skeptics believe, the Bible challenges its readers to test it and come to a reasonable conclusion. There are those Christians who believe blindly, and certain cults (such as Mormonism) teach that truth can be known through prayer. These ideas are heretical to biblical Christianity and often lead to deception, making such individuals susceptible to conversion by the cults.
the Bible challenges its readers to test it and come to a reasonable conclusion.
Our current path is leading to chaos.
superluminal said:pick a bible topic to be tested and reasonably concluded upon and start a thread? Why are all of the theists so afraid of this???
Diogenes' Dog said:I have to agree up to a point SD - many prominent doctrinal religions discourage honest rational inquiry which would threaten their dogmatic beliefs. Creationism is a case in point! All religions then get tarred with the same brush, yet there are many very undogmatic ones e.g. Quakers, Unitarians, most Buddhists, Taoists etc. My plea would be to not to lump them all together.
Diogenes' Dog said:I'm probably stretching the strict philosophical definition of materialism (as in physicalism) into meaning also "pursuit of material values". You raise an interesting connection between that and religion in the US, which I cannot answer - are they one and the same populations?
staples disconnected said:With a little reflection I think it's got to do with the national myth, the American Dream- Manifest Destiny- combined with extreme individualisation and the cultivation of homogenous signifiers of status in material possessions. Definitely something worth thinking about further though.
superluminal said:So ggazoo, why don't you or some other xians/theists pick a bible topic to be tested and reasonably concluded upon and start a thread? Why are all of the theists so afraid of this???
In order to debate something like that I would use the Bible as grounds for my argument