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Emery wrote:I think humans will always need God, humanguy, because having God allows us to resolve our greatest fears and sorrows. With God we can overcome the unbearable sorrow of losing a child, for we will be united again. With God we can overcome death, since we will live again. With God we can overcome the fear that the unjust go unpunished, and the oppressed unavenged, and that our personal tragedies have no purpose. Perhaps it take a higher understanding to come to terms with these things without God, but humans aren't there yet, and I doubt we ever will be.

humanguy wrote:Emery wrote:I think humans will always need God, humanguy, because having God allows us to resolve our greatest fears and sorrows. With God we can overcome the unbearable sorrow of losing a child, for we will be united again. With God we can overcome death, since we will live again. With God we can overcome the fear that the unjust go unpunished, and the oppressed unavenged, and that our personal tragedies have no purpose. Perhaps it take a higher understanding to come to terms with these things without God, but humans aren't there yet, and I doubt we ever will be.
Really? I'm there. Where else could I be? What is IS. Life is what it is, and it isn't any other way. I'll tell you something else, and I don't mean to be strident or boastful, but it is remarkable what sorrows we humans beings can handle. All sorrows are bearable, I have personal experience with this, but more importantly and significant to this conversation is that we have ample documentation of human beings suffering unimaginable sorrows, unimaginable horrors, and still coming out with their humanity intact.
We're strong. Human beings are strong. Being human is great if you do the work, and if you're too lazy to do the work then there's always religion to tell you what to think and how to live.
It's a simplistic way of putting it, yes, but I stand behind the statement. Being alive is being alone, and the putting together of the pieces that ultimately make us who we are is the task we are given in this life and we have to do it alone. That's what I mean by doing the work. Doing the work is what makes one an individual human being.

My favorite quote I have read here on these forums.humanguy wrote:Emery wrote:I think humans will always need God, humanguy, because having God allows us to resolve our greatest fears and sorrows. With God we can overcome the unbearable sorrow of losing a child, for we will be united again. With God we can overcome death, since we will live again. With God we can overcome the fear that the unjust go unpunished, and the oppressed unavenged, and that our personal tragedies have no purpose. Perhaps it take a higher understanding to come to terms with these things without God, but humans aren't there yet, and I doubt we ever will be.
Really? I'm there. Where else could I be? What is IS. Life is what it is, and it isn't any other way. I'll tell you something else, and I don't mean to be strident or boastful, but it is remarkable what sorrows we humans beings can handle. All sorrows are bearable, I have personal experience with this, but more importantly and significant to this conversation is that we have ample documentation of human beings suffering unimaginable sorrows, unimaginable horrors, and still coming out with their humanity intact.
We're strong. Human beings are strong. Being human is great if you do the work, and if you're too lazy to do the work then there's always religion to tell you what to think and how to live.
It's a simplistic way of putting it, yes, but I stand behind the statement. Being alive is being alone, and the putting together of the pieces that ultimately make us who we are is the task we are given in this life and we have to do it alone. That's what I mean by doing the work. Doing the work is what makes one an individual human being.



mitchellmckain wrote:The lesson here is that people are different -- different needs, different wants, different interests, different abilities. I cannot say that I need God in the sense that Emery talks about. The challenges in my life have not been so great that I can see, so I cannot even comment about my ability to endure unimaginable horrors that humanguy talks about, except to say that it does very much seem to me that any such ability is far from universal. My life has been great really. But that this doesn't mean that I don't want more and that is where God comes in for me -- I want to be more.
From the earliest childhood, I have always wanted to know more. Material gain never interested me, so that I pursued my studies with no thought at all about a career. But I have slowly come to realize that knowledge is in many ways just another kind of wealth. Its kind of like learning all there is to know about some computer game. When the game is over and you move on to something else in life then none of that really means a damn thing any more.

humanguy wrote:Seriously, why? What's lost without a God? What has God ever done for humanity, for this world?



mitchellmckain wrote:Humanguy's comment about having religion tell you what to think and how to live is ridiculous.

Rian wrote:If God created the universe and upholds the universe by his power, then we need him in order to exist. That's obviously an "if", but it's also obviously true that we need God if the "if" part is true.

humanguy wrote:Well, that's what this thread is about. Why does there have to be an "if" part?

Keep The Reason wrote:humanguy wrote:Well, that's what this thread is about. Why does there have to be an "if" part?
Well, we know whence it comes. While modern theists will deny this, it comes from pre-technological and superstitious peoples in the past who had not tools to decipher why things existed in the first place.
I would say those peoples were anything but lazy -- they worked damned hard trying to figure things out, but they were simply mistaken. Existence is not predicated on the things they claim it was predicated upon. This is not a negative reflection on them-- it's simply the consequence of a more limited ability to be able to decipher the truth, and they did the best they could do.
People today, however, who rest upon the propositions of a distant people who were handicapped in their tools and knowledge-- yes they are being incredibly lazy. Worse, they are also being incredibly irresponsible. I think we all have a duty to be the best, and most mature, human beings we can be. And that means we have to accept the reality of life on the terms that it offers us, not on terms of what we want it to be, or insist it must be. And only then can we be in a position to take from our experiences an authentic meaning. Now, theists will claim they do have authentic meaning but as you yourself have noted, there just doesn't seem to be any real need for "god" in any of this so I don't know what the concept winds up giving them. Ok, "Security"? "Comfort"? Perhaps, but most assuredly this doesn't mean they won't suffer from tragedy, or their lives are spared the strideful march towards the grave.
While I do not believe people will always need this god medicine, Emery does correctly point out that there are people who do seem to need it. But many people don't-- you, me, Emery himself -- none of us need this dynamic to have meaningful purpose in life (well, I don't know about you so much, but myself I know, and Emery has argued likewise; and there are other atheists who have attested to rich, fulfilled lives without god -- so if not you personally, then the "global you" that's out there not believing).
You know that does not surprise me at all given the arguments you tend to use against theism - the psychological ones I mean not your abortive attempts to construct an empiricist epistemology.In fact, I would say that discarding theism deeply increased my sense of purpose and fulfillment in life.

Moonwood the Hare wrote:I mean what actually surprises me about the atheist on this forum is how little they know about modern thought.

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