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Go ahead – though, opine away. There is no escaping the end of it all, regardless. The grave awaits us all and then we'll know for sure. Might as well, all you have to loose is time. ...
While there are religious thinkers who speculate that we are travelling to the "all knowing", there are others who say we will not exist in a state awarness at all.
Are you actually saying that "if" you didn't beleive in an afterlife, you could find no reaon to live this one?
A universe without God is without purpose. Not just for me personally, but from a purely logical standpoint. No eternal life, no remembrance, no observer, in the end, no nothing. Existence and non-existence are equal when non-existence becomes the final chapter. That's what I meant. ..
JohnPlease do not take offense to this comment. I'm trying to understand why you continue to discuss this nothingness if you really feel strongly that in life and death and it's cycle there is nothing(ness). This way of thinking seems very Buddhist in nature (I feel very much the same way) but in your writing you seem to say what is right and what is wrong, yet you believe that all is right and all is wrong?Christof
God has no existance except in the imaginations of some. Eternal life is not a goal, and cannot be substantiated, and if it were, it is not some moral goal post to be won, by "obeying" a parentally modeled diety, and blindly beleiving some ancient "tales".
Quote from: John CaslerGod has no existance except in the imaginations of some. Eternal life is not a goal, and cannot be substantiated, and if it were, it is not some moral goal post to be won, by "obeying" a parentally modeled diety, and blindly beleiving some ancient "tales".Hrm. I think I'd like to see this discussion moved somewhere else, like Fight Club or even the Sports Bar. Because while there's little I enjoy more than deconstructing people's uninformed views on religion, especially mine, I sure as heck decline to do it in some vendor's forum.
Hey Scott,Bob, has "seeded" this discussion in his forum, since he has rather strong religious convictions and doesn't mind sharing them, ...
I think my question is that of natural curiosity, as to why and how persons of reasonable resolving power, can and do subscribe to certain beliefs beyond fact, logic, or evidence.
You mean, like the assertion that, "first there was nothing - and then it exploded?"The materialistic answers to the question "where did this come from" (where "this" is the material world) requires *fantastic* leaps of faith, having nothing to do with evidence and fact (it's rather hard to know the facts of the pre-reality state), and precious little to do with logic. Given the choice between "nothing spontaneously exploded into something" and "Someone who knows a lot more than we do, is able to cr ...
Much like knowledge. The more you learn, the more you realize you don't know.It seems that the "primary heavenly concept of perfection" cannot exist except in nothingness.Non-existance is nothingness....Nothingness is perfection.So again, the non-beleiver says death is "nothingness" and the beleiver says death is heaven. Seems they're the same thing.
I agree with woodsyi, you cannot "reason" your way to god or belief in god. To my experience, people either already "have" faith or they do not. Reason plays no role in this basic question of faith or no faith.
I am a Christian; I am also very much NOT a mystic. I'm about as hard-headed (if not curmudgeonly) about most matters as can be. My beliefs are rooted in experiences - real events in the real world - and reason.
Scott, belief rooted in experience is a wise and safe thing, but to "commune" with god, one has to abandon reason
My goodness,Go get some sleep, John. You are thinking too much. According to Blaise Pascal, "It is the heart which experiences God, and not reason." You should listen to a Frenchman when it comes to affairs of the heart. You are suppose to feel the love not trying to know the love. I don't know what I would feel after death but I know how I feel after le petit morte. It feels like heaven (I hope), then you feel empty but content and then you fall asleep.
“God has no existance except in the imaginations of some.”