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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? Quote:
It is true imagination is said to be of the utmost importance as is stated by Einstein himself,the man did not believe in a personal god.He believe in the totality and order of the universe as god,a very different concept of divinity.The reason I interject here is that Einstein himself was very frustrated at being use by the religious to fortify their claims,he stated most firmly he did not believe in a personal god. |
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| Re: Do you believe in God? Quote:
Einstein? The beliefs of a particular person are neither here nor there. Isaac Newton was into alchemy as well as physics, but try these quotations from Einstein: "It was of course a lie what you read about my religious convictions, a lie which is being systematically repeated. I do not believe in a personal God." "I have never imputed to nature a purpose or goal, or anything that could be understood an anthropomorphic." "The idea of a personal God is quite alien to me and seems even naieve." Peter Last edited by Justin; 09-04-2007 at 05:06 PM. |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - Peter for the above post! | ||
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| Re: Do you believe in God?
Boagie, Peter, Thank you for your responses. Quote:
As far as Einstein is concerned I didn't mean to enlist him in my own conception which is of a kind of soul of the universe (a hylozoistic universe) which is accessbile by the human mind through math and science and nature. I do appreciate you laying out the facts. Einstein was only one man, true, but he seems to have posessed a keen insight into the nature of things, and whereas he was not a religious person in the conventional sense (which is the same with me) he was not an atheist either. Also I can greatly sympathize with someone like Einstein, who is not an atheist but whom other people with their own agenda try to put their own words in his mouth. It seems that even if I believe in God independently of conventional religions people will still associate me with them. If I may, I would like to pose some general philosophical questions that I have been thinking about recently in light of our discussions here. These are some questions that persons who say there is some form of God has at least partial answers to; and that those who say there can be no God may have difficulty with. At least those that say there can be no God would have to philosophize, I think, in approaching these questions:
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| Do you believe in God?
That is a mere feeling that there is that impersonal god and the same for those who see a personal one. That mere feeling is also the source of the notion that we need God for ultimate purpose, divine love and a future state. Our own purposes ,human love and this one life suffice,I daresay. That mere feeling is a replaceable placebo! That mere feeling results in pareidolia- seeing Yeshua in a tortilla or Mary in a pane glass. That mere feeling is anthropomorphic. Is pantheism the form of your religious nature in projecting that impersonal god onto the Cosmos? What is then your explanation? Mother Nature- natural causes- is impersonal. That fallabilistic approach is that of the Huxleyan agnostic, the rationalist, the naturalist and the skeptic.In "Arguing about Gods, Graham Oppy recommends it., adding we must not think that theists have to adkust to our views.I am all those names. My signature elsewhere is :Fr.Griggs rests in his Socratic ignorance and humble naturalism. He might be wrong! No, the inverse is so true.The people who thought that did not have the evidence! All the evidence. Last edited by Justin; 09-05-2007 at 06:59 PM. Reason: merged posts |
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| Re: Do you believe in God?
there is no doctrine proving god exists theres no finite expression that will show us the complete picture of the absolute because it expresses itself in an infinite magnitude as well as this finite one hints the term "father, son, holy ghost" if a finite expression is what your looking for to explain things on an infinite magnitude it'll not be found.. ever finite quality can be measured infinite quality can only be compared.. not measured we cant ever calculate the wholeness of god its impossible evidence suggests nothing exists beyond the mind but even those of us who understand we have a spiritual purpose can accept this and still believe in god we can see both sides make up an even greater picture everything is anthropomorphic look at matter itself look at Mass can energy not be converted to mass and mass converted to energy? does mass not have a separate meaning other than its measurable qualities? the aspirant must include wholeness and implicative thinking to see the entire absolute |
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| Re: Do you believe in God?
I have to say yes because we live in a world defined by 'consensual reality' and the majority of people believe there is a God. I believe God is a construct, used for many purposes. These uses range from social control to defining life's purpose to mysticism, real and imagined. The Big Bang has less credibility for me than the idea of God. The Big Bang, if it happened, was the start of this universe. But it also implies there was 'something' before it and does not negate a claim of 'God'. The Hindus believe that the expansion and contraction of the universe is the 'breath of Brahma'. Science is as much a religion as the 'others', not an alternative to them. We have a handful of scientific gurus and prophets of 'fact' whose works, for the most part, are able to be understood by only those with special training, not by the populace. The claims are mostly untested, untestable or found wanting; then there is a quick 'patch' to the theory ... etc. Doesn't sound too different to the attempts to weigh the soul, and so on. Do I pray? Yes I do, and I love it. Its effect is tangible to me, and I understand it 'scientifically'. Am I mad? Perhaps. But I acknowledge that I am only able to sense what my sense organs allow me to. I do not see what is, just what my body is programmed to. I also know that people are unique in their programming. Apologies if this appears to be a rant, but you have to admit, for something that probably doesn't 'exist', God is pretty big. All the best, NA |
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| Re: Do you believe in God?
Hmmm.... good post! I've been reading along and here are my thoughts. Wow, where to start... Many of us in the world believe in God and that may be the majority of us. I think the problem is believing in what God is. So how many Gods are there? Which one do you believe in? Trained Wrong I believe myself that many of us are trained wrong from the beginning because many are under the impression that God is some physical being that sits up in the sky surrounded by angels and arch angles and all the company of heaven. My grandmother believes that family is going to be together on the other side and she tells me about how beautiful it's going to be in the land of milk and honey. We simply don't believe in the same God. Pyth... your questions are definitely worth pondering and these are things that I think everyday. I cannot help it, cannot control the thoughts I think... It amazes me when I start to mention it in a group and everyone runs... Philosophy, I mean. As far as the personal and impersonal, that again solely depends on ones vision of God. How do we perceive God and is it different than how our neighbor perceives God? Science is Limited Science, although very important in and of itself, is still limited by the 5 senses. We cannot prove that a God exists in the scientists' eyes because we can't measure him, haven't seen him, no pictures... simply nothing that can be measured by any means of science... yet we see the effects all over. So, if it cannot be measured by science, then it isn't... and this is the limitation of Science. My Lovely Wife My wife believes in God but she's always pictured God as something separate from the Earth. Someone who is far out of reach of man and is the one up there bowling and laughing at us down here, and is also the one who is going to send you to hell to burn if you didn't live your life right. That's it???? This is what people actually believe. So it's one thing to believe in God... the question is, who is your God?Deep Thinker You'll have to excuse me... sometimes I'm a very deep thinker, well... all the time..... God..?????... This is not something I question anymore... Since I was a child I've always tried to seek out the cause of effect. No matter what the circumstance, no matter what instant, my mind races around seeking only the cause of all effect. Sometimes I wish not... However, in seeking this it is seeking God, obviously because he or it would ultimately be a Cause of all Effect. Is God really something separate from us? The question goes back to, what is God? Do I believe in God? Back to... Do I believe in God? Well, I believe that man has definitely built up an image of God and most certainly gave God the name of God. So I don't believe in the image that has been exaggerated throughout generations. I also agree with l0ck... I know, without the ability to measure, that we are energy and the the entire universe is energy. I believe that God is in all creation and that God is Nature and that God is the very essence of mankind and we creatively evolve towards the knowing of this. God (as man may call him, is the essence of life), is the very ether that allows us to wake up in the morning. Not a fat guy in the heavens with a bunch of good looking angels where everyone is to look perfect, once in a while fighting with the devil.. lol no! I believe in... the only reason I'm reluctant to use the word God is because it is automatically construed as some big guy we can't reach... What do you call him or it without falling into a popular perception? Treating Symptons So in essence, I believe.. No, I must correct myself.. I know! We are the essence of life. If our spirit were to ascend from us, our bodies would fall to the earth. Science... just like doctors measure and treat the effects with the limitation of not being able to identify the cause. If man or science knew the cause to all effect, then he wouldn't be treating symptoms. Doctors wouldn't be treating symptoms with drugs that cause more effects... it makes more sense to discover the cause and start there. What does this mean? I believe I believe So, when it comes to believing in God, yes I believe there is an essence to each and every one of us and all of nature. Scientifically it is complete balance and scientifically it has a cycle of balance in nature. God to me is more about Love and Balance and Nature... but the most important thing of all, God is not a being or a deity or a fat guy in the sky, he... or it... is the essence of Love. How so I know??... I know because I've spent my lifetime discovering it. One cause is in control of all effects everywhere! It all comes down to ONE. Is it God? That's the question. Can I label it? How can one person believe in anything when we have yet to discover the cause of all effect? Who even looks anymore? We're too busy living in a world of effect. There we go. NafsAmara, that's how you rant. ![]() Last thought ... One last thought. Mankind creates and has created from the beginning of time. Hell, we're creating right now on the internet and with technology. Take a good look back not even a century ago and see what man has created. Mankind has the ability to create heaven and hell... just ask some of us. So if mankind creates... where is it going to end? The progression is now at a speed we cannot keep up with. God, (or so man calls his deity), is the very essence of all creativity... HE IS. IT IS. What a subject. Thanks all for listening to my ramblings that I never intended on writing until reading this thread. Look forward to reading on...
__________________ "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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| Quote:
One option is to note that there is no guarantee that we can find an answer to every question we are capable of formulating. From what we know of the origins of the human race it appears that our brains evolved as problem-solving tools for promoting survival. This means that we are most successful at handling practical problems and that the intellectual equipment we possess may be inadequate for the questions of you raise. In my opinion questions 1,4 and 5 in your list are likely to fall into this category. Even those who have difficulty with Evolution can accept that there may be questions which we are simply incapable of tackling. If this is the case we should have the courage to admit our limitations. In response to problems and difficulties in general, the first requirement for approaching an answer is to agree on what the problem is, to agree an accepted definition. This thread, on re-reading it, brings out the difficulty that when it comes to discussing the deity, a common definition is lacking. Put at its simplest, the problem is that everyone has his or her private definition of God with the result that we are not talking about an identifiable entity at all. In the Epistemology section of this site I mention that I find it useful to divide thinking into two types, representing two different cognitive responses to our experience: Type 1 focuses on prediction, precision and manipulation of our environment. Type 2 consists of valuing, appreciating and finding significance. Despite the importance which I attach to the Scientific Method, I believe that Type 1 thinking excessively dominates our culture to the exclusion of Type 2. We really do have a difficulty in addressing these issues. It seems to me that the more fundamental questions of the ones you raise are questions of this nature. The point is, however, that these questions do not yield knowledge of the external world but rather explore and refine our awareness of value and significance. A large part of the reason our culture has such difficulty with these questions is that we are attuned to discussing fact rather than value and significance, and even lack an adequate vocabulary for doing so. ....just some thoughts on questions which are destined to leave us feeling humbled. Peter |
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| Re: Do you believe in God?
i like to think of god as tri-fold as far as how it tends to separate itself into groups of awareness but essentially absolute i agree with the 'father, son, holyghost' observation or 1.the perceived environment 2.man 3.and then spiritual being these 3 things being different aspects of the absolute whole all aspects are qualitative and infinite the quality of energy, along with the rest of its qualities, is measurable mass is quality its measurable non-energy qualities like cohesion are not measurable but comparable, and trap energy in the forms of mass but energy itself has no tendency to enmass as we have observed somewhere within the 2nd law of thermodynamics each time energy transforms it loses more of its qualities and its purpose becomes less and less now we as spiritual beings and essentially awareness centers of the absolute absorb quality expressed by the absolute, specifically quality from mass eventually as all qualities are discovered self-awareness is achieved materialistic thoughts and greed are just hunger for quality which is trapped within mass quality is sensed by us, and absorbed, and becomes apart of our awareness this is how you come to know the value of mass.. u have to know it.. otherwise it cannot be described for example try to describe color to someone who has never seen color the awareness of that quality in that spiritual being is not yet present as the stored qualities of mass get absorbed they lose quality and cohesion - energy gets de-massed and moves from a mass state to a kinetic state spiritual beings and mass are in reciprocal qualitative relation to each other the environment serves them each optimally and individually but each experience has absolute purpose as awareness grows, hunger for more quality grows, and then so too does the release of quality from stored energy they are all in relation with each other the hunger for quality and the awareness of quality grows exponentially (but this does not mean human population grows exponentially so lets not interpret it that way) the rate of quality released is exponential the creative intelligence of god grows exponentially then too, which is the quality trying to tie together these 3 aspects of the absolute and make them all aware of each other, it is gods 'will' it has a means to an end, and that is complete self-awareness, but it is not exactly the loving notion you would think it to be though, because essentially it creates conflict, thats its entire objective because it learns and grows more aware by reason of apparent absence, or conflict because through conflict mass releases its qualities and awareness increases the creative intelligence is all about the needs and wants of the 3 different aspects of the absolute developing self-awareness is essentially progressive proliferation of needs and wants.. the need for more qualities.. which is hunger for quality which is hunger for mass which is hunger for self-awareness they are all related and everything is essentially a quality of the absolute we can start with any one quality and proceed to the next |
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