Scientifically, what cause not only my mother's heart, but my own, to start beating? We were officially dead for 3 minutes (4 for my mom).
I am curious; if there was a scientific explanation for what caused your mother's heart and your own to start beating, would that lessen the spiritual value of the event?
I ask because this touches on one of those concepts that I generally disagree with: the belief that divine intervention must inherently have no natural explanation. While I would not claim that God is unable to circumvent the laws of the natural world, neither would I claim that he is incapable of using them.
Which in turn led me to ask my question of you. Even if every single wild-but-scientifically-valid supposition the scientific community proposes is true, would that exclude the possibility of God for you? (I qualified that statement since Scientists have been known to make wild-and-not-scientifically-valid suppositions before. James Watson and Richard Dawkins are two such individuals).
Of course, we would then have the Busy-Body God conception to work against. That is, the belief that anything "undesirable" that happens is evidence of either god not existing or god being a twisted individual. RD and Z ask why God "let" your heart stop. Which is of a similar vein to asking why God lets children starve in the world, why God lets people be murdered, and in general why God lets bad things happen.
Such stances are rather poor ones if one desires to disprove the existence of God; even a cursory consideration gives one two potential outcomes of the stance, either God exists and is a dick, or God doesn't exist. However, deeper reflection on these matters reveals a fundamental perception of God, which I termed the "Busy-Body God" conception. Essentially, there is a belief held by some that if God exists, and if He is good, then there should be no bad in the universe. However, such a conception defines "bad" by "I don't like it." Thus, they expect God to not only promote good in the universe, but to promote the very specific, limited view, good that they want.
Thus, RD and Z ask why God let your mother's heart stop, and your own. They see this as "not good," even cruel (if God exists). However, they fail to take long view of the subject and thus do not take into consideration various other factors that may have well made it "good." For one, perhaps if this series of events hadn't happened, you might not believe in God. Perhaps by coming close to death, your mother's life has been more meaningful and significant since. Perhaps many things; my point is, even when there are unpleasant events, we are not so limited (unless we choose to be) so as to be unable to imagine than even in the worst circumstances, some good could have come from it.
To offer my own experiences: I'm a cancer survivor. Sure, I could take the view that God caused my cancer, and I can also take the view that it is because of God that I recovered from it so well. But having cancer was a very formative point in my life and, looking back, I'd have rather had cancer than not. The experience changed me in a way that I doubt many other experiences could have, and I believe that the change was for the better. So I would maintain, even in giving me cancer, God was being good and kind.
Though to note, that requires the supposition that God “gave” me cancer. I would generally object to such a supposition, especially if one is using “gave” in the same manner that one might say “Bob gave the clamp to Susan” or “Hassem gave a sandwich to Pip.”
Religion virulently promotes ethical frailty and faulty reason; science does nothing of the sort. Both can tools of expression for bad people, but religion is proactive. Religion seeks to legitimize sexism, repression of human sexuality, discrimination against unbelievers, etc.
And, pray tell, what was eugenics but scientists attempting to legitimize sexism and racism? And what was Social Darwinism except science being misused to justify social inequality?
Admittedly, religious individuals have done horrible things. Scientific individuals have as well. However, you continue to attribute to actions of the individual to the whole in the case of religion, and you ignore the actions of the individual and their affect on the whole for science. Actually, you do that for everything else too.
That is the fundamental element of your arguments that make them so ineffectual; you apply a double standard.
Both Daniel and I, and I believe most thinking religious types, would admit that religious individuals have done horrible things and that the world would have been a better place if those things had not happened. However, just as you do not attribute the follies of individuals regarding science to the larger concept of Science itself, neither do we attribute the follies of individuals regarding religion to the larger concept of Religion itself.
In short, people can know the atrocities of religion and still believe that religion is good in the exact same manner that you can know the atrocities of science and still believe that science is good.
Nevermind. I'd written something, but I don't think my arguments will do much. Sufficed to say, ZeaLitY, your arguments were only ever judged well elucidated by you yourself, not by me, so recalling them means little.
While I could certainly be misreading what Z said, I think he meant that Lord J and others have had a positive influence so that his beliefs in certain regards are not exactly what they once were. In turn, I think he was then referring to and recalling Lord J's arguments, not his own.
Actually, I'm slightly surprised Lord J hasn't posted yet. I suppose that could be taken as a comment on the state of the thread.
However, your comments on Z's quote made me think of something. One of the biggest stones individuals throw at religion is modernocentrism. Religions, especially in the modern world, do not represent modern beliefs and that is a sin that the modern world finds unforgivable. The modern world is so certain in the truth behind its beliefs about humans and the world that any disagreement with that perspective is perceived as clearly a heretical belief that aught be burned at the stake (to put it dramatically).
Let us assume, for a moment, that the verse cited is clear proof of a larger theme in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, and that such a theme is one of "sexism."
Would a theme of sexism invalidate religion? Does a theme of sexism make religion into a harmful non-truth that aught be done away with?
If we believe that knowing the truth of the universe is far better than living in a lie, then a theme of sexism should have absolutely no influence on our perception of religion.
Let me stress that this is only following from the afore mentioned assumption. But if there is a fundamental truth in religion, and if that fundamental truth includes sexism, then is that truth a good one that we should accept and follow?
Now setting such assumptions aside, let me make it clear that I do not believe all religions do include sexism as a fundamental theme, and I would argue against the claim that sexism is inherent to religion. But the point being, the modern world faults religion for not agreeing with the modern world's perceptions; if the Modern World says W and Religion says Q, then Religion is wrong.
However, if we are not mere puppets of the modern age, but rather if we are independent thinkers capable of finding truth, then we come to a horrible possibility: the truth might be something we don't like, something horribly opposed to the world as we know it and accept it.
To move away from real-world religions, allow me to draw from literature and H.P. Lovecraft. Imagine, if you will, that the gods of the safe religion are weak things, Great Ones limited to the earthly sphere, and that beyond that there are higher powers. Imagine that the true gods of the universe are the Great Old Ones like Cthulhu or the Outer Gods like Azathoth and Yog-Sothoth.
If we are dedicated to finding out the truth, then we would be dedicating to Azathoth and Cthulhu, beings whose very existence is anathema to the modern world and all we hold dear and conceive of as good.
So the question is, in seeking truth, are we capable of setting aside the false conceptions of what we view and good and evil and take up the truth instead? If Cthulhu were truth, for example, could we follow him?
To return to the real world now, if Religion is truth, can we set aside modern assumptions and pick up truth?
Which is all a very verbose way of saying: just because Religion might disagree with modern perceptions, it does not follow that Religion is wrong or bad. One must first establish the truth of the matter before one can weigh perceptions, and in doing so one must entertain the possibility that the modern perception does not reflect the truth.
The modern world rejects sexism, and I believe this is rightly so (and I believe Christianity and other religions are in line with such a belief). But it is conceivable that the modern world is incorrect in this rejection. If in a search for Truth I discover that it includes sexism, is it better to adhere to the modern world’s rejection of sexism or to embrace sexism as a part of Truth?
The modern world says nothing on the subject of pants. It might be that in a millennia or two the humans of the future will marvel at how oppressive we were to pants, and they’ll wonder why it took the great pants revolt of 2045 to set the world straight. The point being, merely what the modern world believes may not be truth, especially when pitted against the beliefs of the past. Merely coming later in time doesn’t inherently mean we are ethically superior to the past; we may be equally blind to inequities in our own time, and we might misjudge the inequities of other periods. Faulting something else for not conforming to modern beliefs is improper until one has first established that the modern beliefs are themselves truth and not a product of the age.
Which is all to say, even if religion is all those things that Zeality says it is (a hateful, spiteful, evil, sexist, racist, and oppressive institution), that does not speak a single word on its truth or the existence of God. Until one can establish universal truths to base perceptions upon, citing deviations from the modern perspective is nothing but an appeal to emotion.
Not that there's any way science can prove the existence of a God, but when I compare my own religious experience with that of many others, I think I'm a happier person for basing my belief on a logical framework rather than a purely theological one...
Very wisely put. I didn't quote it all, but you are quite good at making your points, those points being poignant, and those points being eloquently stated. I think I've said it before, but when you speak on these sort of matters, you remind me a lot of C.S. Lewis and G.K. Chesterton. Which considering that Lewis is my hero, I do mean that as a very high complement.
That's why I worry about religion based purely on theology. Certainly, religious scholars can find all sorts of scriptural passages that provide them a circuitous way out of the dilemma, but it totally, totally, doesn't work for many laypeople.
I've referenced this before, but the basic approach of John Wesley and Methodism can be summed up in the statement: "In essentials, unity. In nonessentials, liberty. And in all things, charity." I bring this up because I believe in it and I agree with you. Most of theology, to my mind, deals with nonessentials. Being unimportant, it’s nothing to fight over. And even when disagreeances are on essential matters, one should approach the disagreement with charity and good will, not pitch forks and torches.
Still, it makes enough sense that it could happen through sheer randomness without any outside forces so much as poking a critical atom into place, so Occam's razor weighs in favor of the purely scientific explanation.
Heh, actually, the more I learn about science, the more I realize Occam's Razor is bunk. It really does require fewer suppositions and factors to say that God instantaneously created humans whole cloth than it does to understand the scientifically accepted model of the development and processes of human life. Of course, the problem is that we have a lot of observable evidence for the scientific model. But to give you a taste of what I mean: we have DNA. Yay, DNA! Except that doesn't really control who we are, that job is up to RNA, which codes proteins. Okay, Yay, RNA! Except not all DNA produces RNA that codes proteins, yet changing that DNA can cause effects on the individual. So...Yay, DNA again? Ah, but then there is micro RNA that works on a smaller scale to influence DNA and RNA. And if you are female, you have two copies of the X chromosome. Except, only one is needed generally so the other copy is often switched off in a cell. Chromosomes. Switched off. To note, most/all calico cats are female for this very reason. One should generally expect to find any given X Chromosome to be switched off 50% of the time. Unless that chromosome might cause a problem in the overall body. Then that chromosome can be switched of upwards of 90% of the time. How? Why?! WHO!
Anywho, my point being, a system is almost always more complex than we realize. Thus, Occam's Razor doesn't really fit into science all that well.
well, the problem with christians accepting evolution probably stems from its lack of presence in the Bible.
I'd like to come out of the closet... I'm... I'm a Christian and an Evolutionist.
Actually, with the reaction of some Christians to me believing in Evolution, you would think I had told them I was gay.
I would argue that the problem with Christians accepting evolution has nothing to do with the bible (at least, not in origin) and everything to do with social interactions between Christians and Atheists. When Darwin first published the Origin of Species, there were Christians who rejoiced at it, claiming that the book illuminated the great and unseen tools of God. However, some individuals also used the Origin of Species and the concept of Evolution to beat religion over the head, claiming that it proved god didn't exist. Which relates back to an earlier part of my post;
"...if every single wild-but-scientifically-valid supposition the scientific community proposes is true, would that exclude the possibility of God...?"
Evolution tells us how life changed over countless ages, progressing from something barely recognizable as "alive" to humans and beyond. Nothing in Evolution precludes the possibility of God existing, creating the process itself, or indeed, even pushing it along in unseen and unseeable ways (again, I would largely argue that God can influence the universe in both natural and unnatural ways).
You might be interested in a book on this very topic. It was written by Dr. Francis Collins, the geneticist who headed up the Human Genome Project, and he essentially argues why belief in God is acceptable from a scientific perspective. That is, he isn't trying to prove that God exists, scientifically, he argues that nothing in the Scientific Method, scientific research, or the Scientific Community precludes the potential for the existence of God and that Scientists can believe in God without impugning their integrity as a Scientist. The name of the book is
The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for BeliefHe also worked with Darrel Falk to write
Coming to Peace With Science: Bridging the Worlds Between Faith and Biology, which is a book taking the opposite approach. This book attempts to convince Christians that it is okay to believe in Science.
Though, I challenge those to who take the Bible literally to explain why those stories have to be taken literally - I see two problems with this:
Curiously, biblical literalism is a somewhat modern element in Christianity, especially as a widespread belief. Sure, there was simplicity in Christianity in the past (people believing that Heaven was a physical location in the sky, etc), but I would argue that that is different than literalism. To note, theologians and religious thinkers even as early as St. Augustine believed that the creation story recorded in the bible was metaphorical and not literal.
I considered myself an atheist before reading this thread, but fuck it - no point in subscribing to anything - I'll just go with the flow
Heh, personally I'd argue that agnosticism is the only logically valid position, for generally the very reasons you stated. To be a theist or an atheist is inherently illogical to me (one can't know for sure, it is impossible to know for sure, so any conclusion inherently requires one to make a decision without complete information, so while the logical evidence might point to a specific conclusion, the evidence and logic will never reach that conclusion, so accepting such a conclusion requires a break with the evidence and with logic). But then, being a theist myself, that would make me illogical under my own belief, so I might not be the best to comment on such a belief either.
I guess my own brand of logic traps me into saying "yes" to that, or at least whatever level of omnipotence is necessary to break the laws of physics with respect to introducing matter/energy into a closed system. God may have other characteristics (being sentient, exhibiting true love for its creations, existing in some kind of realm akin to the biblical conception of heaven, etc.), but I guess omnipotence is the only one we could possibly detect in the absence of subjective religious experiences. And even then, only through the effects of omnipotence, namely the creation of matter or energy where only a vacuum existed before.
One of the interesting things about science is that it supposes universal laws that are eternal. To provide examples: the gravity on earth is a temporary state but the force of gravity is omnipresent throughout the universe. Pi = 3.14159265358979323846... because it
does, there are no two ways around it. Matter and Energy, though interchangeable, cannot be created or destroyed; that law is eternal.
However, if one believes that God is omnipotent and that he did create the universe, one comes to a curious possibility; he created the laws of the universe as well. He could have made it so that pi = 3 even, or 2, or 4. He could have made it so that matter and energy could be created and destroyed with ease. He could have made it so that gravity is just a local phenomenon. Etc.
To note, I'd also generally claim that God had to create a "vacuum" for energy and matter to be created in. One might imagine pre-universe to be a sort of geometrical point. No width, height, depth, etc. Not even the space for things to exist.