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Forums - Politics - Any theist around here?

haqqaton said:

I don't want to derail the thread either so this will be my last post here... be happy, you'll have the last word.

I'm not mirespresenting Dawkins - at least I don't think so. I just found funny that his arguments are so bad that some atheists become christhians after reading his book. I have read nothing from Turek so I can't speak for him and I'm not invoking apologists here.. easy... If I wanted to, I would quote Chesterton, Lewis or Dostoievski, Pascal or Kierkgaard... Those guys knew how to think.

My point is: you, as human, need to have faith because your knowledge of almost everything is very limited. You can/should work with probabilities but, in the end, you need to make a choice. Even atheists need to make a choice by faith.

The scientific method says that you need to have an hypothesis, realize an experiment and then get to a conclusion. So to someone have a conclusion regarding something he needs to experiment it OR use his faith and believe in others who had experimented it.

Let's say you want to know if the christian god exists. What should you do? Talk with some christians, read the Bible and then try to put those teachings in action. If you don't end it believing what is your conclusion? "There's no God"? NO! You need the check your experiment looking for failures on procedures and rerun it. Eventually, after rounds of experiments you could say "There's no God" but still you'll have to have faith on it. Why? The "steps" of the experiment - described in Bible - are not scientifically verifiable. Maybe you did something wrong on your 999999th try. The same can't be said by searching for a teapot in space.

Do you believe that there's a cosmic object called Pluto? Is it by faith in others - in other words, you don't know it by your senses - or have you "seen" it? Regarding your bedroom example, sometimes you can only have evidences and no proof - you know that they are VERY different. It's highly probable that she was having sex with that guy but this is not a proof. You have to choose to believe that she was having sex - a easy choice, right, but you could be wrong.

In the end, for a lot of things, you have to make a choice; assisted by probabilities, if you want. So, as I already said, a person is atheist by choice.

"Oh! no doubt, in the monastery he fully believed in miracles, but, to my thinking, miracles are never a stumbling-block to the realist. It is not miracles that dispose realists to belief. The genuine realist, if he is an unbeliever, will always find strength and ability to disbelieve in the miraculous, and if he is confronted with a miracle as an irrefutable fact he would rather disbelieve his own senses than admit the fact" - The Brothers Karamazov

Advice: when you try to poison the well with "lol Daily Mail" you don't help the dicussion. Shame on you. ;)

Edit: Sorry for my poor English. It's not my first language.


Burden of proof lies with the one making the claim, not the ones that don't believe it, meaning that theists would be the ones that would have to provide proof for their claim of a God.

The existence of Pluto is provable, and even though you haven't seen Pluto yourself, there is plenty of evidence to prove the existence of Pluto. There is no evidence for the existence of a god however, presumably because there is none. Now I bet you're gonna pick apart the "presumably" part, saying "You have to have faith in that to assume ....etc." but that's only if you are gonna continue treating agnostic and atheist as two different things. I'm an atheist. I'm also an agnostic. I accept that there is no way to disprove a God, just as you can't disprove that there's an unvisible, undetectable, magical animal made of rice walking around in your house right now. Doesn't mean either of them exists though.

When you see your girlfriend naked in bed with another guy, you don't choose to think that she slept with him. It's just your first assumption, as it's the one that makes sense given the evidence in front of you. Same can be said for atheists.



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You may have seen my long post in the other thread and thought otherwise, but I am in fact a theist; I'm just a very questioning one. As to which part of the faith I follow: I can go to most Christian churches and feel at home, although I mainly attend Anglican or Lutheran. I still believe there are many things we can't explain.

*edit* Agnostic Theist



#1 Amb-ass-ador

Kyuu said:


So, what if I agreed with the general Sunni opinion about certain essential matters but went with the so-called Shia opinion in regards to other essential matters?.. to which camp would that throw me? am I guided enough to say "Alhamdullillah"? or am I a filthy infidel according to both sides? and who gets to decide if I'm guided or not anyway?

The line between a Sunni and a Shia can be much thinner than you imagine.. because those things are, for the most part, mere titles. The meaning behind them will continue to diverge as time goes, because as new generations come and go, they will influence their respective doctrines with personal conclusions and this will result in sub-doctrines, deviants, and reformers (as evident in every circle, be it religious or not)

If there was anything I learned from reading and researching, it's how complicated history is and how distant from the truth we are to even begin thinking that we're "on the right path" and everyone else is misguided. The right path is unknown, guess what? that's one of the reasons why I believe in god. I'll never say alhamdullillah in regards to my beliefs until God directly tells me that I had it right ;)

 

"I know one thing, that I know nothing"

-Socrates


@bolded: Allah, and no other  people can call you what they want and you can set a title for yourself what ever you want, but it the end its god who judges you. 



Double thread



An atheist here and one that doesn't understand what's the point in religions. Every religion believes in different gods so wich one is saying the truth? And don't you see religions are only a human way to explain what's there after death because humans always need everything to have an explanation and generally are afraid to death?

Sorry for my english and don't take this in a disrespectful way, i just would like to know from someone religious why he/she believes.



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Teeqoz said:
haqqaton said:

I don't want to derail the thread either so this will be my last post here... be happy, you'll have the last word.

I'm not mirespresenting Dawkins - at least I don't think so. I just found funny that his arguments are so bad that some atheists become christhians after reading his book. I have read nothing from Turek so I can't speak for him and I'm not invoking apologists here.. easy... If I wanted to, I would quote Chesterton, Lewis or Dostoievski, Pascal or Kierkgaard... Those guys knew how to think.

My point is: you, as human, need to have faith because your knowledge of almost everything is very limited. You can/should work with probabilities but, in the end, you need to make a choice. Even atheists need to make a choice by faith.

The scientific method says that you need to have an hypothesis, realize an experiment and then get to a conclusion. So to someone have a conclusion regarding something he needs to experiment it OR use his faith and believe in others who had experimented it.

Let's say you want to know if the christian god exists. What should you do? Talk with some christians, read the Bible and then try to put those teachings in action. If you don't end it believing what is your conclusion? "There's no God"? NO! You need the check your experiment looking for failures on procedures and rerun it. Eventually, after rounds of experiments you could say "There's no God" but still you'll have to have faith on it. Why? The "steps" of the experiment - described in Bible - are not scientifically verifiable. Maybe you did something wrong on your 999999th try. The same can't be said by searching for a teapot in space.

Do you believe that there's a cosmic object called Pluto? Is it by faith in others - in other words, you don't know it by your senses - or have you "seen" it? Regarding your bedroom example, sometimes you can only have evidences and no proof - you know that they are VERY different. It's highly probable that she was having sex with that guy but this is not a proof. You have to choose to believe that she was having sex - a easy choice, right, but you could be wrong.

In the end, for a lot of things, you have to make a choice; assisted by probabilities, if you want. So, as I already said, a person is atheist by choice.

"Oh! no doubt, in the monastery he fully believed in miracles, but, to my thinking, miracles are never a stumbling-block to the realist. It is not miracles that dispose realists to belief. The genuine realist, if he is an unbeliever, will always find strength and ability to disbelieve in the miraculous, and if he is confronted with a miracle as an irrefutable fact he would rather disbelieve his own senses than admit the fact" - The Brothers Karamazov

Advice: when you try to poison the well with "lol Daily Mail" you don't help the dicussion. Shame on you. ;)

Edit: Sorry for my poor English. It's not my first language.


Burden of proof lies with the one making the claim, not the ones that don't believe it, meaning that theists would be the ones that would have to provide proof for their claim of a God.

The existence of Pluto is provable, and even though you haven't seen Pluto yourself, there is plenty of evidence to prove the existence of Pluto. There is no evidence for the existence of a god however, presumably because there is none. Now I bet you're gonna pick apart the "presumably" part, saying "You have to have faith in that to assume ....etc." but that's only if you are gonna continue treating agnostic and atheist as two different things. I'm an atheist. I'm also an agnostic. I accept that there is no way to disprove a God, just as you can't disprove that there's an unvisible, undetectable, magical animal made of rice walking around in your house right now. Doesn't mean either of them exists though.

When you see your girlfriend naked in bed with another guy, you don't choose to think that she slept with him. It's just your first assumption, as it's the one that makes sense given the evidence in front of you. Same can be said for atheists.

So does the atheist who boldy claims there is no god. And you can't prove a ne gative so have fun with that one. There is plenty of "proofs" postulated by philosophers throughout the ages. Artistotle for example. The universe is a series of causes requiring an ultimate cause. The argument is sound. 

Also laws of physics are conceptual in nature and not physical themselves. Conceptual laws require agency. They can't create themselves or appear randomly.

I don't enjoy these debates, they are ultimately futile. There is virtue in defending one's beliefs though.  



Uabit said:
An atheist here and one that doesn't understand what's the point in religions. Every religion believes in different gods so wich one is saying the truth? And don't you see religions are only a human way to explain what's there after death because humans always need everything to have an explanation and generally are afraid to death?

Sorry for my english and don't take this in a disrespectful way, i just would like to know from someone religious why they believe.

Well a common misperception I see with atheists is that they tend to think you have to have a religion to believe in god, which is not the case at all. Religions have different points, some are more meditative while others are more... can't think of the word. But basically there is no "one" purpose for religion, different people go into different religions for different reasons. Some attempt to explain death while others may not touch on the subject. People often look at other religions and choose the one they believe the most "true" I suppose. Again, depends on the person.

About death, humans have always had a morbid curiocity about what happens to your consciousness after death and any explanation that makes the fear of death seem less scary has always been a plus towards religion as they tend to believe in going to heaven or resurrection, reincarnation, and so forth.  



I'm not religious at all. I find it all a bit unbelievable, especially as there have been many gods before the current crop (last gen gods ;) - Don't understand why the current crop are any more believable than the Sun, Sea gods etc.

I do believe there may be something in the depths of space that could be god like (considering what we must be to ants, and what we must be to the universe)... but I do not believe in the human created gods.



Making an indie game : Dead of Day!

reggin_bolas said:
Teeqoz said:


Burden of proof lies with the one making the claim, not the ones that don't believe it, meaning that theists would be the ones that would have to provide proof for their claim of a God.

The existence of Pluto is provable, and even though you haven't seen Pluto yourself, there is plenty of evidence to prove the existence of Pluto. There is no evidence for the existence of a god however, presumably because there is none. Now I bet you're gonna pick apart the "presumably" part, saying "You have to have faith in that to assume ....etc." but that's only if you are gonna continue treating agnostic and atheist as two different things. I'm an atheist. I'm also an agnostic. I accept that there is no way to disprove a God, just as you can't disprove that there's an unvisible, undetectable, magical animal made of rice walking around in your house right now. Doesn't mean either of them exists though.

When you see your girlfriend naked in bed with another guy, you don't choose to think that she slept with him. It's just your first assumption, as it's the one that makes sense given the evidence in front of you. Same can be said for atheists.

So does the atheist who boldy claims there is no god. And you can't prove a ne gative so have fun with that one. There is plenty of "proofs" postulated by philosophers throughout the ages. Artistotle for example. The universe is a series of causes requiring an ultimate cause. The argument is sound. 

Also laws of physics are conceptual in nature and not physical themselves. Conceptual laws require agency. They can't create themselves or appear randomly.

I don't enjoy these debates, they are ultimately futile. There is virtue in defending one's beliefs though.  


Exactly, you can, by defintion not disprove God, but the burden of proof lies with the ones who claim there is a God, so it's their task to provide positive proof for the existence of this God. Again, you still act like an atheist is one thing, and an agnostic is something else. Like I said, I'm an agnostic atheist. I don't believe there is a God (hence I'm atheist) but it's literally impossible to disprove a God, so we can't be 100% sure (Hence I'm an agnostic). You're just reinforcing my point now.



Teeqoz said:
reggin_bolas said:

So does the atheist who boldy claims there is no god. And you can't prove a ne gative so have fun with that one. There is plenty of "proofs" postulated by philosophers throughout the ages. Artistotle for example. The universe is a series of causes requiring an ultimate cause. The argument is sound. 

Also laws of physics are conceptual in nature and not physical themselves. Conceptual laws require agency. They can't create themselves or appear randomly.

I don't enjoy these debates, they are ultimately futile. There is virtue in defending one's beliefs though.  


Exactly, you can, by defintion not disprove God, but the burden of proof lies with the ones who claim there is a God, so it's their task to provide positive proof for the existence of this God. Again, you still act like an atheist is one thing, and an agnostic is something else. Like I said, I'm an agnostic atheist. I don't believe there is a God (hence I'm atheist) but it's literally impossible to disprove a God, so we can't be 100% sure (Hence I'm an agnostic). You're just reinforcing my point now.

In my younger days I was quite impassioned about proving God or perhaps more important; proving my dissidents wrong. That doesn't work, it's futile. Belief in God is personal. Mass conversion does not occur via some intelligent debate. It occurs at an individual level. 

The actual proof of God is pretty irrelevant to personal transformation and spiritual evolution. You can still refer to interesting arguments but it won't lead anywhere.