Dark Matter wrote:Spectrum wrote:
You will note I have supported most of my views with thorough arguments and relevant references.
It has been pointed out to you by myself and others that your arguments fail.
Like most scientist re scientific theories, I will be very happy and waiting for someone to prove my philosophical argument wrong. If there is, that would be an intellectual and philosophical improvement over an argument [mine] so it should be appreciated.
Many have pointed out and express their views on my argument but none of them are sound nor convincing.
If there is any convincing point I would have accepted it, keep on arguing on it or raised a new thread to focus on it, so far there is none.
I am just expressing my views and I do not expect any one to accept or agree. Most of the points I have presented are clues, hints and are tip-of-icebergs of various deeper issues. Preferably, one should not accept these ideas until they have done extensive research to verify the claims I have presented.
All that's fine, but what you present is a poorly formulated straw man that avoids the questions I asked above: 'Why is there something rather than nothing?' 'Why is the universe intelligible?' 'What must be in order for what is to be as it is?' and 'What is the mysterious power behind the things that exist? Given man's innate desire to have answers for these questions, it is dehumanizing to argue that it 'doesn't matter,' 'that it's a matter of probabilities,' 'I don't know,' or say that people who try to answer these kinds of questions suffer from some kind of psychological angst.
I did not say it does not matter, I am for all the above questions.
What I have resisted to the above is when theists stand on the edges of the known and take a leap of faith into unknown and impossible to insist God is the ultimate of those 'somethings.' As I had argued this is due to the very instinctual impulsive primal reason.
Clearly, I am not the first person perceive the dehumanizing nature of atheism.
The term 'atheism' was first coined sometime during the 16th century as a derogatory term to resist the truths of reality, i.e. there is no God, as such a proposition is a psychological threat to theists.
This instinctive impulse has a certain survival value and is common between people in tribes of of "us versus them" which give rise to the common racist, sexist, etc. condemnations of the "other" that had lead to terrible evils [genocides] and violence committed on innocents.
What is of concern to humanity with these theistic related evils and violence is the ultimate ground is 'God' [God said so!] where God is an impossibility and illusory.
The instinctual dehumanization and condemnation of non-theists was recorded long ago in the Bible;
- The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God. They are corrupt, they have done abominable works, there is none that doeth good. -Psalm 14:1
The basis for all these condemnations of non-theists is psychological to counter a perceived threat against the psychological security of theists.
Note my call is always; to resolve the issues of all theistic related evils, terror, and violence, there is a need to acknowledge 'God is an impossibility' and that the basis of theism is psychological, so there is a need to divert the focus into the psychological.
-- Updated Thu Nov 09, 2017 9:33 pm to add the following --
[b]Dark Matter[/b] wrote:As with Bacon, it is obvious to me that without God, humans have no way to distinguish themselves from beasts or to rise above their baser natures. I don't ask you or anyone else to agree with this; only to accept that I do. Of course, my reasons go also go much, much deeper, but if skeptics shut themselves off to something as basic as this, what's the point of talking about the deep things of God?
I agree with the above to some degree BUT ...;
Note my signature below, I believe in the past [something is better than nothing] and even the present [to some extent] and given the psychological state of the majority of human beings, religion and theism was & is a critical necessity.
In the past, theism was an optimal choice given the pros [especially psychological] outweighs the cons [evils, terror, oppression, violence, etc.].
Humanity has since progressed very much since the emergence of the Abrahamic 'gods' and evidently the cons of religion are beginning to turn and outweighing the pros. The extreme is when extremists get access to easily and cheaply available WMDs when these evil prone theists could exterminate the human species. Based on God's promise it is a win-win for them regardless as ultimately they will be rewarded by God in Paradise, more so if they kill all non-believers.
Now that we have argued 'God is an Impossibility', why persist in such an illusory belief that continue to give moral support to extremists to commit terrible evils in the name of God. It is critical the extremists must be convinced their God is an impossibility and illusory to defang their beliefs - thus no more theistic based evils - and this has to start with the majority of the theists [moral supporters].
-- Updated Thu Nov 09, 2017 11:46 pm to add the following --
Eduk wrote:
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Which actually rather supports Spectrum's psychological angst theory. He is saying you are suffering from cognitive dissonance because you don't know something and therefore your brain is giving you an answer and rewarding you for doing so. This is a well understood neurological process that all humans suffer from to greater or lesser extent.
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I agree with all the points you raised in the above post and what is highlighted above is critical to my thesis.
The point here is all humans has the potential to face that existential related cognitive dissonance, i.e. the DOOM - Despair Of Own Mortality (inevitable]. For the major of theists, this potential is activated
subliminally as a severe
crisis & dilemma and theism provide immediate relief to soothe the dissonance.
This existential crisis is manifested subliminally in a range of degrees depending on the psychological state of the theists. This impulse is very subliminal and that is why most theists cannot nail the main reason why they believe in a God [illusory and impossible] except that it really works to soothe some psychological angst and discomforts.
Not-a-theist. Religion is a critical necessity for humanity now, but not the FUTURE.