FrigidSymphony wrote:
Seinfeld26 wrote:
FrigidSymphony wrote:
Seinfeld26 wrote:
FrigidSymphony wrote:
Seinfeld26 wrote:
And Frigid, if you honestly think there's no intellectual thought involved in Christianity or any other religion, you seriously need to consider studying religious/metaphysical philosophy. You'll see how deep religious belief can really go (and it will also clear up some misconceptions you appear to have about it).
I don't think there's no intellectual thought involved, I'm aware of the complex climbing on glass that goes on in theological debates. I just think it's really bad reasoning. Sure, they're making a huge effort, but it's not good reasoning. Thomas Aquinas' proofs, for example, are bullshit. Completely.
And I don't have misconceptions about it, I make it a point to study something before expressing an opinion, and since I've been on the atheist bus for about 4 years now I've made a point to find out as much as I can about different degrees of religious belief.
What were your religious beliefs before then, just curious?
I don't consider a person that young to know what religion they belong to. A child can't belong to a religion any more than he can profess belief in a political system.
To answer your question, however, my parents raised me to be open and curious about every faith system, and they said they wanted to let me make up my own mind when I was old enough. Needless to say, without the benefit of indoctrination I was quick to approach an entirely rationalist and scientific worldview.
EDIT: I apologize for any incoherent sentences. I'm dead tired and watching the simpsons, not the best environment for writing.
Well, I take both a rationalist/scientific and spiritual view of life. Hence my views of issues like homosexuality. Like you, I was also taught to question everything and maintain an open mind. But after pondering the issue quite a bit, I had to be honest: I believe in a greater power and that there's much more to existence than what science alone can tell us. I've curiously tried "not believing in God" before, but in the end, I just couldn't imagine something as linear (and intelligent) as the material universe being all there is nor the "greatest thing in existence."
May be this is why people take such an interest in the topic of why we believe in God. It seems your whole personality and way of thinking probably plays a big factor in how easy faith in God really is for you.
And for the record, I agree with Zad. Metalstorm and Dead Machine - please play nice!

Belief in God seems to stem from the inability to explain things. My rationalistic POV is such that it is my opinion that anything we don't know now will in the future be explained by science. Current gaps don't mean the presence of God, just as they didn't mean that millennia ago, when gods were invented to explain how the sun rose each day. I don't think it's a personality issue. You face every other element in your life with an empirical approach. Why is it that when it comes to religious teachings, the demand for evidence seems to fly out the window? Evidence and spirituality can coexist. I am a deeply spiritual person, I just don't require anything supernatural or inexplicable to be thus.
What you described is textbook naturalism. Naturalism being the belief that everything there is to existence will eventually be discovered by science. Greg Graffin, among many other scientists, considers himself a naturalist. It should also be mentioned that "naturalist" and "atheist" aren't necessarily synonymous. Some naturalists consider themselves "monists", meaning they believe in a God that gradually developed as nature progressed and became more orderly.
I think what "God" actually is needs to be cleared up. God is simply the greatest power in all of existence. In other words, the constant greater power (or force, if you will) that maintains existence and made EVERYTHING in existence possible (including science itself). We Christians DO NOT literally believe in some guy in the clouds with a long white beard or robe. We simply believe in a greater intelligence/power that binds existence together and ultimately made our own existence (along with the universe itself) possible.
As for the issue of empirical evidence, there are a couple important things to consider. For one thing, if God created everything, then everything that exists would technically be evidence of God's existence (so, with that being the case, there'd be more evidence for God's existence than perhaps anything else). Second of all, there are those who believe they have witnessed miracles first hand, and that right there would (to them) be evidence of God's existence. It may not be evidence to you personally (as you could easily decide to look for a naturalistic explanation of such events), but bare in mind that evidence is more in the eye of the beholder than many people realize. There's more to this issue, but I'll probably get into it a little later.
One thing I don't understand is how you believe in spirituality without believing in anything supernatural. If there's nothing supernatural, then all there really is to existence is nature (one would think). And since spirituality implies something beyond standard physical nature, it would seem that you'd need to believe in some kind of greater power (if not "God" then something like a "life force") to believe in it. Because let's face it: If God doesn't exist, then our own existence is inherently meaningless. Which, to me, would seem to defeat the whole concept of spirituality since it would really just be an illusion while we would just be "silly biological accidents."