Author Topic: Thoughts on Religion and the State  (Read 24879 times)

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Offline chadz

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #270 on: November 30, 2013, 11:16:49 am »
+6
Honestly i'll never really be convinced that evolution is real, and after the recent discussion in this thread I think i'm just trying to understand it now. I whole heartedly believe in Creationism and Christianity (which are the same thing, you can't have one without the other) and I won't be shaken in it either because it's so blindingly obvious to me just by my friends and my life.

Well actually it makes me a better supporter for my science/belief because I can't be swayed into thinking something else as easily instead of doubting what I beleive. Unlike what you said, being a scientist makes you more liable to change your belief. Gotcha.

These statements are very upfront and honest, props to you. It reminds me of when I was young. I was raised catholic, and I can remember praying for lots of stuff. Both egoistical stuff as well as stuff like world piece. I wasn't even raised that hardcore a catholic, but I had all those childrens bibles and illustrations, and everyone told me god was real, so I drew the connection and tried to be as good a christian as possible. But apart from that, I was scared. I was extremely scared of being watched. It was a childs naive way of seeing "God watches over you", and it freaked me the fuck out. I was afraid of getting naked in my room because I didnt want god (or anyone else for that matter) to see me naked. I took god like a literal person, a physical being with xray vision watching me every second of my life.

Incidentially, it was also the time of my life where death scared the shit out of me. Despite me fully believing in the (childrens) bible, I was.. unhealthily scared of death. I remember my elementary school teachers talking to my parents whats going on with me, as it's not normal for a seven year old to be frightened of death that much. It wasn't actually that I was scared it would all end - it was more that I was afraid how God would judge me.

And then happened the best thing in my life: I started doubting things. At first it was very simple things. Maybe god does not watch over me every second? Hm... felt uncomfortable at first. How do you know if he's watching you right now or not. How do you know he wont punish you for eternity because just the moment you stole the sweets ouf of the kitchen he'd be watching you, crossing you off the "heavens" list. I think I just took a leap of faith.

With my new freedom found, I dug into the whole idea of not taking everything literally deeper. It took me a few years, but I just started questioning anything (not just religion). It took me some time to get really comfortable with it, because that stuff was what defined me for a long time, but at the end of the line, it all came down (for me) to the fact: The bible is a book. It's printed by machines. It's made of paper. It burns when you set it on fire. It swims when you throw it in water. There's nothing magical about it. It's words written by someone a long time ago. People told me it's the word of god. But how would they know? They knew because the bible said so. They had no more knowledge than me why it's gods word. They just were told by someone (their parents) that it's gods word. It's a book that's saying about itself that it's the word of god. It's like me writing on a piece of paper that this words were written by god.

And at this point, everything went very quickly. Let's see what is left of my religion when I take the bible out of the equasion. It felt like pulling the lowest stone out of a game of Jenga
(click to show/hide)
It still was a mind game at this point, a "what if?" scenario - what if the bible is just a story? And I thought about many things with the "what if the bible is just a story" thought, and not just did it sound plausible to me - it sounded a lot more realistic. When you have the bible as your foundation, you try and draw those crazy lines to make everything in line with the bible. Once you remove the bible of that picture, you dont have to draw crazy lines any more - the connections all make sense without drawing a line. There is no need for a god or a jesus to make sense to the world. The world makes sense in its own way. And fuck the world is beautiful. I felt a freedom in my life that just feels so damn good. I'm not part of some grand master plan, I'm merely a random piece of goo in a universe that's so vast that my life doesn't matter for any supernatural being - it's just me and the people that I know and love that are what matters.

To me, it felt like being raised in a dark prison the first 10 years of my life, and stepping out into the sun, and catching your first beams of sunshine for the first time in your life. It felt damn good, and still does.

It all comes down to this:

... because I can't be swayed into thinking something else as easily instead of doubting what I beleive. ...
Don't you think doubt is important? I don't mean religion; do you never doubt what authorities tell you? Because I think the ability to doubt (which is kind of a synonym for curiosity) is god's greatest gift to mankind  :wink:



« Last Edit: November 30, 2013, 11:20:47 am by chadz »

Offline Paul

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #271 on: November 30, 2013, 11:28:50 am »
0
Jarold, I have a couple of questions to remove some of the uncertainities of my view on your view on things:

1) How old do you think is the earth? If it is a couple of thousand years only, do you think current geological theories are simply wrong and based on faulty or possibly faked evidence?

2) Do you think all fossil found are fake or simply not as old as they are claimed to be(<10000 years)?

3) If a skeleton found from saber-toothed tiger happens to be real, do you think those longer teeth came from an adaptive potential every big cat has and could a today's tiger adapt in a similar way given the correct stress? Can this happen in a lifetime of a tiger or only over several generations?


Offline kinngrimm

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #272 on: November 30, 2013, 11:53:49 am »
+2
..., but all of a sudden there are very little plants but there are an abundant amount of other fist.
It is not all of a sudden, it can take millions of years to develop a atypical trait of a species.

Though they don't have a gene/trait to have teeth they get teeth anyways out of nowhere.
Not out of nowhere but incremental.

Color changes may be a fast example, but also one which doesnt devide species, so lets go with 'teeth no teeth'. Through mutation on an atomic level, genes are influenced f.e. by the bombardmend of cosmic radiation. Very small and tiny changes, starting often without any effect, are implemented that way in the DNA. Over time, those may amass with other changes, not on its own but often first in combination with similar other changes. Like more and more changes to a text where letters randomly are exchanged, the meaning of the text changes as a whole. Only over time also is proven, if these changes actually make any sense, if it gives an adavantage, the sense to the changes hasnt been inherint from start, but can be prooven as negelctable, therefor you see more species not around anymore then there are still.
That is a quite a fascenating process, and even as complettly proofable, through the list of species collected in and out of existance, through DNA samples or reconstructions, through different other biological mechanisms supported, it still is a magical, godly process. Here the scientist may cry out ;) but look at how evolution works. How near perfectly(which they arent) often the outcomes are cosntructed, how beautiful those creatures are and the concepts they embrass for survival. I am full on the side of evolutionary theory though, as everything is prooven and not disprooven, still you have to stand in awe when you see the complexity of this system and its implications, that is truely godly.

You know i think, the term god was not always used in the way we do it nowadays for a consiouness deity with a plan for us, but it evolved on a social level into it. A long time ago there was a stage of the evolution of religions, when it was about concepts people saw but not yet understood, the weather , death, crops , fertility, sun, moon, the seasons al those major influences or concepts which needed to be explained but early mankind havent had the tools yet to do so suffeciently, we know from the point Homo Sapiens Sapiens is identified, he was able to pretty much the same thinking as we are nowadays as the genetic codes for that had been available, he had quite a list of predessors though to come that far some also already with quite some accomplishments, and from them also by stories at night been told some of the mysteries and taken into the general consioussness of Homo Sapiens. Through the widespreading from the former Pangäa, over the sepparated landmasses, in a time period of 30000 years humnakind spread from afrika over to asia back to europe and over the bering sea, within one of the ice ages, to america. That happened in settlement waves, over time nomadic tribes became city states, became states, had borders(fuck you rome for introducing the limes ^^) and developed into nowadays societies.
Parrallel in that cultural and social change, the shamanistik religions, very much bound to the environment but also had always a sence of keeping the tribe close to each other and regulating struggles within the tribe changed to also to be able to cope with struggles in societies of increasing numbers. Independent thinkers from time to time brought us new Idears, may it only be the idear what an Idear is, about form and concept, about logic, systematic processes to question and define knowledge. Philosophies emerged and religions had to struggle with those and were influenced by them. Over thousands of years hundreds of religions of hundreds of tribes, died of. Either by elemination of those tribes, by including those tribes into a state, merging religions or replacing them. Many other ways why some died of many ways how they where influenced by other religons.
Look at the base concepts of the abramic but also hinduism and buddism concepts ... so many parralles.

Point is, while we have found proof for evolution on a biological level, there is also proof for evolution on a religious level. That maybe for these religions the most terrifying concept, they may think they would vanish. Still there is a chance if you evolve the concepts which are struggling, the religon will emerge as stronger with less contradiction ... perhaps it is time to write a new book ^^ or do you believe that god came down to the roman emperor to tell him to kick some priest buts so they make a conclave in Konstantinopel to then combine all their religious principles, rules , stories into one book ... or is there a slight chance ^^ that it was as historians tell, he had the intent to controll the masses around the midterranean sea by just another tool a state sponsered/supported religion with a coherent text(well from the point of view about 1700 years back coherent) and a few hundred years later a military genral with kind of a grudge against his enemies introduced another book. So the bible written by many Quoran written more or less by one, he didnt write it himself right? It was compiled of his thoughts but written by others and surly never ever changed a letter ^^ in the process. Anyhow the christian bible is more open to change sofar what i can see then Quran, but the Quran already has also concepts of the bible included, kind of an evolutionary tree branch leading away from the old ... new ... testament. And as there are Sunites and Shiits, we do have there two possible evolutionary branches both owrking very hard to get rid of the other.

Lets step back to DNA for a bit, you know there is a lot of rubbish in the DNA right? Or at least not activly used code.
(click to show/hide)
That code is not active still there, dont ask me the exact mechanism behind it, but as in a libary you may have books on your table for reading, you put them back and thats it, they arent read anymore. There are possible triggers wich may get the code/book back activated/read again, it may be a avarage tempreature or a higher CO2 level in the atmosphere, we often just dont know yet, but we know there is this inactive code.
Suprsingly enough parts of those code are very very similar of DNA of other species, some parts of the active code aswell, then again an eye is an eye, a hair is a hair, all they may have slight variations, but the conceptiual plan behind it to describe those are very similar. As we are also all bouned by 'other' laws/theories of nature, i find it hardly surpsing that evolution by its typical trial & error appraoch found similar idears/forms/concepts/systems/plans within total different species ... from that part coems also the Theory if there are aliens they may have similar features then any other animal(us including) here on earth ...

I am not a biologist, friend of me has studied it and we talk often about it as i find it very interesting, still i am not that knowledgeable or keen or have the intention to convince anyone. Evolutionary biology is quite a complex field, the singled out concepts of it but are perfectly understandable. There but also counts, the whole is bigger then the sum of the parts.

...

To everyone else, maybe I was being ignorant to the facts before i'll be more open from now on.
if nothing else, this already made this discussion worth it.

...
And then happened the best thing in my life: I started doubting things.
...
when i was 18-19, i was roughly woken up and after that, everything was been put into doubt and questioned. Since then it was nearly 20 years of roler coster, lots of pain and lots of fun, but i am still doubting and questioning everything and i wouldnt want it any other way. Life can be scary to me, but also very rewarding, and as you mentioned, family is important, also to get through the rough spots, as are friends. Many people speak about awakening, wich sounds so metaphysical ... what i don't like, still i think people often need certain triggers, so that they try to broaden their approach of seeing things.
learn from the past, live the moment, dream of the future

Offline Leshma

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #273 on: November 30, 2013, 12:44:14 pm »
0
Are you trying to "open his eyes"?

Leave man alone to believe in what he wants, it's not like believing in god or not will change much. There are ton of successful people who have strong belief in god, just like there are a ton of unhappy atheists. If it does good to his well being (believing in god I mean), I see no harm in there. By trying to "convert" him to the "right side", you're being no better than religious nutjobs who killed millions during dark ages.

chadz, your story is cute. First world problems :D

Offline Xant

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #274 on: November 30, 2013, 12:48:03 pm »
+1
Trying to get someone to see the facts = killing millions of people?
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Offline chadz

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #275 on: November 30, 2013, 12:56:31 pm »
+1
chadz, your story is cute. First world problems :D

Third World actually, as shown by ptx

Offline Zlisch_The_Butcher

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #276 on: November 30, 2013, 01:00:10 pm »
+1
Well actually it makes me a better supporter for my science/belief because I can't be swayed into thinking something else as easily instead of doubting what I beleive. Unlike what you said, being a scientist makes you more liable to change your belief. Gotcha.
Mind explaining this to me? How is blind faith a good thing? If god wanted you to believe in him even if nothing he says makes the least bit of sense, then he'd be basing getting people to believe in him purely on the fact that someone gave the person a bible while he was vulnerable, and if the truth of god isn't so obvious that doubt would hurt the belief, then he can't possibly blame people he placed outside Isreals reach (Japan, Americas, etc) for not being converted. If god didn't want people thinking "is this shit correct?" (I'm gonna assume you're Catholic or Protestant here) then how come your religion is either a successful heretic movement in Catholicism (some random Protestant movement here), or a faith that has been altered half a million times (look at Catholicism in the dark ages and now, it is far from the same thing, and has changed a lot on its way)?

If you're Protestant don't you think it is good that (insert random protestant reformer here) looked at the church and said "this shit doesn't make sense."? And if you're Catholic aren't you happy (insert random church council here) altered (insert random thing the council found broken)? Didn't these peoples skepticism improve your Christian religion? Weren't these people better supporters of your religion than people who sat back and wanted to support it by not questioning it? A good supporter of something will support it because it is right, not because he wants to be a loyal supporter. It is your duty, as someone who believes in something, to look to all possible conclusions, in order to believe in something because it is sensible and just and true, and not because you make yourself ignorant to all other options than the one your ancestors picked.
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Offline zagibu

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #277 on: November 30, 2013, 01:18:57 pm »
+1
Which is not evolution just adaption, in my mind. Since they didn't get a new trait just an existing one.

While evolution is when that species gets an entirely new trait that wasn't there before. Example, a bunch of fish have no teeth and they only eat plants, but all of a sudden there are very little plants but there are an abundant amount of other fish. Though they don't have a gene/trait to have teeth they get teeth anyways out of nowhere.

So the difference between the two are pretty big.

The only thing you are missing is random mutation in the genes, which happens all the times and is exactly what provides a "species" with a trait it didn't have before.

As to your question of dinosaurs getting feathers and becoming a new species...that's just a human-made definition. What is a human with six toes? A new human species? What about a human with webbing between fingers and teeth? Or a human with a tail? A human that is extremely hairy, with hair covering even his face? A human that is extremely small and has very flexible limbs? A human with claws and sharp teeth?

Nature is not limiting itself to a fixed classification, it randomly mutates gene pools, and lets natural selection determine whether these mutations are fit to live or not.

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Offline Falka

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #278 on: November 30, 2013, 01:30:19 pm »
+1
“Catholic, which I was until I reached the age of reason...”
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Offline Kafein

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #279 on: November 30, 2013, 01:31:47 pm »
+2
I technically only have 4 toes, because the second and third biggest are linked together by skin. Am I the new human race, with better ability to swim ? Also I know someone that has absolutely no wisdom teeth, not even small ones hidden ones that didn't grow. Conversely, there is some evidence that supernumerary teeths are strongly linked to hereditary factors.

Offline Falka

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #280 on: November 30, 2013, 01:46:55 pm »
+5
I technically only have 4 toes, because the second and third biggest are linked together by skin. Am I the new human race

Nope, you are a monster.
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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #281 on: November 30, 2013, 02:06:16 pm »
0
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Offline Paul

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #282 on: November 30, 2013, 02:40:53 pm »
+2
I technically only have 4 toes, because the second and third biggest are linked together by skin. Am I the new human race, with better ability to swim ?

I got the same, but only on one foot. I also only got 3 wisdom teeth, with the fourth one missing without a trace even on x-ray. Damn Tschernobyl...

Offline chadz

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #283 on: November 30, 2013, 03:01:05 pm »
+3
I hate to spell out the obvious, but none of that will get you guys into the Xavier Institute for Higher Learning.

Offline Olwen

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Re: Thoughts on Religion and the State
« Reply #284 on: November 30, 2013, 03:09:56 pm »
+3
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