anonymous66 wrote: ↑November 16th, 2022, 8:12 am
Sy Borg wrote: ↑November 15th, 2022, 6:11 pm
anonymous66 wrote: ↑November 15th, 2022, 11:17 am
Sy Borg wrote: ↑November 14th, 2022, 11:38 pm
The most compelling argument for atheism is the utter, utter silliness of superstitious religious belief. There's precious little difference between disbelieving Abrahamic myths and disbelieving myths of Santa Claus. There's shouldn't even be a name for it. It's simply a refusal to believe in nonsense just because some people vouch for it.
There are many people who don't buy into superstitious religious belief and yet are not atheists. Again a false dichotomy - you're acting as if there are only 2 options - superstitious religious belief or atheism.
Not at all. It's the incoherence of your worldview that created a false dichotomy in your mind. Theists, ie. those who believe that Iron Age Abrahamic mythology is true, are inherently superstitious by definition. There are two broad angles - realism and superstition - although how heavily theists lean into the superstition will obviously vary, which appeared to be your point. However, there are many options regarding reality that are not measured against Abrahamic mythology. Last time I analysed the possibilities, I came up with eleven of them. I presume you didn't read that.
Okay - so we both agree that there are more possibilities than just atheism or superstitious religious belief. Deism comes to mind as a counterexample.
Here are the possibilities (copied and pasted with additions). Feel free to add.
1. There is no deity. The universe is self-organising, though perhaps some entities will evolve/develop in the far future that we today would perceive as godlike. [Spinozan, although he said the universe
was God]
2. Deities are subjectively real, but not [ontologically]. Belief in the agency of nature was passed down thousands of generations of human ancestors, who believed that powerful natural entities had agency. Thus, deities are subjectively real as a potential in our brain configuration, inherited from a long line of superstitious ancestors, but they don't exist ontologically.
3. There are synergies in reality, as described in the Tao, Buddhism and other schemas. These, as per #2, might be be interpreted as a deity or deities.
4. The Sun has a kind of consciousness that could be interpreted as a deity. We are increasingly finding organisation in the Sun's structure. It might produce a different kind of consciousness to anything we imagined.
5. The Earth has a kind of consciousness that could be interpreted as a deity. After all, we are only a small part of Earth, so it's logically greater, and we are a system within the Earth's system. Again, maybe there's complex organisation in our planet that we don't understand.
6. The entire universe is conscious to some extent, and this is interpreted as a deity or deities.
7. The spirits of the dead still exist in another dimension/realm that could be interpreted as a deity or deities. There have been many hard-to-explain anecdotal incidents, but nothing conclusive. Many indigenous people believed this.
8. Multiple deities actually exist, and they might be interpreted in different ways. Hindus and many indigenous groups have their own particular polytheistic schemas. Even the Romans and Greeks, though I don't think they took them entirely seriously.
9. There is one supreme deity that created the universe and let it go. [the deism you mentioned]
10. There is one supreme interventionist deity that created everything. [could be theist or panentheist]
11. The multiverse exists and this is interpreted as a deist creator.