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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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  #51 (permalink)  
Old 01-19-2008, 11:18 PM
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Re: Do you believe in God?

Hello,
I should have read all of the posts so far, but I'm just jumpng in so sorry if I'm rehashing the topic.

God is a concept, unfalsifyable. Man created god-the concept (and all other dieties) in mans image because there is no capacity in man to know a mental state higher than his own. We can not know the unknowable.

Our mind is a function of biological structure (and chemical reactions) in our brains. The very way our brain works leads us to find answeres were no answers exist. We are always making cognitive leaps into the unknown, its in our nature. The very argument that existance means evidence of creator is problematic when there may be real limitations to our ability to comprehend. (examples: time, infinity, nothingness, omniscance)

The very word god and "he" this or "he" that is so humanistic and limiting. Does god have gender, anatomy, does god reside in a place, does god have emotions like anger, sympathy, remorse? These are all anthropramorphisms.

Faith in god does exist though, so then god exists in peoples nieve realities. There is some evidence that faith is helpfull in healing. Some unfalsifiable concepts are usefull as well, but fantasy imposing as fact, and dogmatic adherance to fantacy in defiance of empirical evidence is irrational belief.

It is, in my humble opinion, its high time to shift the paradigm away from ritualistic superstitious beliefs to a more practical version of reality. A version that uses practical real world solutions to better our world now instead of waiting for reward in the "by and by" (heavan).

People still refute human ancestory connection with apes, when it has been genetically proven (see NOVA documentary on supreme cort case involving "inteligent design theory"). I hear people say Katrina (the storm) was gods punishment of New Orleans for sin, or that AIDS is punishment for homosexuality (total nonsense).

I assure you my response to Pythagoreans servey is not intended to offend or disrespect anyones faith, and I hold your answer to this question just as valid as my own. I really don't pretend to know, I am only rationalizing my thoughts the best I can.
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  #52 (permalink)  
Old 01-20-2008, 06:44 AM
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Re: Do you believe in God?

I have no doubts about the existence of GOD!!

If more people on this forum read the works of Walter and Lao, then they wouldn't question the existence of God, either!!

KNOWING vs Sensing....

Brett.
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  #53 (permalink)  
Old 01-21-2008, 11:47 PM
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Re: Do you believe in God?

Quote:
Originally Posted by ogden View Post
God is a concept, unfalsifyable. Man created god-the concept (and all other dieties) in mans image because there is no capacity in man to know a mental state higher than his own. We can not know the unknowable.
This is only acceptable if we take the materialistic view of human nature (which, I agree, is the only reasonable option)

However, if (yes, IF) man is composed of a spirit and a physical body, knowledge of God is possible. Kierkegaard says that the Holy Spirit is the synthesis between man (the thesis) and spirit (the antithesis). The Holy Spirit brings our two natures together, the higher and the lower. The Holy Spirit creates our physical connection with the spiritual world and with God. What does this mean, without the interaction of the "Higher Power" (Holy Spirit), man cannot know God, but with the interaction of the Higher Power, man can know God.

Now, we cannot have knowledge of this, like I have knowledge the TV is in front of me, it can only be taken on faith.

Quote:
Our mind is a function of biological structure (and chemical reactions) in our brains. The very way our brain works leads us to find answeres were no answers exist. We are always making cognitive leaps into the unknown, its in our nature. The very argument that existance means evidence of creator is problematic when there may be real limitations to our ability to comprehend. (examples: time, infinity, nothingness, omniscance)
Well Said.

Quote:
does god have emotions like anger, sympathy, remorse? These are all anthropramorphisms.
The Christian God does, remember, Jesus is God. Hebrews 4 reminds us that we do not have a God who has not suffered as we suffer. Part of God becoming man is God experiencing what it is to be man.

Quote:
It is, in my humble opinion, its high time to shift the paradigm away from ritualistic superstitious beliefs to a more practical version of reality. A version that uses practical real world solutions to better our world now instead of waiting for reward in the "by and by" (heavan).
Agreed. Even though I am a man of faith, people need to be dealt with here and now. Retribution is the responsibility of man.

Quote:
People still refute human ancestory connection with apes, when it has been genetically proven (see NOVA documentary on supreme cort case involving "inteligent design theory").
Conjecture. I am no biologist, and frankly I adhere to evolution, but there is a certain point where our science can go no further. Genetics can only prove so much, the rest is left to speculation.

Quote:
I hear people say Katrina (the storm) was gods punishment of New Orleans for sin, or that AIDS is punishment for homosexuality (total nonsense).
Fanatics, they make me chuckle. These are the people who ruin God.

Quote:
I assure you my response to Pythagoreans servey is not intended to offend or disrespect anyones faith, and I hold your answer to this question just as valid as my own. I really don't pretend to know, I am only rationalizing my thoughts the best I can.
People should not be offended by others challenging their faith, they should welcome it. If someone is offended by opposing arguments, it just shows that their faith lacks certainty.
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  #54 (permalink)  
Old 01-22-2008, 04:20 PM
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Re: Do you believe in God?

Not to be a pain in the ass here, but are the terms "believe in" and "God" sufficiently clear to everyone that we're all reading and responding to the same question?

If I ask: "Do you eat bagels?", we all know what the words eat and bagels mean with sufficient specificity that there is little ambiguity in the question. Or (since "believe in" contains a preposition), I could ask "Do you live on Earth?" Live, on, and Earth are also sufficiently specific.

But I'm not sure what you mean when you say "believe in", or when you say "God". I know what you probably mean, but I'm not willing to accept the universality of those terms such that I can restrict my answer to one of those three choices.
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  #55 (permalink)  
Old 01-22-2008, 04:49 PM
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Re: Do you believe in God?

I second that. We can believe in God or say we believe in God... the big question is, which God? So to just answer yes and no like eating bagels, it would be hard to do. We all know that there is a plethora of Gods that man has perceived and/or created... so, which God?
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Old 01-22-2008, 05:20 PM
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Re: Do you believe in God?

I'll give an unnecessary third to Aedes' criticism. Justin is right, "God" has a variety of meanings, and even understandings of "belief" vary.

For me, the short answer is "yes", but this answer is terribly misleading if "God" and "belief" are not clear.
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Old 01-22-2008, 05:54 PM
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Re: Do you believe in God?

I preface my response by stating that this is a personal inquiry, more than a philosophical truth:

I have, for the better part of my life been agnostic. I chose neither to believe nor to disbelieve in the existence of God. In maintaining an open-minded approach to such beliefs, I had convinced myself that one day, one day within eternity, my conscious mind would be satisfied with an argument one way or the other, but alas there simply isn't a sufficent lifespan for an individual ego to continue searching for empirical data that would either prove, or disprove God's existence.

Last summer, following a series of introspective events, a concept became clear to me: A God seperate from myself, the personification of a power higher than myself, does not exist. I realised that searching for such an entity had been fruitless and that indeed we are, for all intents and purposes, alone in all the universe. But we exist.

But what than are miracles? Illusions of ectasy?; and how is it possible that peoples seperated by time and distance, with very little communication between them could come to understand that there is a form of abstract existence, that inspiration and thought can beget reality, that we can find structure and beauty and love in such a chaotic mess of chemicals and particles and random occurences to the point that we glorify its infinite potential... and build towers to heaven as though by building higher we can reach that abstract perfection. Towers glorify their creators as much as they glorify the miracle of creation.

Then I became frightened by my realisation. If WE are God in all of our thoughts and in all of our actions and in our perception of the natural order; we then bear a tremendous responsibility for our thoughts and our actions and perceptions. There is no great father to reward us for virtue, Virtue is its own reward. There is no punishment for sin, Sin carries its own punishment. There is no God if we do not see God within ourselves.

If we want the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth, we must create it.

Welcome to reality.
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Old 01-22-2008, 06:16 PM
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Re: Do you believe in God?

"On Earth as it is in Heaven"
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Old 01-22-2008, 06:18 PM
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Re: Do you believe in God?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Doorsopen View Post
I preface my response by stating that this is a personal inquiry, more than a philosophical truth:

I have, for the better part of my life been agnostic. I chose neither to believe nor to disbelieve in the existence of God. In maintaining an open-minded approach to such beliefs, I had convinced myself that one day, one day within eternity, my conscious mind would be satisfied with an argument one way or the other, but alas there simply isn't a sufficent lifespan for an individual ego to continue searching for empirical data that would either prove, or disprove God's existence.

Last summer, following a series of introspective events, a concept became clear to me: A God seperate from myself, the personification of a power higher than myself, does not exist. I realised that searching for such an entity had been fruitless and that indeed we are, for all intents and purposes, alone in all the universe. But we exist.

But what than are miracles? Illusions of ectasy?; and how is it possible that peoples seperated by time and distance, with very little communication between them could come to understand that there is a form of abstract existence, that inspiration and thought can beget reality, that we can find structure and beauty and love in such a chaotic mess of chemicals and particles and random occurences to the point that we glorify its infinite potential... and build towers to heaven as though by building higher we can reach that abstract perfection. Towers glorify their creators as much as they glorify the miracle of creation.

Then I became frightened by my realisation. If WE are God in all of our thoughts and in all of our actions and in our perception of the natural order; we then bear a tremendous responsibility for our thoughts and our actions and perceptions. There is no great father to reward us for virtue, Virtue is its own reward. There is no punishment for sin, Sin carries its own punishment. There is no God if we do not see God within ourselves.

If we want the Kingdom of Heaven on Earth, we must create it.

Welcome to reality.
Amen Brother!
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Last edited by Justin; 01-22-2008 at 10:15 PM.
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Old 01-22-2008, 10:13 PM
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Re: Do you believe in God?

I find it intriguing that the tree in the garden of eden was the "tree of the knowledge of good and evil" and god said dont touch it or you will surely die, and the serpent said if you eat of it you will become as God. And as soon as they ate it they had the perception of nakednes (became self aware?), and guilt (wrongdoing) because they hid from God. I guess mortality is the price for this knowledge.

In my spirit and my mind I know that within man is great good and great evil. Is it coincidental that the words good and god are so similar, and that evil and devil are so alike?
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