traptunderice wrote:
FrigidSymphony wrote:
traptunderice wrote:
Seinfeld26 wrote:
FrigidSymphony wrote:
Is it reasonable to be agnostic about the FSM? About Thor? Zeus? The Celestial Teapot?
Even an experienced atheist will tell you that God has a lot more credibility than the celestial teapot and FSM. Because there's actual evidence making it (him) a possibility (whether that evidence satisfies everybody is another issue). And it's a very simple/basic concept (just a singular entity greater than everything else in existence). While a celestial teapot and FSM are much more rigid and complex propositions. And we know precisely what we would expect to see if either existed (for example, we'd expect to see evidence that nature is capable of producing teapot shaped items with polk-a-dots). While we can't make such expectations of God.
I call bullshit. Minus the FSM and the teapot, you have no reason to believe a Christian deity over an Indian one.
@Frig: Go read some Feuerbach or Marx. I'm tired of you reciting Dawkins and Harris.
I try not to recite Dawkins, Harris, Dennett or Hitchens too obviously, in the end the arguments are pretty much the same. I appreciate the suggestion, any particular books you'd like to recommend?
Essence of Religin by Feuerbach would be the most concise but he also wrote The Essence of Christianity, which is the same argument but much more elaborate.
For Marx, the intro to his Critique of Hegel has his classic lines:
http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1843/critique-hpr/intro.htmBasically, Marx takes Feuerbach's ideas and explains why people immerse themselves into religion and how it ultimately results from the alienation caused by capitalism.
@Seinfeld: When the universe itself is so great and vast how can it even appear logical to suppose there is an even greater entity? Ockham's Razor just prevents me from making that jump. It's much easier to imagine the reactivity of chemicals as being the source of creation. I guess you could always cite the Boeing argument as to how did this giant complex system come together without some sort of plan but to me that's really just trying to couch the universe into our understanding in where complexity equals design. Maybe I'm just so alienated from my own capacity for production that I can't see god's own works when they are right in front of me.
Well, again, this I think is why discussions about whether or not God exists usually go nowhere. What may seem perfectly reasonable to one person, may not seem quite so reasonable to another (and vice versa). And, when all is said and done, it's really just a "Who knows the unknown better?" question anyway (in fact, one of the key components of Catholic theology is that God is in many ways "unknowable"). I would like to briefly point out, though, that the actual "complexity" of God is debated. Some say that, actually, he's probably the most simple thing in all of existence and that we make him seem much more complicated than he really is. I find this to be a very attractive view, but I'm not really versed enough in that branch of religious philosophy to effectively argue for it.
For me, I just can't fathom infnite time and space. It just doesn't seem logical to me (this was pretty much affirmed when I took upper-level Mathematics). So, almost by complete default, I believe in a "greater power." My actual religion (Christianity), however, is much more personal and emotion/faith-based.