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tbh I dont think there is a god it all seems too good to be true.
Half the bollocks they say Jesus did in his time such as miricals and stuff, seem like somthing out of A Harry Potter book. I do know for sure that there is a after life, weither that is Heaven or somthing else altogether, who knows. My mums friend was up yesterday and gave my mum and aunt a 'Reading' and she spoke to alot of my mums friends that have died. It is freaky some of the things people know, like it just goes to show how much the people we knew that have died, are watching down on us. |
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As for all the paranormal, seemingly bizarre experiences our brains can undergo, there is a mountain of neurological evidence to explain these things. We have huge imaginations built up through evolution. Remember, this did take an insanely long amount of time. Look at our ability to dream. Amazing, right? Because when we dream we believe it's real - within the dream itself of course. That's surely as amazing and seemingly mystifying as anything. Yet dreams are perfectly explainable. Near death experiences could derive from a number of factors, including but not limited to the huge, huge release of adrenaline, dimethyltryptamine and other neurotransmitters which sends the brain into an utter tailspin - compare it to, say, tripping out [dimethyltryptamine is an incredibly potent psychedelic that occurs naturally in the brain and is widely believed to play a role in near death experience]. Your brain is incredibly powerful and is perfectly capable of facilitating, on it's own, these percieved mystical experiences. Just because it has a scientific basis does not make it any less facinating. I hate the assumption that an atheist mind is robbed of all wonder. The brain is still a wonderful thing capable of wonderful states all on it's own, utilizing scientifically grounded chemicals and reactions to produce these states. |
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Billions of other examples exist. I love how an abstract, ill defined 'God' could sit outside the perimiter of the universe and the theory gains wide respect and acceptance just because 'god' as been a preserved facet of our culture for millions of years yet suggest to someone that a cardboard box could be floating outside it and they scoff. Why? One hypothesis is equally as absurd as the other. What if God is a box? You can't disprove that, just like ... as you said ... you can't disprove God, right? It reminds me of that Douglas Adams anecdote of a cult of people who believed snots were demonic, and they prayed and prayed for the coming of 'the great sneeze'. Hey, that's the way our culture could have went. We just picked the man in the sky idea instead. Why is one perceived to be more insane than the other? Because we have been conditioned to accept one, and not the other. |
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You don't see God until you die (apparently). So whilst the examples you give are verifiable, God isn't. |
Nope, there's a number of scientists who've stepped away from the materialist side of things and conducted research in different areas, much to the bemusement of the dogmatic system of which they are members of. They're sniggered at but still believe that there are huge amounts of human experience that can't be explained away through the internal mechanics of the mind.
Your theory on the mushrooms and brain synapses leaves me somewhat cold and doesn't explain how our ancestors buried their kin with tools and quite often in a fetal position. And I'm talking thousands of years ago here. That would lead me to believe that even in our primative form, we still acknowledged rebirth or a journey when death comes. That's very interesting to me. And with near death experiences, patients were able to give detailed accounts of what was going on in the operating theatre while they we heavily sedated and close to death. They could see it all occuring. Mental. I believe that there's others forces at work beyond the merely physical and I applaud any scientists who try to study these areas. |
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You don't, however, see God until you die. How fucking convinient! Maybe you see the box when you die? No, because that's silly :rolleyes:. |
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Science cannot disprove the existence of virtually billions of other things we are capable of conjuring up in our imaginations either, yet this ill defined 'God' figure get's special treatment because throughout the course of human history we have been conditioned to accept him. Or her. Or box. |
Interesting arguments either way.
Obviously science hasnt advanced sufficiently to explain all the mysteries of life, the human mind etc. etc. etc. So maybe the human intelligence we rely on isnt really that reliable. Saying that customs believing in life after death and god etc can be explained because of fear of death and simply not wanting to believe that living life is all there is to it. One life, no afterlife, no second chance at it, well thats kind of hard to cope with aint it? I suppose in some cases people will either believe one way or the other, thats not to say atheists wont have a mystical experience and start to believe, or believers in any form of deities have a crisis of faith and stop believing. The only guaranteed way to find out is by undergoing that experience we call death, if there is something the other side, the believers in one or another faith will have been proved to be at least partly correct. If there isnt then all those who didnt believe in god etc were correct unfortunately they wont be able to say I told you so. |
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Who #2/3- The definition of God. God is just 'there' in no physical form |
I'm talking about Neanderthals here who didn't have a culture as such Stu, and had very short, violent lifespans. How can you explain a primative species like that having such customs, when all they'd be really interested in is shagging, eating and staying alive? It's amazing really.
As for near death experiences I remember reading about one particular person who was dead on the operating table - heartbeat, brain functions all gone and still could give a detailed account as to what had taken place after he/she has been resuscitated. There is no scientific theory that can really explain it in full. The majority of science looks to internalize all these occurrences, rather than look for any exterior influences that may have been present. The book I'm reading is great. Haven't finished it yet so to be continued lol. |
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Your argument rests defiantly on the fact that God is not a material object. Why? How do you know this for a fact? Because to use the threads argument, an argument you started out defending ... science can't prove that God isn't material, right? :wink: Quote:
Who knows what the brain is capable of. It's endlessly amazing and for me, it's not an automatic prerequisite to the spiritual. I can't really argue beyond that really I guess. You have you views and I have mine. What's the book called? |
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And science can't prove that God is material, but if we're going to accept the possibility of a God in the first place then we have to accept the definition, and the definition says he's immaterial. Otherwise if you're going to try and prove he is material then you're not searching for the 'right' God. Btw you'll know if I'm arguing for the sake of it or not, my points actually have substance other than the other day which was just all tongue in cheek :joker: |
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I'll definately check out the book though. I'm reading a lot of atheist based stuff right now and I always like to have a balance. Quote:
So this time my question is : Which definition says God is immaterial? I wasn't aware the big fella had a definition. You simply can't prove he is not material. Your right though, you can't prove he is material either. The topic titles argument is becoming more and more banal as we go along. |
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I think to properly look at the two, you need to isolate them both because they just end up falling back on one another and you get nowhere. Reminds me of when you're a kid and you call someone something, only for them to reply "I know you are so what am I?" Religion essentially opens up a whole minefield for philosophy so its hard to argue when religion is involved, and the dreaded "God works in mysterious ways". To sum up a Facebook group, Christianity: One womans lie about having an affair that got out of hand. |
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That Facebook group is bang on the money, I reckon :blush:. |
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That's what I mean : it's all about striking a balance and not discounting any theory or train of thought, which most scientists sometimes do. They're very rigid in their ways of thinking, you know? That's why I like to read spiritual stuff too because I believe that there's things out there that we're unaware of and it would be silly to place all your bets on one particular way of thinking, which includes dogmatic science or organized religion lol. They all f£ck up. I'll sum my thoughts up by talking about my rabbit. Is he inferior in mentality to me? Yes.. well maybe. Is he capable of logical or rational thought? No. Is his main priority just to survive? Yes. When he comes jumping beside me looking for hugs and cuddles do I believe that there's more to it than just a need for warmth and that he loves me? Yes, I do. And how do I know this.... I don't, I just feel it, and it's the same with life and spirituality. Some things can't be explained or internalized. Call it intuition, call it stupidity, but it's how I feel, and until it's completely disproven I will continue to do so. I doubt that made any fecking sense lol. |
Just throw this thought in:
If the physical universe couldn’t have been created by something physical (as the First Law of Thermodynamics states), then the conclusion is obvious: the physical universe had to be started by something non-physical. Whatever it was started everything in motion technically is god. |
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You see if it was an infinite singularity containing all energy/matter then something other than energy/matter would have had to create the effect, if it wasnt an infinite singularity of energy/matter then it had a beginning and if it had a beginning it had a creating force or creator - God. God doesnt have to be as is defined in any of the religions in existance, having been in existance or even that will come into existance. |
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Either way, if some intelligence exists, I believe it to be an unconcious one. I'm not sure. You talk about your rabbit Setanta [you should be a veggie after saying something like that, surely?], but how do you explain this? : I think of a little child in east Africa with a worm burrowing through his eyeball. The worm cannot live in any other way, except by burrowing through eyeballs. I find that hard to reconcile with the notion of a divine and benevolent creator. David Attenborough. Your standpoint is admirable, really, but most of these 'feelings' you experience are the result of neurological firings made possible through millions of years of evolution. We didn't need nor do we need a God to breath love into is. We created it all on our own. We give meaning to our instinctual tendancies because we are emotional creatures. And if your not going to place your bet on just science, place it on the box god, because hey - the universe could be a practice in absurdity. [Note to self : Stop reading Robert Rankin]. |
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