rio wrote:
I believe it's perfectly possible that a Nazarene called Jesus existed. However, his "achievements" are bullshit. Scientists can be religious, of course, but I've yet to see a single case where this hasn't detracted from their credibility. Religious scientists seek to infer god into scientific theory. Intellignet design is the perfect example. Religious scientists are unable to accept that the evidence is stacked against them, so a theory is produced that gets comprehensively destroyed the moment it surfaces. Yet people still cling to it because they desperately want to reconcile their beliefs with science. And you say I shouldn't ask religion to provide logical answers... Why not? Something potentially so destructive should be required to justify itself.
As you might be able to tell, I don't believe in mixing science and religion together. A priest shouldn't be a scientist and a scientist shouldn't be a priest. The role of a scientist is one that should have nothing to do with religion unless he is trying to prove something that has religious relevance. As a scientist his first role is to follow scientific laws and observations, so I would agree with you on religious scientists (at least the ones who try to input religion into their theories without any proof). What I'M saying is that a person CAN accept BOTH religion AND science like I used to, and my father does.
Because religion itself isn't based on logically proving anything. It is much closer to philosophy. Maybe STRICT organized religion cannot provide the answers you seek, but I have the most respect for religious people who have their own ideas and interpretations and beliefs based upon their own experience and knowledge. However, if someone doesn't have the mental ability to answer your questions, that doesn't make his/her entire faith fall apart which you seem to be trying to prove. Just like if you don't know the answer yet to the more difficult science questions doesn't mean your belief in science is invalid or false.
Honestly, organized ANYTHING is potentially destructive. I do disagree with organized religion, though I don't look down on people who follow it or try to disprove their belief as long as they are just as open minded to me.
rio wrote:
Perfectly rational in the case of organised religions. We have 7 major ones. Clearly at least 6 have to be wrong by definition. Surely the rational thing is to assume they all are, given that none of them have uncovered a single shred of evidence to support their veracity. In the case of a more general "creator" figure, we cannot be so crudely dismissive. But such a being would still be subject to the laws of science, and as such still requires evidence. We have none of that,(and as an atheist I am certain that we will never see any) so we discard it in favour of more credible ideas.
And alas, one of the major flaws of an athiest. You cannot just group religious criticism all of the 7 major religions or even ANY of them for that matter! Religion is something that MUST be judged on an individual basis. Religious opinions and beliefs vary infinitely even in individual sects themselves. It is highly unrational to say every single man, woman, child is wrong if he follows that religion.
Their faith and beliefs are their evidence. Those beliefs allow them to see other evidence that non-believers cannot because they don't share those beliefs. For example, a very devout religious person is terminally ill but is cured. Doctors can't explain it and cannot provide evidence, MAYBE a theory or two. The fact that science itself couldn't prove what happened is the evidence that the same religious person believes in. That is NOT unrational.
rio wrote:
I don't believe such a being exists, so it is totally moot. But we have seen to virtually the edge of the universe, and we know that over there the same scientific principles are evidenced- as such we can assume that this hypothetical (non existant) being would operate on the same plane, just to a vastly more intelligent level. It would still recognise the same physical laws.
Scientific laws and even the word "science" itself are only proved to apply to THIS plane of existence. If there is a being, I'm pretty damn sure it's not going to be anything that follows our laws. The concept of that existence itself defies our laws anyway. Hell, we aren't even sure the entire universe itseIf is limited to all of the same laws. We say that the universe is infinite yet logically, that seems to be impossible, so we don't even know the answer to that. Even so, we haven't come close to discovering all that there is to know about science, universes, "higher beings", different planes, whatever. There is no evidence supporting that another plane would share the same laws and even concept of science itself as this one does. THAT is why you are just assuming. Because of this obvious lack of knowledge, I think atheism is wrong to claim to believe in logic and science yet illogically say that there is definately no God. That is why I am agnostic.
rio wrote:
An atheist is an agnostic that has crossed of a deity as a possibility.
That isn't "Not knowing". That is a certainty.
rio wrote:
I meant that you seem like an intelligent guy, and I hope that over the next few years you join "our side", so to speak. That's what happened to me, anyway. If you find that patronising, then feel free to feel patronised...
It was the way you said it and the timing that made me think so... oh fuck it, just forget it.