Log In   or  Sign Up for Free
A one-of-a-kind oasis of intelligent, in-depth, productive, civil debate.
Topics are uncensored, meaning even extremely controversial viewpoints can be presented and argued for, but our Forum Rules strictly require all posters to stay on-topic and never engage in ad hominems or personal attacks.
Ormond wrote:Yes, as Kierkegaard and others have mention life is absurd making everything in it pretty much equally absurd including question concerning 'God'; although they may be additional absurdity in such question more than others. And you are right in that a lot of it is just philosophical headbutting instead of anything useful. BUT if someone here honestly comes here or any other forum asking a question whatever it may be, I believe there is a chance that might either learn the question to their question or learn something else even if the question happens to be in a thread about 'God'.You are affirming God but denying that God is a being.If God is everything everywhere (a single unified reality), then God would exist, but not as a "being" ie. something separate and distinct.
So why call it "God" someone is probably about to ask? Indeed. Why call it anything, because any word we might use will imply separation and division, such is the nature of nouns. Even the definition "everything" suggests a collection of things.
All such discussions are built upon the highly speculative almost laughable unproven assumption that the highly imperfect reasoning powers of a single half insane species only recently living in caves on one little planet in one of billions of galaxies are adequate to analyze and discuss the most fundamental nature of all reality, the scope of God proposals.
It's not this or that conclusion within the God debate that is irrational.
It's the debate itself.
Until our esteemed fellow members get that, they will be condemned to travel endlessly round and round the same little circle to no useful effect.
Given that most members here are pretty intelligent, and that this has been explained about 1,000 times and never been refuted, we can come to a new theory.
We aren't actually interested in the God subject at all. We're interested in the experience of nerdy head butting. If that is true, that would help explain why we never make any progress on the topic itself. We aren't interested in the topic, and don't want to make any progress on it, because progress might threaten the head butting game.
Fooloso4, everyone is an agnostic.Certainly not! Many of the argument on this board and elsewhere are the result of the assumption of knowledge on the part of its participants. I will restrict my comments to claims regarding transcendent knowledge, knowledge of God, and of the whole. Some do not distinguish between faith and knowledge, some call their certainty knowledge, some deductive proofs knowledge, some call what they have heard from an unimpeachable source such as God knowledge, and some call their own non-ordinary experience knowledge.
Dclements: Yes, as Kierkegaard and others have mentioned, life is absurdKierkegaard was a Christiian, he didn't consider life to be absurd, although men can make it so (by being inauthentic).
Fooloso4 wrote:We are in agreement with regard to ignorance...Maybe we're in agreement, we'll see.
Fooloso4 wrote:....but one can admit to ignorance and still hold to belief based on faith.I'm not referring to admitting ignorance, though that's a place to start. I'm talking about celebrating our ignorance on these matters, and appreciating the value of ignorance more generally. To me, the rational position to take what we actually have, our ignorance, and make the most of it, harvest as much value from it as we can.
Some agnostics are on the fence with regard to belief. I am not on the fence and that is why I prefer to use the term atheist.Yes, you're not on the fence in regards to belief. You're a believer. You believe, without proof, as a matter of faith, that you're in a position to come to a credible theory and/or decision on such matters.
I am epistemically agnostic, but 'pistemically' atheist or ‘apistemic’, that is, without ‘pistos’ or belief or faith in any claims regarding God or transcendent realities.And it's because you define yourself in terms of what you don't believe on faith, that you don't see what you do believe on faith.
Fooloso4 wrote:Renee,That's what I am talking about. Knowledge is subjective self-delusion. Maybe it's right, maybe it's wrong, but you can never be sure if your knowledge (general "you") is real or not.
Fooloso4, everyone is an agnostic.Certainly not! Many of the argument on this board and elsewhere are the result of the assumption of knowledge on the part of its participants. I will restrict my comments to claims regarding transcendent knowledge, knowledge of God, and of the whole. Some do not distinguish between faith and knowledge, some call their certainty knowledge, some deductive proofs knowledge, some call what they have heard from an unimpeachable source such as God knowledge, and some call their own non-ordinary experience knowledge.
Felix wrote:Did Kierkegaard make a mention as claimed above by Dclements?Dclements: Yes, as Kierkegaard and others have mentioned, life is absurdKierkegaard was a Christiian, he didn't consider life to be absurd, although men can make it so (by being inauthentic).
Renee: Did Kierkegaard make a mention as claimed above by Dclements?No... absurd, from the Latin absurdus: out of tune, uncouth, ridiculous.
Greta wrote:...because all discussion is either filtered through the lenses of theism and materialism, making middle ground difficult to investigate. Chances are, however, that the answers we seek surely occupy that elusive middle ground.The "middle ground" concept would seem to assume that theists and atheists are asking relevant questions, it presumes that the theism vs materialism contest is a useful paradigm. What if the problem is not so much with the competing answers but with the question?
Greta wrote:My problem with the God debate is that it "steals our minds". What if we considered the nature of reality without assuming God or gods are out there. What may we perceive? We'll never know, because all discussion is either filtered through the lenses of theism and materialism, making middle ground difficult to investigate.You're right, so let's strike the word "God" from our vocabulary because the word carries too much baggage to be useful. How about using the word "Infinite," instead? Is there such thing as an unqualified infinity? What are the implications either way? Is consciousness intrinsic or an epiphenomenon? Is there truly a beginning, or is manifested reality an eternally-becoming process? It the cosmic order the product of the Infinite eternally separating from itself and returning to itself? Can it do anything wrong?
Chances are, however, that the answers we seek surely occupy that elusive middle ground. Why should reality discussions always be framed around the polar warring sides, each as intolerant of alternative ideas as the other? Maybe there is some remarkable connection between consciousness and other dimensions, or maybe the Planck scale or our perception of time, that brings genuine spiritual aspects to reality? Maybe afterlives are real but it has nothing to do with the kinds of things claimed in scriptures?
Ormond wrote:Yes, there's no reason to believe that actual reality lies directly between our "opposing" models. It may be, as in your example, that we are looking for the colour blue when a deeper reality may be the sound of the saxophone.Greta wrote:...because all discussion is either filtered through the lenses of theism and materialism, making middle ground difficult to investigate. Chances are, however, that the answers we seek surely occupy that elusive middle ground.The "middle ground" concept would seem to assume that theists and atheists are asking relevant questions, it presumes that the theism vs materialism contest is a useful paradigm. What if the problem is not so much with the competing answers but with the question?
As example, which is bigger, the color blue or the sound of a saxophone? We could go round and round on that for centuries too, and nothing useful would come of it because the enterprise is doomed from the start by the question itself.
Ormond wrote:The fact that the God debate has been going on for so long, and we're still right where we started, suggests to me there's something fundamentally wrong with the inquiry, something deeper than just a lack of evidence or convincing arguments etc.That's politics. Any debate with a true believer must last forever because true believers must not yield as a matter of principle. So, either they win, or the debate goes on. The debates as conducted in influential circles are important socially and politically, but I agree they don't help those curious about the actual nature of reality.
Ormond wrote:If one has sufficient faith, one doesn't need beliefs. As the beliefs recede, they are replaced by a quiet open mind. If one has sufficient reason, one will see the limits of reason. As analysis recedes, it is replaced by a quiet open mind. Nobody has won, nobody has lost, because the debate has been discarded in favor of a more useful state of mind. Both parties have set aside the symbolic in favor of the real, and both are now observing the real, listening to the real. What will they discover by this method?What "faith" is here is the faith that things will be okay, that you and yours are safe. So your mind has no major problems to solve, nothing to defend or promote.
Ormond wrote:Maybe they will discover that observation doesn't have to always be a means to some other end. Maybe they will discover that observation has it's own value. Maybe they will discover in observation what they've been looking for from the beginning, maybe they will meet the need that caused them to ask the God questions in the first place. The hunger satisfied, the God inquiry melts away, being no longer needed.The presentism you promote is either only one part of the puzzle or wild animals are gurus.
This is not so esoteric as it may sound. Do you think about the God debate while having wild sex? (Shouting OMG! doesn't count :-) ) Probably not, because your need for connection, for liberation from separation, is being met.
Ormond wrote:What matters is the degree to which any of us can satisfy that fundamental hunger which defines the human condition.That hunger would seem to be 1) the need to minimise suffering and 2) to find purpose in life beyond reproduction and hedonism.
Dark Matter wrote:Yes, they are the big questions, aside from the last, which I agree doesn't make sense. It would seem to me that the largest ordered things in reality, whatever they may be, will not care about our individual actions or concerns. It would be akin to us being focused on our individual molecules and atoms.Greta wrote:My problem with the God debate is that it "steals our minds". What if we considered the nature of reality without assuming God or gods are out there. What may we perceive? We'll never know, because all discussion is either filtered through the lenses of theism and materialism, making middle ground difficult to investigate.You're right, so let's strike the word "God" from our vocabulary because the word carries too much baggage to be useful. How about using the word "Infinite," instead? Is there such thing as an unqualified infinity? What are the implications either way? Is consciousness intrinsic or an epiphenomenon? Is there truly a beginning, or is manifested reality an eternally-becoming process? It the cosmic order the product of the Infinite eternally separating from itself and returning to itself? Can it do anything wrong?
Chances are, however, that the answers we seek surely occupy that elusive middle ground. Why should reality discussions always be framed around the polar warring sides, each as intolerant of alternative ideas as the other? Maybe there is some remarkable connection between consciousness and other dimensions, or maybe the Planck scale or our perception of time, that brings genuine spiritual aspects to reality? Maybe afterlives are real but it has nothing to do with the kinds of things claimed in scriptures?
Ah, fair enough, my mistake.It seems to me what you're saying is that the experiencing of existence, and particularly the quiet-minded type of experiencing which can bring a sense of unity with the rest of reality, is something very special and meaningful to you.
Ok, yes, close enough.
And you want to give it a label which denotes that special meaningfulness, and 'God' feels appropriate to you.
No, I'm neither a theist, or an atheist. These are terms invented by people enjoying the fantasy of knowing. I'm a Fundamentalist Agnostic, a person who celebrates the only thing that is real on these topics, our ignorance.
My range of experience is my own biz, tyvm!So why should I share your personal deification of one type of experiencing over another,You shouldn't share my beliefs, or anybody else's. You should look to expand your range of experience, something entirely different than belief.
You may not know this about me, but I'm an internationally acclaimed unknown poet.I had my suspicions of course.
I had to improve on the lyrics, I could not stand there idly by.Apparently not
Fooloso4 wrote:Renee,
Fooloso4, everyone is an agnostic.Certainly not! Many of the argument on this board and elsewhere are the result of the assumption of knowledge on the part of its participants. I will restrict my comments to claims regarding transcendent knowledge, knowledge of God, and of the whole. Some do not distinguish between faith and knowledge, some call their certainty knowledge, some deductive proofs knowledge, some call what they have heard from an unimpeachable source such as God knowledge, and some call their own non-ordinary experience knowledge.
Gertie wrote:I prefer to call myself an Atheist as a way of signifying that I don't accept the god claims I've come across. I think that's pretty common. On boards like this 'atheist' can carry the baggage of some assumptions about it being a positive knowledge claim ....Atheism is a positive knowledge claim, that apparently no atheist can understand and certainly not admit to, because then they'd have to defend their claim, and the whole point of ideological atheism is to remain on the attack. As has been explained about 17,000 times already...
Gertie wrote:My range of experience is my own biz, tyvm!You asked a question, and I answered it.
Ormond wrote:Atheism is a positive knowledge claim, that apparently no atheist can understand and certainly not admit to, because then they'd have to defend their claim, and the whole point of ideological atheism is to remain on the attack. As has been explained about 17,000 times already...That is incorrect. Atheism is a non-participation in a religious belief system. Atheism literally means 'without theism', just as asymptomatic means 'without symptom'. Atheists simply don't participate in the belief system of theists. Therefore, atheism is not a positive knowledge claim. Those who claim that God does not exist are not engaging in atheism, they are engaging in the same fallacy as those who claim God does exist.
How is God Involved in Evolution?
by Joe P. Provenzano, Ron D. Morgan, and Dan R. Provenzano
August 2024
Mark Victor Hansen, Relentless: Wisdom Behind the Incomparable Chicken Soup for the Soul
by Mitzi Perdue
February 2023
Rediscovering the Wisdom of Human Nature: How Civilization Destroys Happiness
by Chet Shupe
March 2023
I admit that after reading it for the third time ,[…]
Deciding not to contribute to the infrastructu[…]
I did not mean to imply that spirituality and […]