I'll try to respond to the previous three posts at the same time.
6/9/2006 7:26:56 AM
6/9/2006 8:58:50 AM
fair enough.I have considered it many times, by the way.
6/9/2006 8:26:59 PM
6/9/2006 9:08:34 PM
I was under the impression that we don't know how the brain works.Is it not possible that this chemical yall are talking about doesn't serve a purpose you're unaware of?
6/9/2006 10:02:52 PM
Sure, maybe DMT (in one form or another) is there to get us in contact with God. Bill Hicks suggests,"Do you think mushrooms growing atop cow shit is an accident? Where do you think the phrase, 'That's good shit,' came from? Why do you think Hindus worship cows? ... 'Holy shit!'"But, either it's there for a reason, and mushrooms and cow shit really are sacred, and the Hindus have it right, or there's nothing special about DMT, and if that's what contact with God is, there is no contact with God.[Edited on June 10, 2006 at 12:22 AM. Reason : .]
6/10/2006 12:19:26 AM
The question I meant to ask was how sure experts are that DMT is the cause of anyone who believes they have been spoken to by God to believe that.
6/10/2006 9:21:25 AM
I think it's more the fact that lots of "religious experiences" can be scientificially recreated or demonstrated, and thus have a natural explanation.DMT, for instance -- but even near-death experiences can be recreated. Those centrifuge things that train pilots have been documented as creating near death experiences in the subject around when they pass out. Why? Because their brain is losing blood, and weird shit happens.[Edited on June 10, 2006 at 12:12 PM. Reason : .]
6/10/2006 12:11:40 PM
So if someone hallucinates about a McDonnalds being in his or her back yard, does that mean that you should doubt whether or not the one you've seen is real?
6/10/2006 12:43:09 PM
That's a little different. If you doubt the existence of the McDonald's you've seen, you can go back to where you've seen it and touch it, see it, or otherwise test for evidence of its current or past existence.Nothing about God is testable. Nothing about God is logically consistent, either. This is pretty much another way of saying that the God concept is classic bullshit. The argument of this thread, however, is that the God on a cross concept is an extension of the God concept involved in an inversion of natural values.Edit:We can argue a lot about whether religion is a valid, consistent philosophy, but that's not the purpose of this thread. This thread is a discussion of the inversion of natural values, and how it's been characterized as a good thing down to the core of Western culture. I mean, there are even atheists that try to justify Christian morality, and brag that they possess similar or better performance in such a moral scale than God-fearing Christians! How they can fail to be fooled by the bait and still get caught in the trap is baffling to me.[Edited on June 10, 2006 at 5:32 PM. Reason : .]
6/10/2006 5:29:31 PM
6/10/2006 5:34:10 PM
I already have >: (I like you and I'm more inclined to tell you than others, but I have to be fair and say READ WHAT I WROTE.
6/10/2006 7:42:13 PM
Looks like I got some reading to do.
6/10/2006 7:47:25 PM
It's funny that the topic of this thread is not to argue about whether religion is valid and at the same time people can say it is "classic bullshit." Well, maybe not so much funny as pathetic and makes me realize that my initial gut feelling it wouldn't be worth arguing here turned out to be correct.
6/11/2006 11:13:24 AM
^^^page #?
6/11/2006 12:18:56 PM
^^certainly this thread is worthless to you if you don't avail yourself of new options because of new information.[Edited on June 11, 2006 at 1:35 PM. Reason : .]
6/11/2006 1:34:08 PM
lol right, I'm not availing myself based on McDanger's inflamatory internet crusade against religion at large.by the way, people can still consider options without choosing the same ones you would. Just so you know.
6/11/2006 4:27:52 PM
6/11/2006 5:45:24 PM
I have considered the option that bigben1024 doesn't consider reasonable options.
6/11/2006 6:07:56 PM
I think that's more of a possibility than an option, but still funnay. gg.
6/11/2006 6:19:59 PM
http://www.andrewsullivan.com/print.php?artnum=20011007
6/26/2006 12:49:59 PM
and who defines what is "reasonable?"
6/29/2006 5:30:22 PM
Well, people do.People create methodologies, by which things are deamed acceptable or unacceptable.
6/30/2006 12:05:44 PM
everything is subjective
6/30/2006 12:06:33 PM
That's very true, but the consequences are functionally similar to if objective truth existed.[Edited on June 30, 2006 at 12:08 PM. Reason : .]
6/30/2006 12:07:57 PM
nobody can ever determine if an objective truth exists for religion until they die and even then they cant necessarily do thatbut i realize the whole topic is hypothetical in a sense and i dont want to derail the focus of the thread so carry on
6/30/2006 12:10:18 PM
What we can determine is what things breach our reality/are relevant to us.
6/30/2006 1:29:43 PM
This thread is still alive?
6/30/2006 3:52:48 PM
^^gg, that is what's most important.
6/30/2006 9:06:58 PM
^^^ actually, you can't even do that.brain in a jar, man. brain in a jar.
6/30/2006 9:35:23 PM
We cannot determine what's relevant to our reality?Uh, our perceptions alone do that. It's how we survive.
7/1/2006 3:15:31 AM
Some would say we should only use our perceptions to determine what's relevant if we get approval from the nearest nihilist.
7/2/2006 8:56:05 AM
7/2/2006 9:21:24 AM
^ This man is spot on.
7/2/2006 9:35:18 PM
7/3/2006 11:25:41 AM
Are you joking?
7/3/2006 12:21:41 PM
what ^ said[Edited on July 3, 2006 at 12:23 PM. Reason : too late]
7/3/2006 12:23:27 PM
7/3/2006 4:10:04 PM
7/5/2006 1:21:21 AM
7/5/2006 1:28:47 AM
7/5/2006 1:33:10 AM
^^ You realize that throughout history people have attributed the things they could not explain at the time to gods/godesses don't you? Because you can't explain life and all the things you mentioned you assume there is a being/force which is responisble at least in the most minimum way. How is what you're saying any different?
7/5/2006 2:50:50 AM
I had written out this long, well thought out response to all this....but I figured it probably wasn't worth it and deleted it... as any decent response will create more questions then it answers
7/5/2006 3:10:46 AM
7/5/2006 3:12:12 AM
^ Quite the contrary, in fact.I made no statement regarding my attitudes towards physical law. However, it would stand to reason that intelligent life would occur in regions of space amenable to its development. Citing that we are in a region of space amenable to the development of life as evidence for intelligent design is silly. Of COURSE we are! We ARE intelligent life, why is it so shocking that we find ourselves in an environment that is friendly to its development? Just because these conditions are rare means nothing. The base requirement for pondering how rare one's surroundings are is the ability to ponder. If only these rare conditions spawn the ability to ponder, why is it then shocking that we, beings who can ponder, exist in rare conditions?
7/5/2006 11:07:03 AM
^ and ^^Furthermore, if the laws of physics worked differently, then intelligent life would have happened someplace else, at the balancing point between extremes of the defining phenomena of the universe. Which, given these laws of physics, is where we are now -- we are balanced in terms of gravity, temperature, electromagnetism, radiation, and so on. Change the balance, and you will find a fulcrum elsewhere. Or not -- but then there wouldn't be any intelligent life, and as was said, here we are. Life is the remarkable thing about the universe, not its innate "balance." Really, the physical phenomena of the universe are hardly balanced -- it's all black holes and empty void, mostly. But given infinite (or barely finite) space and matter, there you go.
7/5/2006 5:51:36 PM