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| | #21 (permalink) (top) |
| BANNED Location: New York Posts: 4,217 | Religion is a natural occurrence in the development of intelligent life. At some point, there are things to which there are no answers. Those things without answers are considered supernatural. At one point, the moon was considered supernatural. No one knew what it was or what it was doing up there. Further on, the idea of an entity being "in charge" fills the gaps. Finally, there ends up being a "my entity is better than your entity" and when people start agreeing on an entity, there is organization. That organization is religion. When people start having their own opinion about the supernatural independent of organized worship, religion is unnecessary. When people start believing that the supernatural will eventually become natural as Science finds more answers, religion is unnecessary. The key is in accepting that supernatural doesn't mean you believe in ghosts and magic, etc. Supernatural is the correct and accurate term for anything that is yet to be explained by science. It's another word for the unknown. So yes, it is possible to have no religion. |
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| | #22 (permalink) (top) | |||||||
| WeLcOmE tO mY wOrLd Location: Australia Posts: 30 | To coffeesaints post: 1.Nobody can believe there is no superhuman controlling power because we witness that every day. You try stopping a cyclone with your bare hands. It leads to people having to plan around the cyclone rather than defeating it therefore it has a degree of control. But admittedly oxfords definition is a little dodgy because not everybody believes the superhuman power is controlling. The majority of religions believe that the physical world was created by a superhuman power but they don't interfere with it. 2. Worship comes in many forms. In most religions worship is just giving credit to the supernatural force for its actions good or bad. 3. Using the definition of worship above - I think it's in complete agreement that everybody has a degree of faith and therefore a system by which that faith operates. Non-theistic - A spritual being is simply something that doesn't take physical form. Many things we take for granted as existing qualify as spirtual entities. A lot of people believe that their god/s have already been discovered but given other names like air and water. Others believe the universe itself is their god, or even nature. In those relgions their god/s do take physical form. A spiritual entity is also the human soul, therefore making humans in part spiritual beings themselves. zynner & fonceais posts: Quote:
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Atheism is in the mind, it's a choice. We choose to accept or not accept god/s. We don't choose our physical form - so it's not the same thing as nudity. When we take off clothes we then put clothes back on because our natural state requires it. In the situations that we don't it's because our natural state requires us not to. Science while it did have a positive impact in some places. Didn't structure society. People did. They saw a need for a legal system - so they made one. Quote:
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~communication is the problem to the answer~ | |||||||
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| | #23 (permalink) (top) | |||||
| Absolutely Superb Posts: 774 | Jester: Quote:
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Science by it's very nature questions it's own central tenets. Can you say the same of the Bible, the Quran, or any other religious text? Can you think of any central religious scripture that changes with the discovery of new data in our externalized world? Quote:
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| | #24 (permalink) (top) | |
| BANNED Location: New York Posts: 4,217 | Quote:
There are those who do, indeed, make science their religion. But that doesn't make science a religion in the general sense to Catholicism. | |
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| | #25 (permalink) (top) |
| Hot Lava Posts: 817 | xJesterx -- (1) Superhuman is not the same as supernatural. Cyclones and such are part of nature. Superhuman, yes; supernatural, no. (2) "Original state" and "natural state" are concepts that seem to be getting mixed here. I'm not sure there's really much of a distinction. If there is, I'm not sure it's important. Let's just look at humans. Humans are born nude. Therefore, it is the "default" situation. We can add clothes and subtract them. The point is, we are not born wearing clothing. We must add that, and the behavior of wearing clothing is learned through our culture (mama). Humans are also born atheistic, meaning infants have no concept of gods since they have no concepts at all. We must learn the concept of what a god is through culture (mama or otherwise), and religion is built around the concept of god(s). (3) Most people born into a particular culture learn to accept one religion at the exclusion of other religions. Of course, some people are born into families that have different views than the majority in the culture and the child is likely to learn that instead. Also, a person can learn to change his opinions later in life. But the fact remains, most people just accept whatever the other people within their culture teaches them. That's why people are grouped around the world by religion -- it is ALL learned behavior within different cultures. (4) You are right that we need to eat and drink because it is in our nature as humans. We also need to THINK because that, too, is in our nature. It's just that most people accept the thoughts that are already "out there" -- thoughts of other people within the culture -- and do not think all that much about it. Those who do a lot of thinking are usually the ones who have different views (of course, some people with different views learned it because they were brought up in a family with different views, but then it was someone within their family who did the thinking and broke out of the cultural norm, passing it on to the kids). Set aside religion for a moment. Consider communism. Did the people of Cuba or the former USSR all independently come up with the idea? Were they born with the concept? No, a couple of guys, Marx and Engels, came up with the idea, which was built on ideas of earlier people. The ideas were learned by a few who really wanted to implement it and the rest within the culture went along (for awhile). The same is true of all cultural ideas, especially religion. (5) In some cases, the gods of religions might not have "wanted" control (an impossible concept since gods cannot want anything; they are figments of human imagination). The point I was making is this: HUMANS who want to control other humans use religion as one of their primary tools (government being the other primary tool). (6) The reason science is different from religion is because science is objective, it can be tested, and it can be proven true or false, or modified with new information. Religion has none of those properties. It is subjective, not objective. It cannot be tested. It cannot be proven true and has no false option (meaning, theists will not admit that a particular test or argument will prove their religion false; scientists will). It will never be modified from its original form (though people "interpret" it in various ways -- but that's not the same thing). Because science has these properties, we can gain knowledge about the world. We do not have to "believe in" science. We can prove it. With religion, we can only follow dogma. Apples fall to the ground when they are dropped. That can be proven. We do not have to have faith it will happen. What do gods do? ~ zynner |
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| Kuldeep Location: Bhopa, M.P, India Posts: 1,659 | Quote:
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| | #27 (permalink) (top) |
| BANNED Location: New York Posts: 4,217 | @Cephus Read what I wrote again, then write what you wrote. I will simplify for you... Religion occurs in the beginning and as the intelligent life develops and starts seeking answers scientifically then religion is no longer needed to explain the supernatural. You paralleled my statement because you failed to understand that I was referring to religion in the beginning phasing out later. |
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| | #28 (permalink) (top) |
| Hot Lava Location: Redlands, CA Posts: 2,264 | I wouldn't say that. In fact, I'd lean the other way, religion is something that gets left behind in the development of intelligent life. It is superstition, it is fear of the unknown, it is ignorance of the real causes of things, instead simply inventing something to believe to make one feel better. As humanity progresses farther, religion will fall behind because it is no longer necessary for the majority, especially the more intelligent and educated. Studies have shown that there is an inverse correlation between religiousity and intelligence and educated. That says something important right there. |
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| | #29 (permalink) (top) | |
| slipping sand Posts: 1,977 | Quote:
Religion really is the opposite of science. It's taking a problem (ie: how did humans come to me), and inventing a made up story to explain that problem, and that passing that around as truth. A lie repeated often enough becomes truth, and so the brainwashing meme infects billions, being passed down within families and cultures for so long that it becomes unthinkable that the religion be thought of as anything but totally true. Science is taking a problem, forming a possible answer, and then conducting tests and observations to see if that logic naturally explains the problem. If it doesn't, then the hypothesis is thrown out and a new one is thought up. So you see, there really IS a huge difference between Science and Religion, and you can't just water them both down with semi-common threads and say they are the same basic thing. There is a big difference. | |
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| | #31 (permalink) (top) |
| BANNED Location: New York Posts: 4,217 | Not really. Since the presence of another intelligent species is Unknown, then the current and valid sample size is: one. Currently, it would appear that the hypothesis is true until we run across another intelligent species. The trick is in being flexible in our conclusions. |
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| | #32 (permalink) (top) |
| Hot Lava Location: Redlands, CA Posts: 2,264 | But that makes about as much sense as assuming that all intelligent species have two arms because every intelligent species we know of has two arms. Or two eyes. Or walks upright. Or has an appendix. There simply isn't enough examples to start making assumptions about what intelligent species can and cannot have, the only thing we can assume is that *HUMANS* have these characteristics. |
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| | #33 (permalink) (top) | |
| slipping sand Posts: 1,977 | Quote:
When an organism starts to develop conscious awareness and break that barrier, ie: becoming conscious of it's own consciousness, inevitably it will begin to wonder about how it has come to be, what it is etc. Can we agree that when an organism reaches this barrier of consciousness that those questions will inevitably spring up? To me, that will usually lead to something LIKE religion. It's just a thought, but to me it's rational that newly conscious organisms will begin to seek answers to their own existance. When these answers prove to be mysteries, answers will be invented to satisfy those needs - hence religion. | |
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| | #35 (permalink) (top) |
| BANNED Location: New York Posts: 4,217 | @another day Another way to look at your point is this... When intelligence leads to self-awareness, those questions of self and purpose will be asked. The big Why questions. When the understanding of the natural world cannot provide answers, the answers are believed to be supernatural. By supernatural, I simply mean beyond the understanding of current science. Having no religion, being atheist, whatever you want to call it, is still believing in the supernatural. Responsible atheists simply call it unknown and believe science will eventually find the answers. Irresponsible atheists will say that if science can't prove it, it doesn't exist. |
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| | #36 (permalink) (top) | |
| Get the f*** down! Posts: 97 | Quote:
But all this science malarchy gives me a sort of grounding, anchorage if you will. So, by that, it can be construed as being a religion (in a sense). consider: L religiōn- (s. of religiō) conscientiousness, piety, equiv. to relig(āre) to tie, fasten (re- re- + ligāre to bind, tie; cf. ligament) + -iōn- -ion; | |
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| | #37 (permalink) (top) |
| BANNED Location: New York Posts: 4,217 | @Hostile Religion = binding through faith. Interesting. I understand what you're saying about not using my words. I don't know how to express the concept that there are things that science can't quite explain yet, but that doesn't mean they don't exist or are invalid. Psychic abilities and ghosts and such are considered supernatural. But I don't know any other word to use for something that science is currently not able to explain. Personally, I just say "unknown". I'm really big on the probabilities of science. Some don't care about the probabilities at all. Those are the people that I would say have made science their religion. They accept what science says on faith; because science says so. Granted, science usually has some actual proof, but sometimes it doesn't. The people who just want to hear science make a statement, regardless of the completeness of the proof, are the ones who are worshipping science. |
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