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Science discovers God
- Wescli Wardest
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I am a practicing Jedi. I am a Knight of Jediism. I believe in the Force. And I am willing to have reasoned conversations with anyone discussing this and exploring their belief system. I am even willing to listen to reason why they believe I may not have the best reasoning behind my beliefs. But as a Knight of Jediism it is one of my duties to defend the faith. What that means is keeping a safe place for people to freely explore what it is they believe and be able to come to terms with those beliefs without being bullied, harassed or told they are wrong during that process. It is not for me to tell them what to believe.
And when I find things that I feel some people might be amused by I will share it with them.
Being one that does believe, I know that there are things I cannot explain or have the answers to. Yet. But this does not mean that the absence of those particular pieces of knowledge is proof that it doesn’t exist or reason to believe that the belief is unreasonable.
Right now, you and I are at an impasse. Because, it would appear that you want me to believe that without empirical supporting data or some kind of pragmatic reasoning by your standard, my belief is invalid. Where I know that given our understanding of the universe and all in it, there are some things I am just going to have to take on faith at this time.
So, would you say that the soul exists?
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- Wescli Wardest
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the recognition that there are ways of acting which have shown themselves to work best, generally speaking and with all things considered, over long periods of time
And why would we want what is best for all of us if there were not something binding us together and giving us that desire over long periods of time? That is how I believe these things have shaped our morality. Not something coming down and saying, do this, don’t do that.
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- OB1Shinobi
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Wescli Wardest wrote:
the recognition that there are ways of acting which have shown themselves to work best, generally speaking and with all things considered, over long periods of time
And why would we want what is best for all of us if there were not something binding us together and giving us that desire over long periods of time? That is how I believe these things have shaped our morality. Not something coming down and saying, do this, don’t do that.
i think its easy to say that we are bound together at least by the similarities of the fact that we are all human, primates, mammals, alive
science certainly has established that all life on earth exists within something of a spiderweb of relationships, and that each individual life form has a place within and derives its own sustenance from that web
from that view we could definitely consider ourselves being "bound together", and maybe in a way that bridges (or begins to bridge) the gap between "blind faith" on the one hand, and "strict scientific criteria" on the other (not that i believe faith to be entirely blind)
one could possibly argue that even the celestial bodies are connected, through gravity or dark matter or some such, but that is beyond my education at this point
People are complicated.
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- Wescli Wardest
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Many things are bound together by physical similarities. And we all share common background, the Earth. But, there are species that will eat their own, cannibalism. Many humans did the same in several different cultures and many of them share a very different moral system than we do. So why don’t we eat each other? Especially if there were benefit to eliminating the individual. It may be wrong to kill another but if there is no evidence, IE you ate them, and then it would be very difficult to prove wrong doing.
Have you ever felt like someone was watching you? Or that someone was near? Or helped someone look for something and for some reason you felt like you knew where it was? I think this is part of something that connects us on a deeper level. And that connection helps to preserve us as a species and create morals that will help us to flourish as a group.
[hr]
second paragraph meant to be amusing... ha ha funny!
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Well, I don't know what "out there" or "binds together" or "basis for a moral existence" means, so... hard to tell. Given that the expansion of our universe accelerates it would on the face of it appear as though the net forces on that front do more to drive things apart than back together, but then I'm not cosmologist, so my confidence in specifics on that is rather slim. I wouldn't say that the emergence of morality is such a fundamentally unnatural or inexplicable thing that it requires something beyond selective pressures. If however there was such a thing, I would expect moral developments that are less dependent on the lifestyle of the animal taxon that develops them. Now I wouldn't call that definitive or sufficient reason to say that no such Force exists, but it would take more than a mere assertion or an argument from ignorance before I could say that it does.Wescli Wardest wrote: ... Would the idea of there being something out there that is greater than us, something that binds us and the universe together and gives us the basis for a moral existence. Something that could crate from seemingly nothing. Not anything we have definition for now (other than the Force) and I am pretty sure that there is some kind of cosmic balance that this thing keeps or regulates back to center as much as possible. Would that be plausible or too spectacular to believe without question or proof?
Before I get to the soul thing, a few short remarks about the paragraphs prior to your reiterated inquiry:
I would say that the rules do demand respectful conduct, but I don't think anyone here is or should be safe from being told they are wrong about something, regardless of what it is and how it relates to the doctrine. This is off topic, so I only respond to it because you bring up the safe place to express oneself thing a second time as if this was threatened by anything anybody said in this thread.
This started with a video presenting what is an argument for Schroeder's "the Biblical God". I only questioned that he means the same thing you do when you speak of the Force. Whether your belief in the Force has reasons was not addressed. You do keep implying that it is not a matter of reason, and that I would call unreasonable (by definition), but I wouldn't call the Force proposition false (or in valid) for that reason alone. To call it so and to explain what I mean when I do is all I can, too. If you are fine holding a belief that is unreasonable in this sense of the word, that's where the debate stops. I probably still have a belief or two from days before the formation of my current skepticism that I would abandon for being likewise, should I consciously reconsider them today.
As for whether I believe the soul exists, that depends on what we mean by the soul and by existing, respectively.
If by the soul you mean some kind of life essence or a spirit of the person that survives the body's death and is no product of the body's neurochemistry, and if by exist you mean that it interacts with either the body or any other part of the natural world in some detectable way, then I do believe such a soul does not exists in such a way. If existence does not include detectable interaction, then I still have crushing questions about the coming together of the body and the soul, but cannot fundamentally assert or reject its existence so technically I'd say I do not believe it exists, though I do not believe that it doesn't either. If by soul you mean something else, we can discuss that, too, though I'd welcome it if it were in a different thread or in private, seeing how pending a tie to this thread's topic it seems peripheral or even irrelevant to it.
Better to leave questions unanswered than answers unquestioned
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- Wescli Wardest
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I wouldn't say that the emergence of morality is such a fundamentally unnatural or inexplicable thing that it requires something beyond selective pressures. If however there was such a thing, I would expect moral developments that are less dependent on the lifestyle of the animal taxon that develops them.
On this point I would offer that pure morality, yes I am making that up to explain a concept, the core of what we find as being right and wrong, acceptable and not, is basically universal. The moral systems we adopt then add to the pure morality, or maybe core morality would be a better descriptor, and is completely able to be influenced by lifestyle and the animal basis.
I was having a discussion the other night where my point was that no policy should be made based on emotional content or “feelings.” Because, this is where the personal bias and subjective interpretations of past events come into play and often, and quite easily, bring prejudice and uneven measures to be adopted. And I believe that the exact same can occur when deciding what to deem as moral and not moral. And if a culture continues to value the secondary morals as priority then it can change the universal core morals till a society begins to erode.
And that is why fundamental principles based off the core morals must be protected. And we must uphold and cherish those morals.
I really don’t have anything to add to the rest of what you wrote. Seems reasonable, thought out and like a perfectly good belief.
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- Lykeios Little Raven
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It's an interesting thought but I don't think he really succeeded in proving the existence of the Biblical God. I would need much more proof than this to get me to believe in that particular God.
“Now I do not know whether I was then a man dreaming I was a butterfly, or whether I am now a butterfly, dreaming I am a man.” -Zhuangzi
“Though, as the crusade presses on, I find myself altogether incapable of staying here in saftey while others shed their blood for such a noble and just cause. For surely must the Almighty be with us even in the sundering of our nation. Our fight is for freedom, for liberty, and for all the principles upon which that aforementioned nation was built.” - Patrick “Madman of Galway” O'Dell
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