Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 5:12 am
Gee wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 3:24 am
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 5th, 2024, 4:06 pm
Gee wrote: ↑February 5th, 2024, 6:32 am
You have already dug too deep, as it appears to me that all of the above is speculation.
Do you mean speculation that's unlike the outrageous suppositions an speculations of religions?
No. I mean speculation that is just like the outrageous suppositions and speculations of religions. Different ideas, same topic.
I simply did what religions do - I saw a gap and put something I thought was not impossible in it. The difference is that religions come up with some exceptionally unlikely scenarios.
"not impossible"? That is your criteria for your speculations? For someone who routinely posts in the Religion Forum, you seem to have a seriously biased and limited understanding of religion, spirituality, and the history behind religion.
To help me understand what appears to be a serious bias, please list five things that you see as "outrageous suppositions".
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 5:12 am
Gee wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 3:24 am
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 5th, 2024, 4:06 pm
How can a religious person accuse a non-believer of speculation with a straight face? Religion is the very most unsubstantiated and speculative of fields, making the multiverse look positively scientific by comparison.
In your second sentence, you have a point. In your first sentence, it looks like you are considering me to be a religious person. Is that true?
Maybe haha. Still, religious people often accuse atheists of speculating.
And as is evidenced by your posts, atheists often accuse religious people of speculating. You have no point here -- just a tit for tat.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 5:12 am
Gee wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 3:24 am
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 5th, 2024, 4:06 pm
You closed by asking why all societies have religion. That fact says more about humans than about the nature of reality.
Probably so, but there was something that these people were trying to understand, something that they interpreted to be some kind of force or "God". I think that the something was spirituality. I don't believe that religion caused spirituality, nor do I believe that a "God" caused spirituality. I think that we have it backward and always have had it backward. We became aware of spirituality, were sometimes in awe of spirituality, which is actually a perspective of emotion, so we tried to learn about it. Religion developed from the quest to understand spirituality/emotion, and "God" was the interpretation we gave to the cause of it. When the "God" idea went out of favor, then we decided that an Intelligent Designer, or maybe a universal simulation might be causal. Why do we insist that something or someone is causal in this?
I think that the reason is simple. If you see a ball flying past your head, you will look to see who threw it. If something falls out of the sky that is not rain or snow, you will look to see what dropped it. Why? Because we know and understand that when something is put in motion, something that is static, material, and solid would have caused the motion. So something caused life, something caused the self balancing of nature, something caused the sun and moon to move and shape our lives -- something caused and continues to cause motion, spirituality, and feeling/awareness/emotion which are all fluid.
As I sit here at my desk, I remember that science has explained that my desk is not really solid; it is made up of atoms, and molecules, and even smaller particles that are in motion. When it comes to consciousness, we believe that solid, digital thought is what causes fluid emotion -- following the same line of thinking. What if we are wrong? What if motion is the base and what appears to be solid, stable, and continuous, is just ***?
I think the religious belief regarding a force, or forces, is part of a larger dynamic. That is, there is a tendency to assume agency when it's just physics at play. For instance, two tribal people see a nearby bush tremble. Person A assumes it's a tiger and runs away. Person B assumes it's a breeze and stays. So, by game theory we have different outcomes:
If it's a tiger:
- A lives
- B dies
If it's a breeze:
- A wastes a bit of energy
- B saves a bit of energy.
If you repeat this dynamic enough, there will be more As than Bs. So we are evolved to see agency. So there were volcano gods, river rods, desert gods, tree gods. Storms, droughts and floods. All these things can be overpowering, even overwhelming. So it might make sense to surrender something you value, like a virgin, to the volcano god, who presumably also values virgins. By petitioning the volcano god, they have a sense of control. To them, it's not a force of nature that will happen no matter what they do, It's a mind, and minds can be petitioned.
When you say "motion is the base", yes, everything that's not at absolute zero is dynamic. It's said that reality is a verb, not a noun. It seems about right, all things considered.
We seem to be close to agreement here. The one thing that I would add is that the "motion" that is the base of reality is something that religion understands as emotion/spirituality.
Also, is anything really capable of sustaining "absolute zero dynamic"? Doesn't entropy prohibit that?
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 5:12 am
Gee wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 3:24 am
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 5th, 2024, 4:06 pm
Religions also differ wildly, constantly contradicting each other. One religion posits a single god, another posits thousands of them, some worshipped the Sun, and others revered the Earth and the spirits of ancestors.
That would be because they are all interpretations.
Yet, scientists from different cultures seemed to have much more in common.
Of course they do; it's science, not an interpretation. You are talking apples and oranges in your comparison. If you want a comparison of the different cultural religions, look to music or dance, which is very different in different cultures and is also based on interpretation of feeling.
Consider this: If you asked 50 people to give you a word or phrase that means "love" to them, how many different answers would you get. I would estimate at least 10 entirely different answers, and up to 30 or 40 different answers. The reason is that there is no definitive answer to the question of what is love; it is all interpretation. All emotion is interpreted and religion studies emotion. Spirit is a perspective of emotion; therefore, there are going to be different interpretations of "God". It would be unrealistic and maybe impossible to expect it to be otherwise.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 5:12 am
Gee wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 3:24 amSy Borg wrote: ↑February 5th, 2024, 4:06 pm
I have no problem with religion. My disbelief does not constitute a "problem" with it.
Maybe so, but anyone who can read my words and interpret them to mean that I am religious has a problem. My friends and family would fall over stunned if I suddenly "got religion". So I suspect a little projecting.
Nah, I just can't always keep track of who's what, and I don't care enough to remember
If you can't keep track, can't remember, and I have not claimed to be religious, then where did the idea come from?
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 5:12 am
So, if you play Devil's Advocate without idiot-proofing, I might figure you're just another theist trying to justify what doesn't need justifying.
You are making less sense by the minute. Justify what, exactly? If you will recall, I study consciousness, which I have mentioned a few hundred times. I look at religions, because they also study consciousness. I don't care if they want to call it "God", it is still relevant to my studies.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 5:12 am
Who cares? I don't It's their heads, not mine, so it's no my business. They can do whatever they like with their minds - believe what they like, desire what they like - as long as they don't cause others grief.
If you truly do not care, then why do you spend so much time in the religion forum attacking religion???? Unless you can convince me that it is some kind of duty, it will appear to me that you do indeed care.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 5:12 am
Gee wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 3:24 am
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 5th, 2024, 4:06 pm
My attitude towards religion is not so different to my attitude towards any myths - they evoke curiosity in me as to what the myth-makers were trying to say. I obviously don't believe them implicitly; that would be missing the points the authors were trying to make.
And it has been stated that myths often have a grain of truth, or at least a reason for being.
Sure. If you don't take the Bible literally but see it as a pretty random repository of knowledge, history, culture, myths, propaganda, wisdom and the authors' personal fetishes. The desire to pass thoughts on is very much human. It's what we do. My only objection is to silly literalist and presentist interpretations.
If anyone wanted to take the Bible literally, they would first have to remember that the New Testament is around 2000 years old, and the Old Testament is closer to 3000 to 4000 years old, and the oral stories that the Old Testament came from are at least 6000 years old -- and they would have to interpret the Bible while considering those time frames. They would also have to consider that the Bible is a history book, and all history books are written for the purpose of promoting a specific history. Then they would have to be able to decipher what is literal and what is metaphor. Then they would have to be able to divide what was actually written in the Bible and what was church doctrine which was taught to the people, but is not in the Bible and sometimes is not even referenced by the Bible.
Who is going to do all of that? And why are you talking about the Bible, as you have not given me the impression that you know enough about it to comment.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 5:12 am
Gee wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 3:24 am
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 5th, 2024, 4:06 pm
I think the keys to most religion are the Sun and the Earth - which certainly are worthy of worship - and all religions extrapolated from that base.
The Earth and Sun both represent motion, so on that basis, I can agree with you.
The Sun has 99.86% of the solar system's mass. If the Sun was a person, the Earth would be like a drop of sweat in its BO cloud. This is not our story or the Earth's story, this is the Sun's story, and we are along for the ride. As for the Earth itself, if it lived as long as a human, our lives would last a matter of seconds, like a bubble. Thus, the Sun beats down on the Earth, its radiation causing complex bubbles to continuously grow and pop. We life forms are the bubbles.
You are talking about "mass", I was talking about motion -- not the same thing. So what is this? An apologist notion that religion can worship the Sun which makes an adequate deity because it causes life? You know, science has recently found life in places that never see the Sun, deep in caves, etc., so the idea that life is caused by the Sun is an old idea.
Sy Borg wrote: ↑February 6th, 2024, 5:12 am
There's two top quality deities right there. Add the Moon - whose contribution to our existence is considerable - and we arrive at the emotionally satisfying number of three, which is quite popular in religions.
The number three is quite popular in many venues. But if you want to start a new religion based on the Sun, Earth, and Moon, you are going to have to find a time machine to take you back 10 or 20 thousand years in order to find people, who will buy into your nonsense. Have you been arguing the science v religion nonsense for so long that you have actually convinced yourself that religious people are stupid? They are not.
Gee