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Peter_Plato
Guest
Assuming that the only way in which “people” come to experience the numinous is by “hearing” about it from someone else. Apparently, this is you transposing your experience onto ”people all over the world."People all over the world started worshipping gods without hearing of your particular god.
Obviously, you haven’t taken the time to really think through the “one god further” nonsense. If you want to embarrass yourself we can pursue that line of thought, but I suggest you resist the urge.People, ancient ones in particular, were quite good at inventing religions- all but one of which you believe to be false. Thus, the fact that people find your god plausible is not proof at all.
I suspect you don’t believe in Thor, Shiva, or Zeus, but can’t definitively prove they don’t exist. As the saying goes, atheism just takes it one good further.
The notion that “all but one of which you believe to be false” is somewhat misleading. It would be more truthful to state it as “only one of which you believe to be completely true.”
I have not come across any religion I would say is completely “false,” although a few come very close. Every religion has elements of truth and more than a few are quite compelling. (I am quite empathetic to Taoism and a great deal of early Confucianism.) Some are obviously more false than others, but a binary position on this is one that just isn’t necessary despite that atheists get a great deal of smug self-satisfaction from thinking it must be so.