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  • #46
    Re: If evolution had been known all along...

    Originally posted by FrostyBoy
    What would civilization be like? Brutal? Peaceful? Would we be more advanced or less advanced?

    Something tells me we would be more brutal and less advanced.
    Or more brutal and more advanced, Europe's colonial domination was born from the brutality of medieval warfare. Did we become more brutal since Darwin? The 20th century sure was nasty in that regard, but we've advanced rapidly too and those advancements make our inherent brutality even more deadly.

    Religion opened up mathematics, engineering, war - which lead to important inventions, the printing press, it even opened up our minds to imagine in that which doesn't exist.
    Like the gods?

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    • #47
      Bull****. People had plently of self-interested motives having nothing to do with metaphysical or moral quandries to create tools or methods to improve their basic material lives. The most crucial human discoveries were agriculture and animal husbandry, and those had far more to do with the fact people get hungry than praying to any deity. Religion, as opposed to mysticism or basic superstition, is a creation of civilization, not the cause of it.
      You say bull****, yet I agree with you. I did not say religion was the cause of ALL discoveries.



      I just don't interpret the Bible literally in believing the Earth is only 6,000 years old or that God created life itself.
      Yeah, because if you did that, it would make your belief in God troublesome. How convenient.



      Frosty Boy, out of curiousity, which religions do you believe created mathematics, war, engineering. I must assume they weren't all a product of one ancient belief system. Similarly, if a Christian developed evolution, does that make evolution a Christian concept?
      Well i'm no historian, but I could assume easily that Christianity needing a way to mass print their bull****, lead to the invention of the printing press. But don't assume I think that only Christianity could have lead to that discovery, I just think Christianity gave it a boost.



      Why is it that "religious people" are all lumped as one? Hindus and Buddhists are religious, but they do not accept the concept of a singular sentient omnipotent creator 'God.'
      Many religions have lead to many discoveries. Which is kind of the discussion here.



      As opposed to religious disagreements, which are somehow not?
      Actually they are. Haven't you noticed one religion changes slightly the further they are from each other?



      As for Darwin himself, it was his love of God's creations that lead him out to learn about them. It was while he was doing that, that he made his discovery. Proving my point once again.
      be free

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      • #48
        Originally posted by FrostyBoy

        Yeah, because if you did that, it would make your belief in God troublesome. How convenient.

        Well Mr. Fundie, do you wear clothing of mixed fabric/fibers?

        Have you ever eaten shellfish or other foods prohibited by Leviticus?
        A lot of Republicans are not racist, but a lot of racists are Republican.

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        • #49
          Your God, came before man, how did man come to know of this God and how did he interpret him and understand his law?

          I'm just asking, since you don't follow the bible's story, so I'm curious what yours is.
          be free

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          • #50
            I suppose I need to burn all my clothing of mixed fabrics before I can really answer your question.
            A lot of Republicans are not racist, but a lot of racists are Republican.

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            • #51
              Originally posted by GePap
              If the answer to "is there a God, gods" is such a clear one, then people all around the world should have reached it, because that is a question whose answer should not be tied to anything material in the world. That reasonable and intelligent human beings throughout history haven't been able to come up with anything close to an answer should tell is that there is a problem with the question.
              ...no, that does not follow, and I at least have never claimed it was a clear answer. It's a very tricky question, and even the simple way you phrased it implies a number of complicated sub-questions. Nor does it follow that the search for deity be unaffected by material variables, individual perspective and local trends the way everything else is. This is all flat assertions and puffery.
              1011 1100
              Pyrebound--a free online serial fantasy novel

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              • #52
                Originally posted by FrostyBoy
                Yeah, because if you did that, it would make your belief in God troublesome. How convenient.
                which is why my bible has everything omitted out except "In the beginning"

                I'll omit that too when those damn silly scientists prove there was no beginning!
                :-p

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                • #53
                  Originally posted by Blaupanzer
                  Both atheists and religious people feel sorry for the other because the lost do not know the truth. Of course, if either side gets turned loose they create concentration camps and burn at the stake those deemed to be incorrect. The odds that either side will respect the views of the other seem rather low in that light.
                  Atheists don't burn those deemed to be incorrect (i.e. religious people). It's the other way around. The inquisition springs to mind for example
                  "An archaeologist is the best husband a women can have; the older she gets, the more interested he is in her." - Agatha Christie
                  "Non mortem timemus, sed cogitationem mortis." - Seneca

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                  • #54
                    Originally posted by Elok


                    ...no, that does not follow, and I at least have never claimed it was a clear answer. It's a very tricky question, and even the simple way you phrased it implies a number of complicated sub-questions. Nor does it follow that the search for deity be unaffected by material variables, individual perspective and local trends the way everything else is. This is all flat assertions and puffery.
                    Now you're simply clouding the issue by asserting it's too complicated a question. Finding the fundamentals of life sure is a difficult question, but why then can religions be found all over the world with different answers?

                    The manner by which people search for that deity is affected by the environment, culture and other socio-economic factors indeed. But what I think Gepap meant is that the manner and material aspects of those different religions don't matter, because they're just the tools to search of the absolute answers. In the end the answer should be a universal one. However, reality shows us that every religion proclaims its own fundamental truths.

                    So why is that? Is one religion wrong, or are they all right perhaps? Are they all merely different manifestations of that truth, that 'God'? If so, then why do they hold different views on those most basic, fundamental things about life?

                    I believe this is simply because it's a socio-cultural construct. It's a philosophy (for example the Greek pre-socratici) with a spoonful of faith, which makes it internally a logic explanation. But, because it's man-made the explanation differs all over the world.

                    Simple enough.
                    "An archaeologist is the best husband a women can have; the older she gets, the more interested he is in her." - Agatha Christie
                    "Non mortem timemus, sed cogitationem mortis." - Seneca

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                    • #55
                      Originally posted by FrostyBoy
                      Well i'm no historian, but I could assume easily that Christianity needing a way to mass print their bull****, lead to the invention of the printing press. But don't assume I think that only Christianity could have lead to that discovery, I just think Christianity gave it a boost.
                      Well, you may say Christianity lead to printing press, but probably not in the way you'd expect.

                      Printing press and protestantism appear more or less at the same time.
                      And what makes protestantism unique at that time, is that it abolished the priest caste in religion.
                      Before that, the believers have to rely on the priests to tell them God's will. May I just remind you that the bible was forbidden to read for ordinary catholic believers until vatican 2. As a side note, I know some old catholic guy (70+), true believer who is still afraid of reading, and even having home a bible. His education about the bible being a book for the initiate is so strong, that still today he prefers to rely on the priest to tell him what is in there and how to understand it.

                      Protestantism introduced the 'democratic' access to God.
                      The printing press was certainly not desired by religion. Religion of that time was so abusive, that it lead to a reformed form of religion, and a will of people to look for themselves, learn for themselves in the topic of spirituality, as well as in the topic of simple knowledge.

                      Still today, even among the protestants - who should know better - while they are supposed to practise the 'check for yourself' in spirituality as well as in knowledge, some want to prevent the ordinary believer to check for himself, or to confront their beliefs or science. 'Here is how you should understand the bible, and here is what science should tell'.

                      Printing press, books, are the democratisation of knowledge. Knowledge about spirituality and science. At some time in history, one very unique form of religion allowed the ordinary believer to have access to that knowledge and even encouraged the discussion, study of the basics by everybody.
                      And once that pandora box was opened, the nightmare of religion: atheism wasn't that far away. Today, you see how religion tries to strike back by dictating how the bible should be interpreted, but that is a petty attempt to retake the control, to close the box.

                      Religion leading to printing press?
                      Well, I'd say: religious abuses leading to p***-off people, leading to reform and appeasement measures, leading to printing press. Ultimately leading to people seeing through religion bovine waste, leading to atheism.

                      But there is no way a true religion would want the believer - whose greatest virtue is to believe without questioning - to have access to knowledge, to books. Christianity, the church, because of her abuses had to give away ground on this, but I can guarantee that was against her will. See how she fought the reform, and how she put books, including the bible itself to the infamous index.
                      The books that the world calls immoral are the books that show the world its own shame. Oscar Wilde.

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                      • #56
                        Originally posted by Comrade Snuggles
                        Originally posted by MrFun
                        It would be nice if more atheists respect the beliefs of religious people, that's all.

                        But, that won't happen in this millenium.


                        It will never happen, because the beliefs are no more worthy of respect than the belief that the Flying Spaghetti Monster is the creator of the world or that there is an invisible pink unicorn behind the Moon. The only reasons to believe in a creator are irrational, and irrationality is not worthy of respect.
                        And you don't think it takes a lot of faith to believe in Marx's predictions for the future of mankind? Commies have their own "end of times" and "paradise" faith based concepts.
                        I need a foot massage

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                        • #57
                          Originally posted by Traianvs
                          Now you're simply clouding the issue by asserting it's too complicated a question. Finding the fundamentals of life sure is a difficult question, but why then can religions be found all over the world with different answers?

                          The manner by which people search for that deity is affected by the environment, culture and other socio-economic factors indeed. But what I think Gepap meant is that the manner and material aspects of those different religions don't matter, because they're just the tools to search of the absolute answers. In the end the answer should be a universal one. However, reality shows us that every religion proclaims its own fundamental truths.

                          So why is that? Is one religion wrong, or are they all right perhaps? Are they all merely different manifestations of that truth, that 'God'? If so, then why do they hold different views on those most basic, fundamental things about life?

                          I believe this is simply because it's a socio-cultural construct. It's a philosophy (for example the Greek pre-socratici) with a spoonful of faith, which makes it internally a logic explanation. But, because it's man-made the explanation differs all over the world.

                          Simple enough.
                          EDIT: Had to go get a shower before the hot water died, and posted hastily. More thought-out version:

                          Has it occurred to you that theology is necessarily subjective? You can't exactly rectally probe the Almighty and take measurements. And all subjective insights are necessarily colored by past experience and cultural upbringing. With that fairly major proviso, however, you'll find that most religious traditions are fairly similar once they mature past a certain point. There's a regular progression from vague pantheism to paganism to structured polytheism, and from polytheism to at least a functional monotheism. Even in the deliberately-primitive neo-pagan faiths like Wicca there's some guff to that effect.

                          And the end product is similar, especially in the more mystical strands; a Sufi, a Zen monk and a Russian starets will give you more or less the same advice on any matter. Now, that's probably because the mystical sects focus a lot on the psychosomatic stuff, interaction between bodily and mental discipline, which is more empirical than plain theological speculation. But it's still interesting IMO.

                          Exceptions include religions more inclined to the philosophical than the supernatural (Theravada Buddhism, probably others), and Confucianism, which was established with the express intent of imposing societal order, religious truth being basically irrelevant. Oh, and Scientology--for obvious reasons--and young religions that are still working things through.

                          Look at psychology: even today, there are several wildly distinct schools of thought in it. There are Behaviorists, Humanists, Psychoanalysts, Psychodynamics, Cognitive-Behaviorists, and a whole lot of others (asked my psych-prof mom for a list, was overwhelmed). And there are people who claim it's not a real science because it doesn't have precise formulae like physics or chemistry. The real reason for all the fuzz is that it's the study of something which can only be observed in the most indirect fashion, and different perspectives produce different results. Also some of those schools are closer to philosophies than sciences IMO, probably as a result of that indirectness and its partial overlap with the duties of religion and philosophy.

                          Now, unlike religion it's still quite young, and technological progress is making it possible to study the brain's workings more directly. The analogy is far from perfect, I admit.
                          Last edited by Elok; November 15, 2008, 10:29.
                          1011 1100
                          Pyrebound--a free online serial fantasy novel

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                          • #58
                            Originally posted by GePap
                            Why is it that "religious people" are all lumped as one? Hindus and Buddhists are religious, but they do not accept the concept of a singular sentient omnipotent creator 'God.'

                            And even when religious folks agree on how many deities there are, they then disagree about what exactly these or this deity wants us humans to do in the world.

                            As I have said before, this utter inability of the religious after 5500 years of writings to agree on even basic principles is some of the best evidence about why all of them are wrong nad basing all their beliefs on nothing more than blind faith.
                            Why would something have to be agreed upon or tend towards universality to be true?
                            In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.

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                            • #59
                              Originally posted by Barnabas
                              And you don't think it takes a lot of faith to believe in Marx's predictions for the future of mankind? Commies have their own "end of times" and "paradise" faith based concepts.


                              The "predictions" of Marxism are based on scientific analysis and history.
                              Christianity: The belief that a cosmic Jewish Zombie who was his own father can make you live forever if you symbolically eat his flesh and telepathically tell him you accept him as your master, so he can remove an evil force from your soul that is present in humanity because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree...

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                              • #60
                                Originally posted by Dry

                                Well, you may say Christianity lead to printing press, but probably not in the way you'd expect.
                                I wouldn't, since it was invented in China.
                                Christianity: The belief that a cosmic Jewish Zombie who was his own father can make you live forever if you symbolically eat his flesh and telepathically tell him you accept him as your master, so he can remove an evil force from your soul that is present in humanity because a rib-woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from a magical tree...

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