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| General Discussion Off-TopicThis is a general discussion forum for off-topic and casual general chit chat. |
| View Poll Results: Do you believe in God? | |||
| Yes, I believe in God | | 41 | 51.25% |
| Don't know, am Agnostic | | 18 | 22.50% |
| No, I don't believe in God | | 21 | 26.25% |
| Voters: 80. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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| Re: Do you believe in God?
Interesting, you don't call this monotheism do you? Sounds like infinate number of Gods, or are you saying the variation is in our perception. In that case then I can agree, because there are likewise an infinate number of posible realities as well. I just have a deformed idea of god. If I say God is my toothbrush then I guess it is, if I ascribe it that value. Phenominalistically, conceptuilizations and precepts are all we have. Even scientific truths are in some respects value based subjective judgments. If I say "RED" you may have a different idea of what red is. I might then describe what wave length the light is. But with God, is there really any sensory input to precieve and make judgment on? Certainly people have sensations, or epiphanys that they say are from God; who can despute the value they ascribe to those feelings. The color red and God are both concepts; thay are only what we believe them to be. So in MHO god is a very real idea (and red is a color). |
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| Re: Do you believe in God?
Truthfully ogden, I don't study any of isms but someday I'll have to look some of this stuff up. ![]() As you've said above, I agree that the variation would be in our perception. We think first and then manifest our thoughts into reality. If we think we believe in a God then we must have some idea of who or what God is. This perception of God, in the mind or thoughts of each person will begin to manifest itself into a realistic entity based on the individual. For most, if we want to learn about God or get closer to God, what do we do?... Find a church. We Church hop until we find a Church and a community we can plug into and a Church that fills a need we've created within ourselves, (in America anyway). We attend the church and basically become passive recipients of the information pertaining to God that the community or the Pastor delivers. The longer we receive this information and believe it within our minds, the more real it is and the more convincing it seemingly becomes. We do this until we reach the point where our minds are closed to any other ideas of what God or Church is and then we begin to judge other religions because ours is the only right one. I think we're kind of hi jacking this thread. I'll open a new thread that pertains more to what God is or who God is and it will be interesting because, while there will be things we can agree on, there will still be individualistic ideas and perceptions of God so each response will differ. Not talking about you and I, but everyone who gets involved in the discussion. Interesting discussions indeed. ....
__________________ "By a divine paradox, wherever there is one slave there are two. So in the wonderful reciprocities of being, we can never reach the higher levels until all our fellows ascend with us." - Edwin Markham |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - Justin for the above post! | ||
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| Re: Do you believe in God?
Just a little comment... I'm not sure that 6 billion different perceptions about God (if He exists) makes 6 billion different Gods, much less 6 billion different God (singular). In my estimation, that would make 6 billion perceptions about God, all of them more or less accurate in any number of ways (unless there really are multiple gods, then it would simply be more complex). If you ask 1000 different people what Elivs is, you'd probably get 1000 different answers. But we'd still be talking about the same guy, even if our perceptions vary greatly from one to another, including some perceptions that are probably incompatable. Most would say he's dead, but probably a few would say he's alive, or might be alive. Most would say he made good music, some would say he made terrible music. And if you ask some people from other parts of the world, they might not know anything about him at all. But we'd still all be talking about the same man, even if only denying any knowledge of him. I guess asking "Who is Elvis to you?" would still be a valid way of asking for opinions about him, but it would seem a bit weird to me to ask that in a way that suggests that each different answer would create a different Elivs. So when addressing the subject of God, regardless of the differing opinions on the subject, we are all adressing one reality, just like Elvis. (PS, this is not an attempt at proving God exists... We could change "Elvis" to "Merlin" or "Big Foot" and my conclusion would be the same. Whether they exist or not is not my point here.) Just a few of my thoughts... I'm not trying to sound harsh, I'm just trying to makes sense of it all for myself. Last edited by NeitherExtreme; 01-31-2008 at 05:16 PM. |
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| Re: Do you believe in God?
I hear that. The difference is we know that Elvis was actually a man and we have records to prove that he was a singer. Whereas in the case of God, each man has created his own based on his own perceptions and I believe that each of them is different. While we my all be addressing one reality, are we? Our realities are actually very different. This is a fine line. It's definitely a topic to be discussed further. Each of us form our own perception and although we are talking about a "one God", this one God has taken on many forms based on what each man thinks that One God is. Whatever each of us believe and accept into our mind as reality and truth, is what we will reflect into our perceived world. That reflection thus creates our perceived reality and reflects back to us. It's easy to say, there's only One God. Yet, each man has a different perception of the One thing and thus has created many Gods and many religions. This is what's dividing us today. We're all here in the same world in the same still light that hasn't moved... however our perception differs from one man to the next and some more radical than others. Here's a thread I stared and we should take this topic of what god is and move it there.
__________________ "By a divine paradox, wherever there is one slave there are two. So in the wonderful reciprocities of being, we can never reach the higher levels until all our fellows ascend with us." - Edwin Markham |
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| Re: Do you believe in God?
Subatomic (as all) particles, arise from the Omnipresent Ether.... Please refer to the link for a more thorough understanding of the Ether. Moray articles Index page - KeelyNet 2001 Brett.
__________________ The fulcrum of all effect is the One Light of God. GOD ALONE IS – IN MAN – AND IN ALL THINGS. Walter Russell |
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| Re: Do you believe in God? Quote:
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Then you might think of 'love' or 'firendship' but (according to me) love is a product of religion when they where trying to make people of the past stop having casual sex with anybody they felt like and make them build a family and so on, my guess is that before recorded history, waaaay back in the past of the early man people lived quite like monkys do now with a alpha-male who protected the females of the pact and had sex with them as he pleased while the other males of the pact followed his command and firendship is a new term for those other men in the pact and if you think about it, all firends groups have a leader.. Quote:
__________________ "When men are pure, laws are useless; when men are corrupt, laws are broken." - Benjamin Disraeli http://www.wizzyofsweden.com Last edited by Wizzy; 02-02-2008 at 10:10 AM. Reason: spelling |
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| Re: Do you believe in God?
My beliefs tend to stack up one on top of the other in relation to God. On a basic level, I believe that I exist and the universe exists. Then I think: "Why and How?" This leads me to believe in at least some force/source/energy/phenomena sparking the universe into existence. Then I think: "what are the conditions surrounding this force that influence it to cause the physical universe to exist?" Since there couldn't have been any physical stimulus BEFORE the physical universe existed, my opinion is that the nature of the stimulus in somewhere in the realm of something supernatural (by this I mean anything outside of or surrounding the natural realm). To me, this realm involves certain driving energies closer to WILL. Who's will? I don't know, but it had to be someone's or something's in my opinion. At the VERY LEAST, I believe that the "something" had a will and/or purpose for creating the universe; otherwise, what conditions would be favorable for a universe to proceed from nothingness?
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| The following users say: THANK YOU - mean ether for the above post! | ||
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There are multiple scientific hypotheses which attempt to explain the beginning of the universe. Einstein, among others, believed in the "steady state" hypothesis, which states that the universe is eternal and that galaxies "float" about aimlessly. However, mounting evidence supporting the big bang, including the movement of galaxies at an increasing speed away from a set point and the sound left after the "big bang," has forced scientists to start believing in the "big bang." A hypothesis which was briefly popular afterwards was the oscillating model, which hypothesized that the universe expands and contracts regularly. However, the oscillating model was rejected when evidence seem to point out that the universe is expanding exponentially, not slowing down (which would be necessary for a contraction to eventually occur). One hypothesis which is gaining some publicity is the multiverse hypothesis, which states that there are multiple universes which can somehow spawn each other. I am not sure as to all the science behind it, as there's a lot of it supporting various versions of the hypothesis, and most of it is quite controversial (but so was the big bang). Quote:
We are somewhat entering into the realm of epistemology here. What constitutes the truth? What constitutes genuine knowledge? Quite frankly, we cannot know anything for sure. Some of the oldest philosophical arguments, after all, are about solipsism. You cannot know for sure if anything besides the vague concept of your own mind exists. But we can establish that empiricism (knowledge based on experience) is the best way to know if something is true or not almost for sure. The scientific method is based on empiricism. In any case, you cannot argue that you cannot disprove something because there is no evidence to disprove it. This is counterintuitive and a logical fallacy. It's called burden of proof. It is not the job of atheists to disprove God, but the job of deists and theists to prove the existence of God. Why don't you believe in Thor? Ares? Loki? The tooth fairy? Santa Claus? The flying spaghetti monster? Divine purple hippos? BECAUSE THERE'S NO EVIDENCE FOR THEIR EXISTENCE. So why believe in the Abrahamic (or any other) God? Why even be a deist? I'd go so far to say that believing in a God is illogical, irrational, and unreasonable. How likely is it that a super intelligent and complex being has existed without us being able to detect him? Not very. How likely is it that an unimaginably complex being just appeared out of no where and then created the universe? Also not likely, considering we've never seen any other example of this happening (gas/dust clouds existed before planets, simple single-celled organisms existed before complicated ones, etc.). I'm not even mentioning the standard arguments showing that God is an illogical concept (i.e. omnipotency and omniscience). I can rationalize someone being an agnostic. I'm an agnostic of sorts myself, since I recognize we cannot lock out the existence of God with complete certainty. But in reality, I'm more of a "practicing" atheist. Why believe in God, Santa Claus, or the Tooth Fairy when there's no evidence for any of them ever existing? |
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It is much more likely that the universe (which is relatively simple) sprung from nothingness. |
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