Interesting, and probably controversial
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Bit of trivia:
The pledge of allegiance, which originally did not contain the phrase "under GOD," was written by Francis Bellamy, a Baptist minister (ironic, since most Baptists today tend to be fundamentalist and would oppose it's removal).
"In God We Trust" has appeared on U.S. coins since 1864; since 1938, it's been mandatory.
President Teddy Roosevelt was against having the phrase on any money, as he thought it was sacriligious.
Stinkie, no I do not think athiest are considered un-American, per se. The majority of Americans understand and agree with our right of freedom of conciousness. However, as noted with our currency and Pledge of Allegiance, public expressions of Christianity have been the norm forever, and even where it is clearly unconstitutional and is contested, fundamentalist Christians have developed an attitude of persecution. Many erroneuously believe our country to be a Christian nation (whatever that means), and they're fine with other Americans practicing their own religions, as long as this stays a Christian nation.
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I'm Agnostic... Atheism seems very much founded on the same faith as all other religions. it requires one to make a definitive decision on something that cannot possibly be known.
I've had the same question for Atheists as well as God Lovers as I call them...
"If there is a God, who created him/her? if there is no God then who or what created the Universe?" when someone can answer either of those questions with any certainty, then I will choose a side.
God lovers answer this question with the standard, you must have faith... intelligent Atheists answer with... some things are not known yet or cannot be known... so basically they lean on Faith also...
just for the even keeled's sake... Atheists treat Christians with the same disdain they treat them with.
I live my life the best way I know how, I try to be good to other people and try to do what I feel in my heart and mind is the right thing given the situation I'm in... if I die and there is a God I feel he/she will recognize this, if I die and there is no God, then I died living life the best way I knew how...
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Buddhism is the only major religion [unless you count Atheism/Agnosticism] that doesn't need/have a 'God', but it still has most of the 'morality' and the 'arcane-ritual' that makes a 'mainstream' religion...
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Yes , keeping those questions alive means that we are able to keep the connection with the unknown.
Much more productive than forgetting them. Avoids closing the door . -
@unknownuser said:
Great one Kris!
Sounds like a good religion...can I join?sounds like you're already a member... and bonus; no one has to try to drown you or cut off your penis to join.
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Agnosticism is illogical because nowhere do we say "I don't know" if something exists for which there is no evidence of its existence. If I insist I have two heads do you say you don't know if it exists? Of course not. You know it does not exist because there is no evidence of its existence.
The same applies to supernatural beings. You either have "faith" or not. "I don't know" is a cop out, a fence sitter.
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@krisidious said:
@unknownuser said:
Great one Kris!
Sounds like a good religion...can I join?sounds like you're already a member... and bonus; no one has to try to drown you or cut off your penis to join.
I hope you are being sarcastic. Protestants don't practice infant baptism. For us, baptism is an optional, outward profession of ones salvation. And circumcision isn't "required". Unless you're a Jew maybe. Otherwise, it is only practiced for hygenic purposes.
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@krisidious said:
If there is a God, who created him/her?
If you believe in a God that created everything in a matter of 6 days, couldn't you also believe that He had no beginning? He is not constrained to "time" as we think of the word. He created time along with the rest of the universe.
Disclosure: This is my opinion.
I don't want to start an argument here. I was just answering your question.. I doubt this will change your or anyone's opinion but I am simply stating what I believe in answer to your question.
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@unknownuser said:
If you believe in a God that created everything in a matter of 6 days, couldn't you also believe that He had no beginning?
If God created the universe and he existed for all time then the universe was not truly the universe, it was just another scale-able name for a pea in a pod... so if God existed before the universe and created it, then who in turn created God? where did he live before the universe? he hung out in infinite blackness twiddling his thumbs for an infinite amount of time before he came up with all this?
Likewise on the Atheists side I'm supposed to believe that everything just popped into existence from nothing? for no reason? it just started being? think of this place before time, before the universe... nothingness... infinite nothing... no matter, no air, no heat, no cold, no gases, nothing... how can something just pop into existence from nothing? and on the first "go" it went so incredibly well as to create this fantastical thing we call the universe? color me dubious...
An Agnostic does not justify a god or question one of any given faith, first he questions the existence of a God at all... so I don't attempt to justify the Christian "6 days theory" my question is of a God of any kind... but by definition God would have created the Universe. regardless of how he might have done it... the question is a basic one. did the universe come from nothing or something. my skeptical and scientific mind reaches the conclusion that nothing has "no beginning or no end". however my only plausible explanation for the universe's state is that it must have always been, like and elastic rubber band contracting and expanding time after time... creating and recreating itself over and over... but then I'm slapped in the face with physics and the laws of the universe and the battle between anti-matter and matter at the beginning. if not for chaos none of this would exist. therefore how can it repeat over and over and always fall with just a little bit more matter than anti-matter. and there I'm left... with no answer...
Solo,
Sometimes there is not enough information to make an informed decision. how can you believe the universe just popped into existence from absolutely nothing? science does not deny that which it cannot prove does not exist. science by definition is "the state of knowing : knowledge as distinguished from ignorance or misunderstanding" if you cannot prove it then, it's not science. it's a theory.
Just to make us all feel better I remind you that every single one of us will have the answer eventually... we will die and then we will know... and if we don't? we'll never worry about it again. and in between... we'll have SketchUp.
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@unknownuser said:
I hope you are being sarcastic. Protestants don't practice infant baptism. For us, baptism is an optional, outward profession of ones salvation. And circumcision isn't "required". Unless you're a Jew maybe. Otherwise, it is only practiced for hygenic purposes.
yes, I was trying to be funny...
and for the record I'm both Baptized and ummm... you know the other thing.
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Kris,
Gravity, science or science fiction?
We cannot see it, we have a theory and a law, does it actually exist? Religion never could explain it, well they tried until the earth ended up being round.
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Guys,
The 'old God debate' coming up again! As I write my dog (Jock) is on his chair, half snoozing and not a worry in the world or so it would seem. He would appear to be 'programmed' by Nature to live his life without question or 'deep' thoughts / concerns or worries.
Well, I don't think he questions much, maybe just gets curious now and then about things! Like when he smells by shoes to figure out where I've been walking! I doubt he thinks about an afterlife, its more a case of live for the moment in harmony with Nature. If this is the case, I am jealous!
Einstein got fairly tangled up with the existence of God matter. 'Did Albert Einstein Believe in a Personal God?' http://www.godandscience.org/apologetics/einstein.html makes for an interesting read!
I heard about 'Spinoza's God' some time ago and found Baruch Spinoza http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baruch_Spinoza findings interesting and thought provoking.
I watched with great interest last night, 'Jesus - The Lost Years' on NG. Again very interesting suggestions about what he did between the age of 14 and 30!
I like to keep and open mind and not brand myself as anything. I recently filled in the 'Census of Population of Ireland' forms, had to do so by Law.
When I came to question 12, "What is your religion?', I had a number of options. I could 'tick' 1. Roman Catholic, 2. Church of Ireland, 3. Islam, 4. Presbyterian, 5. Orthodox or 6. Other, write your RELIGION. I was only allowed 20 letters to describe my 'religion'. Not enough space so I filled in twenty ????????????????????
Option '7' was No Religion! But I don't think option 7 should be under the heading 'What is your religion' as 'no religion' is not a religion. Maybe the heading should have been 'What are your opinions / beliefs etc on the existence of an afterlife' In this case I would 'tick' the 'mind your own business box' if supplied or maybe use the 20x? option.
Some nights prior to drifting off to sleep I start thinking about what will happen when I kick the bucket. I am now of the conclusion that death is just a continuous sleep with no dreams. I am happy with that. I think my 12 stone of mass goes back into the cosmos to become part of the overall ... God! .... who knows! ..... no one....... except God ....... if he exists
There is really no point in getting too up tight about an afterlife. I wish Jock could communicate his thoughts or instincts to me. But again, the more I think about it, he does!
Mike
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Great post Mike.
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I heard Pete talk to God at Basecamp. He met him in the toilet at Baker Street Pub.
All I heard was 'Oh God, oh God....not again........hhhuuuuuuurrrrrllll!!!!!!!'
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Really, me hurl? you sure it was me and not Liam?
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The question is, can there be a neutral position of belief or lack of?
If yes, it would be a dismissal of the question.
I don't think "I don't care" counts as neutral. If you are not a theist, does that automatically make you atheist, or is it possible to be neutral?
Agnosticism to me is the purgatory between a decision, I'm going by what I think, I don't believe everything I think.
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And the Dyslexic Agnostic Insomniac sits up all night wondering if there really is a DOG.
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@unknownuser said:
Kris,
Gravity, science or science fiction?
"Gravity"
although invisible it's effects are visible. and can be proven through experiments that conclude with the same answer repeatedly. Science"something from nothing" (Big Bang)
unprovable, thus far... so Theorycan you, in a scientific experiment prove the "something" can come from "nothing"? I'm fairly sure that you'll get a Nobel in Physics if you can create a vacuum of nothingness and then make something, anything pop into existence within it.
p.s. I do not doubt that the big bang happened... I just see no proof it was the first big bang or that it came into being from nothing.
I don't hold religions to their ancestral misconceptions... these people wiped their bums with their hands, I cannot hold them to the errors they made in judgement so long ago with so little information. even if I were to be convinced of a God then I would not likely join any of the organized religions... for the main reason I see it as quite presumptuous that we would be so important to that god that he would be so involved in our lives to the point where any of the religious text would be real.
I mean no offense to anyone... I'm just an ignorant man, questioning his existence and that of the world around him.
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we need a like button on these posts...
@unknownuser said:
And the Dyslexic Agnostic Insomniac sits up all night wondering if there really is a DOG.
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