There seems to be a bit of a chorus of individuals complaining that they hadn't intended to get re-involved, but anywho...
Some individual conceptions of God can be proven wrong, either by being shown to directly conflict with physical reality or via inconsistencies in their description (of which the Bible has more than a few given the clash between the vengeful OT God and the more merciful NT iteration), but until we have a theory of everything, it will be impossible to make a general statement.
Two things in regards to this.
1) Inconsistencies do not relate to validity. To provide an example: I am quite reserved around people I do not know, while with people I do know I am quite boisterous, jovial, and gregarious around those who I am familiar with. My two inconsistent behaviors do not relate in any meaningful way as to my existence (that is, it cannot prove any concept about me “wrong”). Additionally, that which appears to be inconsistent on the surface may not be so in reality upon a closer, meaningful investigation. To provide a non-religious example, the speed of light is a universal constant but light travels faster in a vacuum than in the atmosphere (and slower still in other mediums). This appears to be an inconsistency, yet deeper knowledge of the subject reveals otherwise (light travels slower in earth's atmosphere because it is getting absorbed by the atmosphere itself and re-emitted). So then, that which appears to be inconsistent between the OT and NT may not actually be so upon closer inspection (they still might be, but this is an argument for possibility).
2) Even if a Theory of Everything were to be developed, that does not necessitate that such a theory would be able to provide information on souls, the possibility or a good many other concepts. A Theory of Everything could not, for example, take into account other "Bubble Universes" (if such things exist, which a Theory of Everything couldn't actually address). The only sort of theory that could take into account Chaotic Inflation Theory (to my understanding, at least, but BROJ seems knowledgeable about such things, so perhaps he will correct me) is one where there are no constants, only independent variables (and thus, such a theory would be effectively meaningless).
And as an aside (yes, I said two things, but this barely counts as a third), we can make general statements without a Theory of Everything (and mind, such a theory may not be possible). They just might be dubious or improperly informed.
One may, however, argue that the definition of a god is relative, which could potentially, given a lot of time and technological advance, allow for such an entity to exist in physical reality. To ordinary humans, Lavos is so powerful that he might as well be god; he could crush any of us like ants. And to ants, we are as gods ourselves.
Only if we define a god as a being with the power to destroy; if, rather, we define a god as a being with the power to create independently of all other factors, Lavos might still be godlike to humans (we don't see the extent of his power), but humans would not be godlike to ants (who, of course, wouldn't be able to perceive such a concept).
They didn't stop teaching math after Godel's incompleteness theorem. It may be impossible to prove the consistency of a system from within the system, and it may even be that using the scientific method requires a certain measure of faith in the consistency of logic, but so far there has never been an incident in which a logical contradiction has been shown to exist in the real world, whereas contradictions have been shown to exist in religious scripture of all stripes.
Read “Structure of the Scientific Revolution” by Thomas Kuhn. Paradigms have shifted before and there is no reason to assume that paradigms will not shift again.
True, there has never been a logical contradiction in the real world, but they exist aplenty in the conceptual world (which is not merely limited to religious scriptures of all stripes). However, allow me to remind you of the argumentum ad logicam fallacy; just because the arguments for a conclusion are fallacious does not then necessitate that the conclusion is false (indeed, it is because this is a logical fallacy that Logic itself, as a system, can be used reasonably).
In fact, consciousness - the "soul" if you will - is composed of nothing but information; this can be seen in the simple fact that people change over time as they are exposed to more information, as well as the stances they take due to their own iteration of logic. The entire discipline of artificial intelligence is predicated on this idea; in function, the brain is essentially a biological computer, albeit limited by its chemical origins.
If I might propose a thought experiment: Present a computer with a problem and inform it of the computer's own outcome. The computer's future actions are irrelevant, and it will faithfully compute the problem and give you the answer you predicted. A human, on the other hand... present a human with a problem and inform him or her of their outcome of that problem. The human might be faithful and resolve the problem and give you the predicted answer. But the human might be uppity and choose to give a different answer, out of spite and independence.
Consciousness is not just information, but information uncontrollably reacting to other information.
He is not alone in this, especially on the Internet. [...] the same logical process that leads to the conclusion that murder is wrong can be supplemented by faulty but correct-sounding logic in order to prohibit stem cell research.
A minor point, but this seems to be little more than a bandwagon approach. That one is not alone in this curious form of what might be termed “atheistic extremism” does not indicate that such extremism is good or bad (or perhaps “desirable” and “undesirable” might be better classifications).
As for stem cell research, one hardly needs to rely on religion in order to promote the prohibition or limitation of stem cell research. Every medical research University worth its salt has Ethics Grand Rounds. The very scientists that research stem cells and their potential uses also debate among themselves and others the ethical grounds that they work on; you will not find arguments from religion in such places.
However, in your particular example, you are confusing stem cell research for embryonic stem cell research; nothing, not even potential, "dies" in obtaining adult stem cells, so the logical processes that lead to the conclusion that murder is wrong do not apply (and are not applied) to such.
Indeed, curiously it is adult stem cell research that has the most potential for medical uses (thus the limitation regarding embryonic stem cells is limiting the less profitable line of investigation; given that adult stem cell research is at an economic disadvantage to embryonic research, this could be seen as a good thing). For example, transplant organs grown from embryonic stem cells will still require the use of immunosuppressant drugs to reduce the risk of rejection. Transplant organs grown from adult stem cells, however, have the potential to be grown from the patient themself; there would be no difference in the transplanted organ and the one removed, thus rejection is not a consideration and thus immunosuppressant drugs (which open the patient up for a host of other diseases) are not required.
Christianity acted likewise when proselytizing; we can see this today in the existence of Christmas trees and even in the date selected to celebrate Jesus' birth, both of which were pagan in origin.
Historical records indicate that the date of the birth of Jesus was not, in fact, pagan in origin (this subject is still debated in historical circles). Particularly in the Coptic church, there are indications that Jesus' birth was held to be in that time frame (ranging from December 25thish to January 7ish, if I am recalling correctly) as early as the first century. However, to note, Christmas wasn't much of a celebrated Holy Day till several centuries later. It wasn't considered important.
The arguments for a pagan influence on the date of Christmas are faulty due to post hoc ergo propter hoc; numerous pagan holy days were around the same time period, therefore it is concluded that Christians specifically adopted one of those. However, no such record exists of this event. Rather, evidence is drawn from Catholic (and mind you, the first records of the celebration of Christ's birth are pre-Catholic) doctrine not established until much later. One such example used on occasion in such arguments is Pope Gregory the Great's advice to St. Augustine of Canterbury, which did include specifically replacing pagan festivals with the pre-existing saint days. Yet this example is from the very late 6th century; it is anachronistic to apply it to the 1st century.
However, to be fair, this topic is still debated in historical circles and I am sure well-published historians would disagree with me on a number of points (even including dating).
The mistreatment of women originated in evolutionary concerns rather than religious control, though the two are often intertwined; the female of the species controls reproductive access. In order to subvert this, males used their physical strength to create a social system under which women are considered property, and codified religious laws to support this. Whether one subscribes to a religion or not, that it has frequently been used as a tool of hegemonic powers is very well-documented. The anti-religious wish to cut the problem off at its source by removing supernatural justification for earthly oppression.
That isn't cutting the problem off at the source; you admitted that social systems were constructed after the fact to support oppression. Therefore, those social systems (in this particular case, Religion) are a symptom, not a cause. To fault religion in terms of sexism is akin to amputation resulting from diabetes. The flesh might be corrupted, but cutting the symptom off does nothing about the cause. Unless treated at the real source, it will return somewhere else.
But economics, rather than reproductivity, may be the more likely cause for sexism. In a basic hunter-gatherer society the physically able are the hunters (and these were usually men). Meat is a bit harder to come by than berries yet greatly desired as a food source, so meat had the higher economic value. Men, therefore, controlled a vital resource.
If we look at reproduction, then male-dominance actually makes less sense. Sperm and the implantation of such requires very little investment of resources, thus allowing men to potentially reproduce more often than women. Indeed, it is to the man's evolutionary advantage to do so (just like a flower that is better as spreading its pollen has an evolutionary advantage). Women, on the other hand, can, at best, engage in reproduction once every nine-ish months, and child rearing is a resource-intense process (while men and women are both subject to biological factors that increase the desire to rear a child, if the man isn’t present he can’t be effected by them). It is to the woman's advantage, then, to consolidate and pool resources. Thus, it is to the woman's evolutionary advantage for men to not "sow their wild oats," but rather devote all their resources to a single mate and the children produced there in. Polygamy is advantageous to men, monogamy is advantageous to women. If religion were entirely oppressive to women and instituted by men for their own benefit, then one would expect polygamy to be the norm. Contrary to this expectation, monogamy, the woman's benefit, is the norm. If we use religion to explain this, then it would appear that women instituted it to oppress men, not the other way around.
Scientists can be egotistical, authoritarian, and even abusive, the same as priests. This is not a consequence of science, but of humanity, as the scientific method makes no claim to instruct people on how to behave in their interactions with others. All it can do is provide experimental support for the hypothesis that one will generally catch more flies with honey than vinegar. However, the scientific community does tend to censor explanations that are not grounded in methodological naturalism; this is not bias, but merely the practice of good science.
Exactly! Being egotistical, authoritarian, and abusive is not limited to religion but a result of the human condition! Well said!
To note: The scientific community itself is in need of reform. It is good that it censors explanations that are not grounded in solid methodology, but it censors even good methodology in subtle ways. If the explanation isn’t new and exciting, it won’t get published in a major scientific journal. If it doesn’t get published in a major scientific journal, the scientist behind it can have difficulties finding a job, getting tenure, and procuring funding.
The scientific community is addicted to "The New;" a key component of the scientific method in retesting a hypothesis. Try getting funding with such a goal in mind, however. Scientists are eternally afraid of being scooped, in constant fear of negative results (which are, scientifically speaking, just as valuable as positive results), and loathing of high-risk projects. These things all have fine merits under the scientific method, but the scientific community is ruled by the twin tyrants of Prestige and Funding and nearly half of what science should be has been excommunicated.
Of course, I get grumpy because my academic field of choice doesn’t even compare, in terms of funding, to scientific fields. No such thing as an early investigator (K23) award in history, for example. There is no National Institute of History.
Well, those contradictions in religious scripture were made by the scientific system we have, no? A system developed by humanity, to better explain things than the scriptures themselves.
I think what you mean is that some of those contradictions might be better explained by humanity's understanding (or misunderstanding) of the universe at the time the documents were written, is that correct?
The most famous example is, of course, geo-centrism. Christianity at one point supported the belief, but the belief itself had its origins in Greek philosophy and many proofs of that belief were presented by "natural philosophers" (essentially, the closest thing to scientists that the time period had).
A few slightly lesser known examples can be found in the Kosher Laws (for example, I think whale were identified as fish; however, I haven't read this in the original language so I am not sure to what extent such incorrectnesses might be attributed to actual faults and what may be the result of translation).
However, I think what Hadriel meant was closer to inconsistencies in behavior of God and concepts (OT God said eye for an eye, Jesus said turn the other cheek), possibly the inconsistent pronoun usage (God sometimes says "I" and other times says "We" when referring to himself), and probably other things as well.
Religion must accept proven facts, it has to. As for unproven things like evolution, religion can reject it, no matter how much evidence makes it seem true, because they have a different answer for it.
If evolution isn't proven, then gravity isn't proven.
However, to note; religion can reject evolution (doesn't make much sense to, but it
can), but very few religions
need to reject evolution. There is nothing in evolution that contradicts most religions. (see Theistic Evolution).
Heh... Religion is the greatest aspect of making the facts fit what you want to believe. =P
I thought that was just humanity in general. After all, if we were in the right crowd, that statement would be accepted as "Liberalism is the greatest aspect of making facts fit what you want to believe," "Conservatism is the greatest aspect of making facts fit what you want to believe," "Being American is the greatest aspect of making facts fit what you want to believe," and "Grantsmanship is the greatest aspect of making facts fit what you want to believe [in order to get funding]."
Meh, you're making the same error I did. Religion (Christianity, in this example) is indeed sexist. It clearly states how men should live their lives differently then women. It also clearly states that men are in control of women.
There are physical differences that necessitate men live their lives differently than women; for example, men never have to bother with sanitary napkins
But on a more pragmatic term, men and women relate to people differently, they think differently, and even what makes them happy is different. Recognizing differences is not sexist (indeed, I would claim discounting such differences is sexist against both). Suppressing one side because of such differences is.
Is Christianity sexist? Again, women were just as liked to be saints in the Catholic Church. The early patrons were often women. Women could hold religious positions (being a nun, mostly, but a Mother Superior still had a good bit of power). Indeed, if we look at the average woman in the middle ages and compare them to the average man, they were surprisingly equal (hard times did not allow for the luxury of much inequality). Curiously, it is in the late industrial revolution that some of the hallmarks of sexism were reintroduced into society ("a woman's place is in the home," for example; though to be fair, before the industrial revolution home and work were not separate places), a time when religion was loosing power.
On that note, who's to say whether it truly IS a problem at all?
Moderno-centrism. People always believe that the customs of the current era are superior to those of previous eras (and, curiously, on par or better with the customs of future eras). Doesn't say anything, however, of if such customs are truly superior or not.
If there is no afterlife, and they have served a life of servitude, if you will, in vain, but they were happy whilst they did it, then who cares? They were happy whilst they lived and most likely died believing they led a good life. Because you personally wouldn't do it that means that it is wrong? I don't know, that sounds pretty unfair to me.
Very well said.
I don’t have a word of disagreement to offer. Religion is not the only thing that messes people up, or that is itself messed up. Education in America needs to be reconceived from the ground up.
It is always nice when we can agree on something (that being that the current education system is messed up). However, this isn't limited to America (I don't think anyone can LOOK at the German education system and not think it some lovecraftian horror). I think there is less of a chance of scrapping the education system than scrapping religion, though, so I for one intend to be "cunning" about it and work on fixing it from the inside. Just call me Double-0-Ph.D. (or maybe wait a few years till I have one).
The principle of the answer is so maddeningly easy. Only the implementation is hard. The principle is: People ought to be competent to have kids before they have them, and, once they do have kids, they should build a friendly, educational environment, teach them well, and set good examples.
Sounds a lot like homeschooling, and weren't those kids at the VERY beginning of this thread homeschooled? But that is getting into faulty implementation, not principle. Sorry.
... There is something to be said about a society where every citizen is a teacher. Sounds like a basis for a utopia.
Science cannot prove what it cannot define.
Science cannot prove; it can only disprove. But yes.
Eventually it will happen, if we don’t kill ourselves off first. The United States is, somewhat famously, one of the most religious of all the developed nations. Our fundamentalist Protestant heritage is something of a cultural aberration when considered on the global scale. Nations like the UK are, just as famously, post-religious in their social attitudes.
Such a tantalizing historical question, it makes me almost wish my specialization was in the modern era (or post modern era, or whatever the classification of such things are these days) and that I lived a good hundred years in the future, just so I could study this.
Gender does not exist in nature. It is a human construct designed to facilitate gender roles (which, despite the term, preceded the concept of gender itself). In the wild, biological sex is all there is.
gen•der, Pronunciation [jen-der],
noun 1. Grammar. a. (in many languages) a set of classes that together include all nouns, membership in a particular class being shown by the form of the noun itself or by the form or choice of words that modify, replace, or otherwise refer to the noun
b. one class of such a set.
c. such classes or sets collectively or in general.
d. membership of a word or grammatical form, or an inflectional form showing membership, in such a class.
2. sex
3. Archaic. kind, sort, or class.
Aggression certainly has its place, but an armed female uprising (and let’s not have the peanut gallery be making “hawt” remarks here…) is not a very good solution. Perhaps a workable solution in certain specific instances, but not as a general rule.
Just a passing curiosity, but have you read "The Gateway to Women's Country"? It is a story about a society where there was, essentially, an armed female uprising (minus the arms… so a Venus de Milo uprising!)
Question in my mind is, what is the proper role of men in such a revolution? Should we not allow women to cast the torch? Are we subject to a subtle paternalistic chauvenism by believing that *WE* - the male elite - must accomplish this for them?
Quite the conundrum. However, if I might propose, the world does not need a feminine revolution but a sort of
human revolution. If we operate under the old "us v them" mentality, no matter how we define "us" and "them," it seems like we will be trapped in a spiral of division. If women are to be equal, it is a task for humanity to solve, not women alone.
If there is such a human revolution, then men could (and should) have a role, but such a role would inherently need to be matched by a female role (would comparing this to two pieces of a puzzle have too many sexual overtones?)
I do blame religion where it deserves it; for the Inquisition, the Crusades, the massacre of the Native Americans, 9/11, and the Iraq war. I also blame the Abrahamic faiths for condoning slavery, as well as for the numerous atrocities of the Old Testament.
Do you also praise religion where it deserves it? The Crusades, for example, provided the tinder for the Renaissance and Enlightenment, while the Abrahamic faiths were instrumental in dissolving slavery (see William Wilberforce). Indeed, one of the fascinating things about history is that essentially no matter how horrible the event, if it didn’t happen then subsequent good might not have been done either.
the idea of an afterlife which we cannot prove stifles efforts to make this one better by diverting energy away from the pursuit of progress.
Says the people in a
video game forum.
<.<
>.>
Say anything that even vaguely opposes America's actions or calls its history into question, and you are branded a traitor.
Historiography is vital in this claim, and alas it does not hold up. Individuals
have been calling America's history into question for the last 80ish years. They aren't branded traitors, they're granted tenure. Academia is awash with individuals who call America's actions and history into question and no, they are not branded traitors but rather praised. Read a modern American History textbook and compare it to a textbook from to years ago. Things have changed quite a bit, all because people called America’s history into question.
Wow, I don't think I ever really knew that. So Europe is a prime example of the fact that we just straight up don't need religion anymore. That's actually insanely interesting, and I'm going to do some research on that, now. =D
Research is always good, but unfortunately resources are limited for this question. You'd need to wait a good fiftyish years to even begin to approach objectivity.
Europe is an example that we don't need religion? Possibly, but is it a GOOD example? Since WWI, Europe had been, essentially, in decline, as a civilization. It is only within my lifetime (specifically, since the fall of the Soviet Union) that Europe has shaken itself out of its slumber; it no longer needs a superpower to protect it, so it is free to grow in new and exciting ways. We are only seeing the first sprouts of that new growth; it is too early to judge what that growth will ultimately be. To be sure, the France, the Germany, the England that exists in 50 years will not be the same France, Germany, or England that existed 30 years ago. Even down to the basic cultural level, they'll be different.
And, of course, as Solon (at least I think it was Solon) advised, we can't accurately judge a life until it is over. But certainly not in its infancy.
And it just keeps spiraling from there, more and more extremely.
Our society literally has devised a nearly perfect system to keep boys "masculine" and girls "feminine", both of which are nonsense. Masculine VS Feminine is a system that needs to be killed, mercilessly. As a matter of fact, those words themselves can be killed along with it.
Not going to happen; to do such ignores
science. There are differences between men and women; to ignore these is silly. We react differently to medicines (due to differences in hormonal levels, among other things), we are susceptible to different diseases (women are more likely to have autoimmune problems, for example… which is also related to hormone differences), we interact differently on a fundamental level with the world around us, and even our rights are different (men, for example, do not have the right to an abortion, while women will never be able to become sperm donors).
Equality does not mean uniformity. Recognize the differences, but do not discriminate for or against them.
It's not "To be religious is to be dead" or "To be religious it to be inprisoned" but "To be religious is to be ignorant" then?
"To be religious is to be human." Of course, "To be non-religious is to be human" too.
When a student is bad, the teacher punishes him to make an example out of him. How can a system of morality where no one is punished by God on this world, or at least, we don't know if God punished them or not, work then?
Such a system? It can't. But such a system necessitates that punishment is to serve as an example to others. That is an example of negative reinforcement (well, technically, positive punishment). This sort of thing was refered to as terrorism somewhere previously in this thread (there is little difference between threatening hell and threatening any form of punishment).
In this matter, I am inline with C.S. Lewis: "The gates to hell are locked from the inside."
We have not proved it yet, but the beautiful thing about science is that chances are we eventually will.
The development between single cellular and multi cellular life forms is probably understood about as well as most evolutionary traits. The eye is a classic example; creationists say it is too complex to have evolved. Evolutionists can point to numerous living species that have some form of proto-eyes, ranging from light-sensitive skin patches to gel-filled optical fossas (fosses?).
Likewise, the creationist claims that the jump between single cellular life and multi cellular life is too large. The Evolutionist can point out that there are single cellular life forms that live in colonies of differing complexities in which individual members provide specialized roles. Such colonies are just a hop, skip, and a jump away from being multi-cellular.
How can non-physical and physical substance interact? I can go on for a long time on this matter.
Ideas are non-physical yet can be applied through physical means in order to alter the physical.
Indeed, ideas are the genes of the future.
EDIT:
More like "to be religious is to not examine oneself rigorously."
Haha, take THAT, meditative contemplation!
As we have seen, this is not true for all religious people, but it is for the majority of them.
Only fair to quote this since I quoted the above.
EDIT 2:
As a side note, being "rigorous" isn't always a good thing. "Thorough and exacting in analysis" might be a better phrase.