I can respect YOUR MOM.Let's be respectful on such a touchy subject
iirc anthropology deals with that...Also, on the subject of "proof", this is why I don't see why there has to be this titantic struggle between science and religion. Science is the 'how', religion is the 'why'.
It's like with a car, science explains how it is put together. Why the rivets hold things together, that turning the steering wheel will turn the tires, etc. Religion would explain why the car was created in the first place and what it was created to do.
I can respect YOUR MOM.[/quote]Let's be respectful on such a touchy subject
Religion to me isn't about "proof". You can't prove most things in religion. You also can't disprove them either.
It's called 'faith' for a reason.
Thanks for your replies so far. I've been thinking about this for a while, and I feel like I need to "come out" about my shaking faith in organized religion.The reason I put "proof" in quotations is because I realize that having faith means believing in something, even if it hasn't been proven or disproved. I just want to know why YOU believe in what you do.
This is exactly what happened to me with Catholocism, except I was 5 I had just realized that Santa Claus wasn't real, and I figured that God was just something the adults invented to make sure I was good.I was raised Episcopalian, and one day I just kind of thought "wouldn't it be funny if everyone was sitting here talking and bowing and lighting candles for no reason at all?"
And I didn't want to waste my time being part of the joke.
This is exactly what happened to me with Catholocism, except I was 5 I had just realized that Santa Claus wasn't real, and I figured that God was just something the adults invented to make sure I was good.I was raised Episcopalian, and one day I just kind of thought "wouldn't it be funny if everyone was sitting here talking and bowing and lighting candles for no reason at all?"
And I didn't want to waste my time being part of the joke.
This is exactly what happened to me with Catholocism, except I was 5 I had just realized that Santa Claus wasn't real, and I figured that God was just something the adults invented to make sure I was good.I was raised Episcopalian, and one day I just kind of thought "wouldn't it be funny if everyone was sitting here talking and bowing and lighting candles for no reason at all?"
And I didn't want to waste my time being part of the joke.
Half my family is, but they don't care as long as I'm happy.This is why I'm glad my family was never overly religious to start with.
On that note, have you read about the afterlife that awaits atheists/agnostics in classic D&D lore? Shit be messed up.I sometimes think my "proof" came when reading Dante's Inferno. No, it's not a religious work; no, it's not even about Hell, but as I was reading through it all the other depictions of Hell, Heaven and the afterlife whether fictional (including D&D's fantasy afterlife) or those of believers'.
I'm ignoring the second half of the thread so far because it looks like it's turning into a different discussion that V wanted (not that thread drift is wrong)
Me? I'm atheist.
I sometimes think my "proof" came when reading Dante's Inferno. No, it's not a religious work; no, it's not even about Hell, but as I was reading through it all the other depictions of Hell, Heaven and the afterlife whether fictional (including D&D's fantasy afterlife) or those of believers'. I don't just mean the depictions, either, but the idea behind it - that idea of the eternal life of the soul - and I decided that it was just wrong. Not just inconceivable or impossible. Simply wrong. And I just extend that to God, too (whichever God you want that to be). Now, I sometimes think that's my proof. Other times, I assume that's just my justification, and a justification I don't need.
I simply don't believe. Not in God, not in the soul. This extends to all things supernatural, too. Not ghosts, not monsters, not even fate. I am an unbeliever.
Unfortunately, I don't have time to get into the details of my faith, but I don't see religions as being so illogical as many people (even many religious people) would have you believe.[/quote]My reasons for believing in God are fairly numerous, but I think that the core of it can be summed up by this C.S. Lewis quote:
[quote="C.S. Lewis]“If the whole universe has no meaning, we should never have found out that it has no meaning: just as, if there were no light in the universe and therefore no creatures with eyes, we should never know it was dark. Dark would be without meaning.”