I wouldn't want to live if God didn't exist.
You should do something about that then.
I wouldn't want to live if God didn't exist.
I wouldn't want to live if God didn't exist.
meanwhile certain other stalwart personalities cannot bear the notion of existing in the presence of god .....It's that kind of commentary I find most disturbing as it does little more than to demonstrate affront for all living things and a penchant for mankind's self-destruction over ancient myths and superstitions.
How incredibly sad the state of affairs for "modern" civilization.
I will pray to Zeus for your forgiveness.
meanwhile certain other stalwart personalities cannot bear the notion of existing in the presence of god .....
Since there is no God I'd be living the same way I do since I was born, free of mythology running my life!
Did you ever read the OT? You know, flood the planet, kill almost all life ... if anything, they're pretty much acting like God!Considering that historically, Christians have been some of the most savage killers and destroyers on the planet for 2000 years, they tend to act as if God doesn't exist. If JC ever does come back, he's going to lose his lunch when he sees what some people have done in his name.:bugeye:
I will pray to Zeus for your forgiveness.
Zeus would probably prefer a sacrifice or at least a libation of wine.
Good question!
Most theists would say #1.
Let us then raise a glass and toast the salvation of Jessie, if only that we save her from herself, if nothing else.
Being moral is nature to human nature because we evolved through millions of years of living together in small groups. We are instinctively aware and concerned about the welfare of the group and those in it. We were this way clear back in prehistory before we even believed in gods, when we just thought everything had a "spirit."question for theists
if you knew beyond reasonable doubt that God doesnt exist,
1- would you steal,lie,cheat,kill etc
or
2-would you be honest,good,nice to everyone
Apparently, most theists are imbeciles.
I don't believe in God (wasn't ever brought up with it, never accepted it, kind of toyed with it a few times), and I generally think that this is an advantage for me, but not for the usual reasons that the irritating kind of atheists provide (it's illogical, stupid, oppressive, blah blah blah) since I don't subscribe to a secular humanist ethical system either.
What I believe it allows me to do is be the source of my own meaning in life, without needing to live up to a static set of standards provided for by a traditional religious attitude. Not to say that I -invent- my values, but rather that I am always searching for them, always seeking to make myself more than I am, and always encouraging others to do the same. Of course, my notion of "better" is entirely my own.
But I also recognize the pitfalls and hazards of not having your values decided for you as a child
(not to say I wasn't given any, but they weren't very strong; I love my parents but they are mediocre people in the area of ideological dedication), and those include a tendency toward nihilism, depression, misanthropy, elitism, etc... basically a whole list of anti-social tendencies. I definitely ascribe these tendencies toward not having been brought up with a definite value system, be it religious or secular, and not having said system to define myself in opposition to when I got older. I am still young, but I don't ever foresee myself developing a definable ideology in the future.