Man, this is very difficult to remember it's the devil's advocate arguments and not some eejit proposing their own views!
Quoting Tigger from 18:19, 17th Aug 2008
Firstly, the Original Poster is an unregistered user, therefore his opinion means nothing. (I know, I know, but I'm just making the same statement as many many others on many other threads)
I'd say 'carries less weight'. The idea is that folks seriously involved in debates tend to register. If not, oh well.
Quoting Tigger from 18:19, 17th Aug 2008Secondly, Religion holds fast as a belief system, for want of a better world, and brings people together, albeit many times in the act of war, but together nonetheless.
Religion does this, btu so do a great many other things. Music is a perfect example. Ever get into an argument with people about a band? Extremely divisive stuff, but extremely helpful at gluing within the divisions themselves. (Note: Can also be used to undo glue too)
Other stuff applies here. Football fandom, computer games (clans, anyone?), art, humour...the list goes on.
I think that religion has some beneficial factors is not enough to advoid a deeper analysis of its merits. (By the same token this also applies to most things; football fandom, music etc)
Quoting Tigger from 18:19, 17th Aug 2008Thirdly, If i was taking a scientific viewpoint, as I'm sure all the physicists will argue against, then the Big Bang, where, oh wait, the universe was created from nothing???surely proves that there is more to creation than the original evolution theory.
This is a non sequitor(sp?), but still is an important issue. That is: there's a logical leap being made that
1- Science hasn't explained it (and it might not be able to)
2- Religion makes claims to explain it
3- Therefore religion has credibility
(Though evolution is hardly the be-all creation answer/counter... continental drift, plate tectonics, star formation, the-bulk-of-chemistry are address neither by the Big Bang-related theories nor evolutionary theories (natural selection etc). The trick with evolution is that it's one weapon in the arsenal of science, it happens to be good at explaining that life's creation was a lot more complicated than a vague deity wishing us into existence over the course of a few days)
Now, addressing the association here of 'science can't explain it' and 'religion has merit' is insufficient, IMO. If we're trying to understand things then, I'd say, if science can't help explain it then it's not really important [this is has a lot of unstated major premisses, but it's a different topic really so I'll dodge it here...])
Quoting Tigger from 18:19, 17th Aug 2008and finally, Everyone is a sheep, blindly following the shepherd of the moment. Yes, things like lightning etc have been proved to be natural occurences, but then again, science has been proved wrong on many occasions, with further research. Events that happen in this world that cant be explained scientifically are seen as freaks of nature. Cop out much?
Not really. I think folks still understand they can be studied, they just don't happen often enough to be studied rigorously. One day we'll figure them out. (It's better putting things in a 'do later' box than an 'it was Thor' box, no?).
Not only that, but the structure of our scientific search is such that even things we understand to be true are still checked, double checked and reverified (and, of course, cracks appear and we know to look deeper!).
Quoting Tigger from 18:19, 17th Aug 2008Explain or be damned is what say. Prove God doesnt exist with something more substantial, because lets face it, faith in ones own ability, against illness, disease, and poverty, has shown amazing results. (I point to the Man that cured himself of HIV, through the power of positive thinking. Before someone comes back and says the tests were wrong that originally diagnosed them, well surprise surprise, science failed. Or you could say that a miracle occurred. Or you could say he was a freak of nature!)
This is the set of arguments about knowledge itself. Can anything but your own experience be trusted? What about anecdotal evidence? We've empirical evidence which talks about the unreliability of human memory...
Science isn't perfect, I'd say, but I don't see how anything could be...better than it. (That is just picking something, believing it and going with it unquestioning).
Cue: Funny Picture.
[img]http://web.mac.com/rico.fusco/meme/flow.jpg[/img]
Quoting Tigger from 18:19, 17th Aug 2008Man is God is Man. It is the belief in something higher, something to strive towards, that lends people a reason to go on. Lets face it, without belief, whether justified or not, in an "Omnipetent" or not, would mean that we have the cycle of pointlessness. ie. We are born and then we die.
Morality doesn't derive from religion by necessity. The feeling good and being happy with purpose in life needn't be purely due to religion. I'm quite happy with my purpose in life
without religion. The "Well, I like it so that's enough for me!" argument isn't one I'm terribly happy using, but I find it difficult to counter when other folks invoke it.
Quoting Tigger from 18:19, 17th Aug 2008Making a difference in the world, even for one person, surely makes everyting worthwhile. If that be helping a lady across the street, or sponsoring a child, or giving the big issue seller your last change, that one positive step shows compassion in mankind.
This is charity and compassion. This is not religion. They might overlap in activites, but that doesn't mean they're the same, obviously.
Quoting Tigger from 18:19, 17th Aug 2008 Without this compassion, this faith, this belief in other Man, the world would be a desperate place.
It's not really religion though. Science hasn't quite mastered society yet, but if it did? If there was a better way to do things without this faith?
[hr]
"There is only ever one truth. Things are always black or white, there's no such thing as a shade of grey. If you think that something is a shade of grey it simply means that you don't fully understand the situation. The truth is narrow and the path of the pursuit of truth is similarly narrow."
Also, some years later:
"here we are arguing about a few uppity troublemakers with a bee in their bonnet and a conspiracy theory."