That people can arrive to the concept of theism, but also spirituality, without death. They can use love or sex (as in tantric sex which is spirituality development through sex from the Hindu tradition) — Shwah
Belief entails "good evidence" for the believer so it's immaterial here. — Shwah
consider you a joy to exchange views with! — universeness
No. The below is what I quoted from your post. If I didn't see that, then that's not what I responded to originally. Please see below. I'm paralleling your post below.With all due respect, you need to read a response more carefully.
If every human alive stated that god exists then I would not be calling it a fable, because I would believe it too. — universeness — universeness
If each human you meet, confirms to you (if you ask them) that in their opinion, humans dream, then that is proof enough.
— universeness
So anecdotal account can serve as proof. What if every human you meet confirms to you that god exists, would you accept that as proof of god? — L'éléphant
Don't take Mello seriously, my friend! We both know better! — EugeneW
The reason you believe in God is based on your relationship with him. — Shwah
:ok:Ok, sorry about the crossed wires, I don't think our positions are changed by your update. — universeness
↪Gregory A Why are people theists? Why do people believe in God?
a day ago
— baker
As a loser, a homeless person, someone sleeping in a car, yet with a message, can communicate with others wherever they are in the world I can't help but consider such an outcome so slanted in my favour can come about by mere chance. But, still don't let me stop you believing that a 12v powered tablet computer, a hotspot from my phone, like the Mount Rushmore memorial are simply Natural features of an uncaring universe.
— Gregory A
— baker
You're working with a fallacious reduction of options. There aren't just "either believe in God, or believe in mere chance". It's also possible to not have any particular opinion on the matter. Or believe that Earth is controlled by beings from other galaxies. And whatever other cosmogonies people believe in.
I asked you
Why are people theists? Why do people believe in God?
This is to point out that most people who have ever believed in God, have not done so as a result of careful consideration and choosing, but were simply born and raised into a monotheistic religion. They were taught to believe in God, they never chose to do so.
The people who _choose_ to believe in God are a minority.
Do you have any comment on this?
Metaphysics is about first principles and a creator etc is a first principle. — Shwah
God, could never be approachable if it was fundamentally determined by culture — Shwah
trying to account for ontological assertions simply through culture (family or macro-cultures). — Shwah
Your conception of God informs your worldview of math, science, ethics where what a culture can determine meaningfully is much less. — Shwah
However you may define God (even as a "woo"), it's dealing with objects which would inform math etc. — Shwah
Regardless it does look like you're downplaying atheism's actual intentions which are to take away the rights of those who believe. — Gregory A
Atheism's antipathy for theists is apparent whenever an atheist opens his or her mouth. — Gregory A
I think maybe a more concrete example is how arithmetic informs calculus (you need arithmetic to do calculus but not vice versa). Whether you use a duodecimal system or decimal etc, and even how you do arithmetic (whether it's wrong or not) informs how the calculus problem will be (what digits are used and whether it's wrong or not or whether there are multiple answers). — Shwah
The Left are out to censor all things that hurt their eyes and ears, theism with its patriarchs is one of those things. — Gregory A
In this, since religion informs math, it is not informable by culture. — Shwah
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/newton-stm/In recent literature, Newton's theses regarding the ontology of space and time have come to be called substantivalism in contrast to relationism. It should be emphasized, though, that Newton did not regard space and time as genuine substances (as are, paradigmatically, bodies and minds), but rather as real entities with their own manner of existence as necessitated by God's existence (more specifically, his omnipresence and eternality).
What about the reason that there exists a universe? — EugeneW
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