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Is there a GOD?

Do you believe in GOD?

  • Absolutely no question--I know

    Votes: 150 25.6%
  • I cannot know for sure--but strongly believe in the existance of god

    Votes: 71 12.1%
  • I am very uncertain but inclined to believe in god

    Votes: 35 6.0%
  • God's existance is equally probable and improbable

    Votes: 51 8.7%
  • I dont think the existance of god is probable

    Votes: 112 19.1%
  • I know there is no GOD we are a random quirk of nature

    Votes: 167 28.5%

  • Total voters
    586
Walk around the Middle East today, or 16th century Spain, with a sign strapped to you saying 'God/Allah does not exist'.

Good luck...
You could say the same about 'the great general' Kim Jong-il and North Korea. Certainly not a heavenly figure there.

I'm just saying that this god/s debate has been going on for... well... ever, and regardless of the outcome nothing will change. If EVERYONE agreed that god does or doesn't exist, or on one god, life, planet earth and the stars remain the same.

Belief in god and religion is just too 'bitter sweet' for me to see any real logic.
 
Pat, my point is, that your comment is from a non believer or at least an agnostic, and not a 'true' follower.

For a great percentage of the planet, life without God would cease to exist.

Looking into the crystal ball there may well be a day when there is conflict between the believers and non believers to determine our future, and change the shape of moral fundamentals. It may be a bloody fight consuming the world. It's a way off though, God/Allah/Brahma is pretty well entrenched right now.
 
Pat, my point is, that your comment is from a non believer or at least an agnostic, and not a 'true' follower.
Exactly right. I don't follow a religion. God to me.... not sure, I'm open to all positive suggestion. I respect the hand that feeds me.

I still see no logic in religion. To me, Carl Sagan summed it up in the book Contact with Eleanor's (I think thats her name) thoughts on God. (Sorry can't provide quote's, the book is at my mum's )

Agree that fanatics may 'lose' there will to live, but life goes on. I think society as we know it may cease to exist. I'm yet to be convinced humans are capable of living in peace without any religious input, so I can't say the world would be a better place without belief in God or religion.
 
 
Interesting comment in

http://www.worldscibooks.com/economics/5819.html

You can download chapter 1
which this is from..

 
Ok, your 'recent archeological and literary research' absolutley trumps my 'some scholars'. Case closed.

There is actually no archeological evidence that proves a few hundred thousand people trampled across the Sinai following Moses. Nada. Not even a clay pot.

Only Evangelical Christians and Orthodox Jews hold on to this myth. And anyone else indoctrinated at an early enough age, that they refuse to see logic.

I'm not sure if you've read any historical books on the subject, other than the bible, but I can recommend one, The History of God, by Karen Armstrong. Yes, I'm logic bashing. I'm sorry.
 
Is there a God?

I honestly do not think that you will really determine an answer here.

Is there a God? (31,000,000 search results from Google)
Does God exist? (831000 search results)

For those of a religious background, the answer is Yes. For those that who are not, the answer would be Yes/No/Maybe.

We live in a scientific age, where people want some scientific proof of existence. Articles from one commentator or another won't (?) convert another persons beliefs. Just as much as you might shout NO, there are others (like David123) who will shout YES. So I won't try and covert you either

Ultimately, whether couched as scientific inquiry or purely religious/moral/philosophical faith it a personal, investigative decision for each one of us - a matter of faith (or not).

Tim
 

Hey kennas,
couple of points - first, there wouldn't necessarily be archaelogical evidence of a couple of hundred thousand people tramping across the Sinai if they were tramping the whole time? Don't know anything really about archeology though

and second, even if there wasn't evidence that Moses led the Jews across the Sinai, this still doesn't effect his authorship of the Pentateuch.
 


+1

I couldn't phrase that better if I tried.
 
I'm not sure if they just tramped for 40 years. I don't know anything about archeology either, just what I've seen on Indiana Jones... lol

Remember also, they were chased by most the entire population of Egypt according to Exodus, I think. I few million extra tramping...

Yep, he could have written it all, there's no difinitive answer, you just have to make your own judgement on the available information.

Some of the things he says happened in the books make me question their authenticity. That's my judgement.
 
The big problem I have with the debate is that on one side we have folks trying to prove/have faith in the Biblical style God, and on the other, folks who believe science disproves the Biblical style God. (in western society anyway)

I think as far as the Biblical Style God goes, the atheists have it in a cakewalk.

But... we humans tend to polarize ourselves in debate and disregard the infinite number of possibilities in between. There are emotional reasons for this. We humans make emotional decisions and then enlist logic to back up our decision.

Removing the emotion (guilt, hurt, fear, whatever) as much as possible, leaves the mind to consider all sorts of possibilities. The LHC at CERN is a massive opportunity to learn new stuff about the creation of the universe (not said in the religious sense) and cause a new evolution of thought, in whichever direction the person wants to take it.

The potential of CERN is in reinforcing my own particular take on things. i.e. a "natural god" absolutely unlike anything in the "scriptures".

OPEN MINDS - it's exciting!
 

+1

I couldn't phrase that better if I tried.
There is another theory about belief in supernatural beings, gods, and why we form religion that I've been reading about recently and it's an evolutionary adaption theory. I've been writing some stuff on it, but it's on my own computer back home.

It's very difficult to summarise, but this news piece is a good start:

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/04/magazine/04evolution.t.html?pagewanted=all
 
I'm not sure if you've read any historical books on the subject, other than the bible, but I can recommend one, The History of God, by Karen Armstrong. Yes, I'm logic bashing. I'm sorry.

Yes, I've read historical books on the subject but not hers. Why not? When you totally disagree with someone's premises, of course you will disagree with their conclusions.

Armstrong follows modern liberal "comparative religions" theory which suggests all religions evolved from common source, and all ideas of "god" are simply human projections from the culture of that time. She gathers data to support her theories and rejects any which contradict. She is an ultra-liberal member of the Jesus Seminars who totally reject the biblical picture of Jesus, and have regular seminars to make a "Jesus" in their own image, voting on which bits of the gospels they think authentic or not. Of course this changes as fashions change. She also denies the Bible teaches any clear theology or relevant ethics. Of course 1000s of scholars would strongly disagree with her views, her evidence and her conclusions.

Read her if you like, but don't pretend she is the only word or the authoritative word on the subject.
 
Of course many people who have blind faith will disregard a scholary historical account on the history of the idea of God.

When you totally disagree with someone's premises, of course you will disagree with their conclusions.
I'll read anything on the subject to not close myself off to the potential factual truth.

Of course 1000s of scholars would strongly disagree with her views, her evidence and her conclusions.
Well, we can add Refined Silver as one. Got a seconder?
 
 
 
In drunken stupor, i've come to the conclusion, any debate regarding god or similar, is illogical, or at least the logic in doing so is flawed.
 
In drunken stupor, i've come to the conclusion, any debate regarding god or similar, is illogical, or at least the logic in doing so is flawed.
God is the logic to describe the illogical.
 
In drunken stupor, i've come to the conclusion, any debate regarding god or similar, is illogical, or at least the logic in doing so is flawed.

That's why it's fun.
 
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