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#16 |
Subsim Aviator
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in the assumption that the universe is an empty void, and we represent the pinnacle of life in the universe. thats where the arrogance comes to play
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#17 |
Rear Admiral
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But that's how faith works, not science. Science must test and predict, you can't do that with assumptions that something might exist. Certainly science believes there is more, but it simply admits it doesn't know. Right now, all we know is that we are the pinnacle of life in the universe. What evidence or science do you have that shows otherwise?
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#18 |
Subsim Aviator
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muh UFO shows!
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#19 |
Rear Admiral
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![]() Don't know if you saw my old ghost thread, but as much as I jested about it, I still remain baffled because I have no way to explain what I experienced, except some strange pictures that may or may not be something. The universe is utterly amazing, so much so that science cannot grasp it. I look in the heavens and think there must be something more. Life does seem to hold an amazing complex energy source at its core. As for God, I was for years a dedicated fundy Baptist, but that evolved over and over. I view my faith as a beautiful house of cards that for years as I asked questions, I had to pull a card here, replace one there....over and over. I tried always to leave the house standing, but one day I pulled one and the house came down. It didn't lead me to unbelief, but became more agnostic. I spent 1000's of hours of study trying to figure out if God exist, which religion has it right. My biggest problem is if one religion has it right, it basically condemns the mass of humanity for no other reason than the culture they're born into. I have a hard time accepting any religion that condemns failed human beings to any type of torture and claim love....and that somehow it's my fault if I end up there. I hear many say that religion is different than being spiritual, but I've never been able to separate the two. All spiritual belief stems from religious doctrine that have evolved over and over.
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#20 | |
Soaring
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To me, as I explained both terms, spirituality and religiosity are mutually exlcusive. You cannot be relgious AND spritial at the same time. But since we are mortal and sooner or later reaölsie that our time is limited, we start to ask those big questions. Therefore I would say that man is a sportual being by birth adn essenmce, and even cannot escape to be that. I would just hope he would stop trying so hard to be religious. Many people claim that to be a win. To me, it is a loss of a natural, inbuild quality that we have, due to our ability to be intelligent more or less, self-aware, and to reflect about ourselves and the cosmic context we are embedded in, may it be for our better or our worse. The more spirutual you are, the more you are a heretic to relgious dogmas. The more religious and believing you are, the less you want to know yourself by own experience, the less spiritual you are. You cannot be both. Hence my statement that science and spirituality can come together, but not science and religion, and also not religion and spirituality. Sounds counter-intuitive, because many people do not draw that difference between what I call spiritual and what I call religious, and think of both as just one and the same. But I think that is a mistake, and that difference is vital and utmost important. For the same reason, I have come to label myself - when I got asked occasionally - not as an atheist, but as a "spiritual atheist". And I knew many anti-religious but nevertheless spiritually-feeling atheists in my life as well. I think the difference I make is less rare and less exotic as it may sound. When doing some voluntary counseling job myself long time ago, I often had to deal with people who also refused dogmas and religion and tradition, nevertheless were sometimes desperate about trying to find a convincing meaning in life again. You know, it can happen that there rises this existential hunger for meaning in man, and when it cannot be tamed, then it can push man into deep desperation, and even clinical depression. Man needs a meaning in life, whatever it may be. For some, religious dogmas are good enough, but for others who dig deeper and are not easily to be satisfied with pre-produced answers, that is not good enough. They want more, and thus they become - necessarily - heretics. That can be good for their soul, but since it is a threat to the cult of their social environment, it also can be bad for their bodies - when they are being dragged to a stake to burn them, that is. Religions are a formidable excuse to turn out the worst in man, and they have a splendid historic record of violence and brutality carried out in their name, they breed supremacism to the outside and submission to the inside of a society, and poison human minds with tunnel-view syndrom, hate and intolerance. But truly spiritual people you will seek in vein in such historic recordings. Selbsterkenntnis just does not serve well as an excuse for trying to submit the outer world. So let's keep the reason and logic of the scientific mind and religion separate, therefore, for the first is the natural enemy to disclose the irrationality in the latter - something which the latter never will forgive the first. These two must be enemies, and no way there is that I would want it any different.
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. Last edited by Skybird; 03-26-14 at 08:49 PM. |
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#21 | |
XO
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As a civilisation, we're finally coming out of the tunnel. The engine has already exited, but some cars are still in the tunnel. And science is the driving force. (https://www.google.pt/#newwindow=1&q=science+etymology) science ˈsʌɪəns/ noun noun: science
Middle English (denoting knowledge): from Old French, from Latin scientia, from scire ‘know’. |
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#22 |
Eternal Patrol
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My path closely parallels that of Armistead, from believer to questioning believer to believing questioner to just asking questions, and seeing fewer and fewer answers until I finally see no answers at all. I'm not an atheist, since I don't discount the possibility of a Supreme Creator, but I'm also not an agostic, since that implies by definition the belief that we can never know whether there's a God or not. The most I can assert is that I don't know, and no one has been able to show me that his belief is justified by anything more than his belief. Unlike the assertions of some others, I don't consider myself spiritual at all.
I also agree with Armistead about the question of other life in the universe. If it's arrogant to assert we are alone, it is also unscientific to assert that we are not. I don't discount it, but I also will withold believing we aren't alone until I see some real evidence. Until then, as always, I don't know.
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#23 | |
Rear Admiral
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If faith is the key, basically belief without proof, then any religion should be good enough for God. One of the best debates I've watched is Bart Erhman vs. William Lane Craig on Jesus. Craig tried to prove his points that the bible is a correct historical source with numerous witnesses and sources that Christ did miracles and rose from the dead thus it is true. Erhman correctly pointed out several other Gods or religions had numerous witnesses, books and sources that their savior of God did miracles or rose from the dead. Simply, if you applied Lanes logic, then it verified numerous saviors or Gods over history. I do think faith is a strong force that can be used for good or bad. It certainly gives people hope. Course, if things go wrong then they can rely on it was Gods will or plan for them, that way God is always right or in control. I know a lot of my FB friends always posting about prayer for some of the silliest things. I peod several off when I said I don't pray for stuff or even health. I told them before I would expect God to waste his time on me, I'd prefer he feed the 4 million children that die from starvation every year. To me, there's nothing more dangerous than the closed indoctrinated mind.
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#24 |
Ace of the Deep
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I for one, also think that we are not alone in the universe. There likely are other civilizations out there. I just don't subscribe to the belief that we are currently being visited by any of them.
In the course of 60 years since the first saucer sightings, the UFO "research" movement is no closer to knowing anything about more alien visitations than when they started. In that time, real science has discovered DNA, put a man on the Moon, conquered the atom, gone to the deepest oceans, and revolutionized how we inform ourselves and interact. That is what we can do when we set about to do practical things. When we set about instead to indirectly argue a pet theory for which there is no evidence, we'll do that until he cows come home. Frankly, I think the methods of the UFO research crowd are geared not toward finding an answer, but toward endlessly perpetuating the debate. Why? Because these endless go-arounds are profitable for the UFO authors and lecturers. What about the rank and file? I think most believe because they want to. Most seem to have a lack of faith in mankind or human institutions (who can blame them?) and see aliens as some sort of otherwordly saviors. There are some strong parallels to religion there. What I find interesting was that in the past one in fifty people carried a camera and today forty out of fifty people carry a camera, we should expect to see more UFO photos today than we did in the past, a lot more (we certainly get to see more photos of things that do exist, things like kittens and fast cars and phone distracted people waking into fountains)... unless of course those things which were being photographed in the past are now easier to identify in the photos and are therefore not reported as UFOs anymore. |
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#25 | |||||||
Old enough to know better
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I'm confused alot.
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There is a difference, a huge difference.
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“Two possibilities exist: either we are alone in the Universe or we are not. Both are equally terrifying.” ― Arthur C. Clarke ![]() |
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#26 |
Rear Admiral
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Well, at least UFO research is based on science and logic.
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![]() You see my dog don't like people laughing. He gets the crazy idea you're laughing at him. Now if you apologize like I know you're going to, I might convince him that you really didn't mean it. |
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#27 | |
Eternal Patrol
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What science and what logic, exactly?
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“Never do anything you can't take back.” —Rocky Russo |
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#28 | ||||||
Soaring
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But I have. Repeatedly in this thread. Repeatedly in threads over the past years. I must not once again explain what I mean by "religious" and "spiritual", yes?!?!
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Or you learn by not trusting or not caring or not wanting to learn existing dogma, instesad want to base on what you experience yourself. That can be introspection, that can be meditation, that can be life experience in general. I have been meditation trainer for almost ten years. You can imagine that I got some expoerience about what states of mind and what attitudes are people in when looking for such things, and what walls they often run into. I hd around 200 to 250 trainees in those years. Just one or two of them I am sure broke through to a really deeper understanding of himself, to another (=deeper) awareness and understanding of life and reality. Maybe there was a third person, but I am not certain, when she left, it was too early to predict her path for sure, but I saw a promise in her. the other two were a couple and last thing I heard many years ago was that they now do their own trainings after the returned to America. To understand spirituality, I remind - once again - of this very famous passage from the Buddhist Kalamas Sutra. It makes a a strict difference between real own experience, and dogmatic belief and unfounded faith. You do not give trust in advance in order to be rewarded with "evidence", that is not trust but unfounded credulousness. You trust because evidence or empiric justification has come first. From the Kalamas Sutra: Do not put faith in traditions, even though they have been accepted for long generations and in many countries. Do not believe a thing because many repeat it. Do not accept a thing on the authority of one or another of the sages of old, nor on the ground of statements as found in the books. Never believe anything because probability is in its favour. Do not believe in that which you yourselves have imagined, thinking that a god has inspired it. Believe nothing merely on the authority of the teachers or the priests. After examination, accept only that which you have carefully examined and tested tested for yourself, and found it reasonable and to be in conformity with your well being, and that of others. Combine it with the golden rule: do not upon others as though do not want to be treated by them, and there you are: all moral and ethics you could ever need. Without any religion. Quote:
Sorry, I take no prisoners there. Not a single one.
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If you feel nuts, consult an expert. |
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#29 |
Lucky Jack
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I believe I'll have another drink.
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“You're painfully alive in a drugged and dying culture.” ― Richard Yates, Revolutionary Road |
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#30 | |
Soaring
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He said "likely", and so speaks about probability being in his theory's favour. Probability calculations making such statements, base on cosmological models. These models are theories in themselves, sometimes more and sometimes less well-founded. "Evidence" is a probability that is so high that it leaves no doubt, not the smallest one: probability has turned into certainty, into 100.000...% Since he mentions "likely" and thus argues from a position of thinking in probabilities, he must not give you "evidence". What he says is: by current cosmological models, probability is in favour of assuming that we are not alone.
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Your attitude of keeping in mind that one does not know anything for sure, proves to be very healthy on UFOs.
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