Fluffy, on 2013-January-20, 06:06, said:
I though the same at the start, but I have realiced mike and probably michael as well are aready sure of what the truth is and don't consider alternatives, arguing with them about existance of god is not very produtive.
I suggest you read what we actually said: try to understand it rather than jumpng to false conclusions.
We say: while there are important, fundamental questions about the nature of reality and its origins to which we do not have answers, we decline to fill in those gaps in human knowledge with imaginary, unproven and inherently unprovable god entities. As Vampyr pointed out, the god that you and almost all of the other believers believe to exist is an anthropomorphic entity, a bizarre jealous, vindictive entity which, for Xians and Muslims at least, plays an active and judgemental role in our lives.
We ask a very simple set of questions about this god: questions neither you nor any other here has answered. Indeed, questions that (to my limited knowledge) no theologian has ever answered with anything other than an appeal to faith and a denial of the power of reason. To me the main one is:
What factual evidence is there that positively points to the existence of a god? The answers are usually in the form of 'the universe exists'. Well, yes, it does. Why does that undeniable fact make YOUR particular creation myth valid? What mathematically, or physically testable explanation does your myth afford us?
So there seems to be no fact or evidence based reason to accept that there is a god of any kind. If there is a god, btw, that only pushes the search for understanding one step deeper: what is a god, what made it, how did it come into existence, etc. And the usual answer that these questions don't apply to god, since it has always existed isn't in fact an answer at all, but a confession that some issues are beyond our understanding. Why not accept that, for now at least, the origin of the universe is the topic beyond our understanding rather than pile on that mystery an unneeded hypothesis about some god?
We say: we don't know! We say we have open minds...we'd like to know, but we don't and maybe we never will. The religious say: we know! We know with absolute certainty.
Of course, there are many, many versions of this god thing in which anywhere from hundreds of thousands, to billions devoutly believe and they believe, with this utter assurance, in different things. And then they have the sheer arrogance or utter lack of insight to accuse atheists of being fanatics.
I am a fanatic in asserting my LACK of certainty. Weird, I know, but true. Being uncertain, however, doesn't mean that I see as plausible any ancient or current creation myth that lacks rigour and/or testability and/or explanatory power.
At the risk of a very bad bridge analogy: consider 4 hands are dealt face down. Your priest (who played no role in the dealing) tells you that you hold precisely AK32 Q65432 void J72.
You believe him. Why?
The atheist tells you: I don't know what your cards are: I suggest we do some research and find out. The atheist waits until the evidence is there, which can in this case be gathered by looking at the cards.
Now, if this happened, and you held the hand the priest described, that would raise some very interesting questions. if the priest could do this every time, with our being able to prove beyond doubt that he wasn't cheating, then my beliefs about the nature of the universe would be severely challenged and I hope I'd change them to accord with reality.
As it is, the odds that the holy books describe reality is on par with the priest guessing the cards.
So tell me Gonzalo: where are the flaws in my arguments? If you want to have an argument, you need to make logical points in response. So far your posts are notable mostly for asserting your personal reasons for choosing to believe. Why not try to assert some fact based reasons for the truth of what you believe? There is a difference, you know. You find comfort in the idea of god, but your personal feeling of comfort is not an explanation that suggests god exists. Try thinking about why a non-believer 'should believe'...what evidence is there? If you are rigorous in your thinking, you might become an atheist
Or actually have an argument, rather than a confession of ignorance.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari