consistent replacement of supernatural explanations of the world with natural ones
inconsistency of world religions
weakness of religious arguments, explanations, and apologetics
increasing diminishment of god
fact that religion runs in families
physical causes of everything we think of as the soul
complete failure of any sort of supernatural phenomenon to stand up to rigorous testing
slipperiness of religious and spiritual beliefs
failure of religion to improve or clarify over time
complete lack of solid evidence for god's existence
It becomes difficult to see the point of a proof of God's existence when it is construed as a proof of an individual's existence. Does one use arguments to become acquainted with an individual? Either that individual exists or it doesn't, and experience alone can tell us which. The project of a proof of God's existence thus ironically comes to appear meaningless to contemporary philosophers of religion. — Theism and Atheism: Opposing Arguments In Philosophy (2019), Joseph Koterski, Graham Oppy
Opinion | Why I don't believe in God — jorndoe
The real question should be not “is there a god” but do I have faith that there is no god. T — simplyG
Perhaps it is like sexual preferences, some people are attracted to the god narrative and others are not. — Tom Storm
I didn't read those as deductive, but as evidence in support of the case. Though, I could of course have misread Christina.
That being said, these observations (evidence) can draw attention to the point in the opening post regarding elaborate versus idealized.
It becomes difficult to see the point of a proof of God's existence when it is construed as a proof of an individual's existence. Does one use arguments to become acquainted with an individual? Either that individual exists or it doesn't, and experience alone can tell us which. The project of a proof of God's existence thus ironically comes to appear meaningless to contemporary philosophers of religion.
I find "supernatural magic" and "G did it" to be non-explanations
…
They could (literally) be raised to explain anything, and therefore explain nothing.
When did such an explanation ever do away with ignorance/errors?
Not themselves explicable, cannot readily be exemplified (verified), do not derive anything differentiable in particular, ...
The real question should be not “is there a god” but do I have faith that there is no god. This confuses most theists and atheists alike, because the question of god has nothing to do with proof or evidence but belief and faith. — simplyG
Why is our vision hard wired to like beauty ? — simplyG
Is a pack of wolves hunting and killing a bison beautiful or not beautiful? — Agree-to-Disagree
For me the most convincing argument I suppose you could call it, is intelligent design combined with aesthetics. Why is our vision hard wired to like beauty ? Is it universal?
I think simplyG is referring to aesthetics, and not subjectiveness. — javi2541997
Conclusion: We do not believe because God obviously exists; we believe in God because we have been so taught. Were God-teaching to eventually end, God/god would fade and end as well. — BC
If God teaching ended then I think that God/god would not fade. The human mind "wants" explanations for the unknown, and meaning for events, and god provides these. — Agree-to-Disagree
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