M
Mystic_Banana
Guest
I’m fairly Cartesian/Fortean in this respect. I understand this, of course, reflects not wholly positively on the Church (especially the Forteanism element), but I find precious little outside it that doesn’t end up, in teh end, bowing down to materialismTrue. I try to keep mine open and upfront. I’m engaged in a search for ideas about the cause of those things which exist, and if those causes include an intelligent entity, its motivations. I’m writing a book which expresses my own ideas on the subject, to which a couple of CAF members have already supported with their forthright criticism.
In the process I’ve learned much about how people think, or evade thought. Thanks to the excellent CAF moderators, I’m learning to express my ideas appropriately, or not at all.
Ultimately, my agenda is that the people on this planet quit squabbling about which religion is right, or if there is a God or not, and figure out the truth of the matter. There is a reality, or truth, or whatever one chooses to label it. Our job is to find it, and despite the assertions of religious people and atheists, it is within our grasp. I believe that if my ideas, or even better ideas which integrate the idea of a Creator with physical science, were widely adopted, science and religion would be working together for the development of the human mind and elevation of the human spirit.
This is a pretty stupid and pointless agenda, since I’ve already learned that believers just want to believe whatever they’ve decided upon, whether they be religionists or atheists. But there are some first-rate minds who show up on this channel, and I appreciate the opportunity to exchange ideas with them.
When I read the Bible, I turned agnostic, essentially, and looked to science. When I started reading up on science, I found assumption piled on positivism, on assumption (etc.) - and realised this is not the way I had been taught to understand it - all my life. The extent to which Science obfuscates these elements, and uses the false pretense of objectivism as a weapon against all other belief systems, appalls me.If you’ve worked in science, you’d have more reasons to be skeptical of various scientific opinions. You would not be inspired by the amount of invented material.
Science is strongly dependent upon faith, but most of these beliefs are not known to the non-scientist. For example, there is the belief that the laws of physics are the same everywhere in the universe, and at all times. (Except,of course, during the Big Bang.)
There is the belief that the velocity of light is the same everywhere in the universe, and has been the same even in the past (except in the aftermath of the Big Bang).
First rate scientists are aware of these elements of their faith. (It is from such men that I learned them, since beliefs do not overtly appear in textbooks.)
Comparing the ideas about the beginnings of things, it would seem that fine Christian minds have proven that the universe must have been the creation of an extraordinarily intelligent entity. When given their turn, brilliant atheistic minds have shown that belief in God is illogical. In effect, both sides have proven one another to be wrong.
Why not believe them both, accept their excellent work with gratitude, admit that both atheism and current religions have failed to adequately explain the reasons for existence, and then, freed of beliefs which once showed promise, discover a set of ideas which correctly explain the nature and purpose of man and of everything else?
Let us find a concept of God which is consistent with the understandings and facts our sciences have discovered, and with a purpose sufficient to make sense of the existence of human beings. That’s my agenda.
I apologize for having been sucked into an irrelevant topic and wasting valuable words discussing it. The hour was late and I must have been tired. And I sure hope that you don’t find a mid-day postmark on the relevant post.
And, if the answer is appropriate to this thread, what is your agenda?
Once this ‘revelation’ hit me, I re-read the Bible, with my skepticism turned against those who ultimately turned me skeptic (not least that good old proto-Nazi Lovecraft)… and found it somewhat less wanting than previously.
In the battle of dogmas, I find the materialistic/scientismic faith the most dangerous, for it does not realises itself as such, and gains authority from this unrecognised faith in itself. The blindest, most oppressive, least rational faith of all is one that does not realise or admit it is one!
I suppose, to expose and oppose the delusions of scientism is my primary goal, on most of my contributions :knight2: