A
Atreyu
Guest
Well isn’t that what we’re doing here? Hammering something out, as amateur philosophers? I think that “why” the Universe exists is a very important question, as it goes completely against everything that we understand as science for something to come out of nothing.There was a beginning, it’s the Big Bang. What happened before that is unknown as yet – which doesn’t mean it had to have been done by God. That’s just a red herring – in fact, so’s your second ‘issue’. It exists; what’s the point of trying to figure out why? Leave that to the philosophers and theologians and let them hammer something out.
Well, apart from the teaching of ex nihilo, which is completely in accord with the Big Bang. And, according to someone who should know (my tongue is in my cheek at the moment) - Dan Brown - the Big Bang theory was invented by a Catholic monk. In fact, how much of what we know today as science was invented by Catholics, throughout the ages? A fair amount I would guess. The Catholic world-view encourages scientific investigation. Galileo was an exception, not the rule. In fact, even as early as the turn of the 5th century, Augustine of Hippo recognised the importance of science. I’ve lost the reference, but he said something like “if valid and confirmed science contradicts our interpretation of Scripture, then we must reinterpret Scripture, since the science cannot be wrong, and the Scripture cannot be wrong, but our interpretation can”. He said it much more eloquently than I, but I’m pretty sure I’ve demonstrated his ideas accurately.Religion hasn’t done squat to answer the question of how the universe physically came to be (okay, God said ‘let there be light’, but what actually happened to make that light?) and it’s pretty thoroughly torn by disagreements on the question of why existence.
Atheists by and large are completely and utterly wrong about abortion. From a purely philosophical point of view, if you define murder as the intentional killing of an innocent human being, then abortion is murder. Therefore everyone who believes that human life is important should be anti-abortion. This is not the case, and it demonstrates to me just how far atheists can get it wrong. And I would ask that we don’t turn this into a debate on abortion - so if you disagree with me, just say so and we’ll leave it at that - I’m just using it as an example.This is one of the things I really admire about atheism, and which makes me think of it as a more reasonable position: atheists generally aren’t afraid to admit they might be wrong about something (here I discount strong atheism a la Dawkins). They don’t try to antagonize scientific thought and effort with only the justification of ‘my religion says it’s this way instead!’. Not that all religious people do act like that, of course – but it does seem to be far more common.