But there are many folk around who can give you guidance on how to be decent ... maybe it helps folk to think there is someone in control that ensures decency will triumph...I dont think there is anyone but I do hope decency can prevail.
Let's say that for some reason more females were born in region, than males. Let's say for every male that was born, a thousand females were born at the same time.
From an evolutionary standpoint, most of those females were not going to be able to have off-spring, so that they could pass on their genes.
Which would mean those excess females would not be selected.
Do you think it would be okay for some of the few remaining males to rape and/or murder a very small amount of these females?
Could that ever become a good thing?
Don't worry, I don't think you ever would, but I ask because you seem to think that moral decency comes from humans, or that morals are subjective as opposed to objective.
A little off topic, but I believe we can tailor it to fit, as it does have something to do with atheist and theist psychology.
I do think its all made up and I dont think that is unreasonable and God may well exist outside the stories humans have made up to define him.
You already accept that God is made up.
Obviously it is not unreasonable to you, because to you, God does not exist.
If God does not exist, then that's the end of the discussion.
Your reason for God not existing, is not a reason.
Even you think nobody was there in the beginning (so how could they have written it in the), bible, it does not mean God does not exist.
You have yet to show how God does not exist. But you can't. Nobody can.
There is no logic that can reasonably show that God doesn't exist.
Science obviously cannot show that God doesn't exist.
There is nothing to show that God doesn't exist.
Because God cannot not exist.
All you are doing is denying, and rejecting God.
However I believe the universe is eternal with no begining or end and so no room for a creator.
There is need of a creator, otherwise how are you here.
But at least you believe in something, even though you are simply denying God, by replacing God with the universe.
I certainly find, if we entertain the concept of a creator that to believe we are important to him rather inconsistent with observation.
It doesn't matter whether we believe we are important to God or not, as to whether there is a God or not.
That's what I mean by God Is.
Our belief in God, only serve to better ourselves spiritually, so we can develop our knowledge, and come to the platform of God consciousness.
Then as we advance in our understanding, we understand the importance of our relationship.
Belief in God is natural, a lack of belief in God only acts as an opposing counterpart.
To start out thinking I am important to God, or to anyone for that matter, is not a good way to form a good relationship. In fact it is a bad way, and we know this, or at least most of do. And if we don't, we don't, we soon find out.
Fortunately God can see our imperfections, and will meet us, to extent to which we truly desire to relate to God.
I think observation tells us that superstituon ruled knowledge.
Take the earliest civilizations we know of ... superstition was used to explain most events.
I study all history and think my observation is not unreasonable.
So at what point in time did man stop being guided by superstition, and who were the people that pioneered this development?
Sacrifice to a god is clearly superstitious and was part of most religions one can study.
Compare that to nowadays where people sacrifice people for virtually no good reason at all.
I understand that in ancient times men would go out to a particular territory to fight their wars, and the women, children, and elderly didn't end up as collateral damage.
Nowadays wars kill anything that moves.
Maybe ancient sacrifices weren't based on superstition, but maintained a certain kind of moral order (obviously it would depend on the nature and intent of the sacrifice).
I know it would be difficult for you to see it but the evidence of superstition and its importance for early humans is rather easy to observe.
What is the evidence of superstition and it's importance for early humans?
I ask because this seems to be a key issue to you?
The only way I can see it work is not to reference any holy book and consider god as an ideal as opposed to a reality.
Based on what I've gathered so far about your atheist psychology, I can see why you would do that.
Have a pleasant evening with your guests.
I'd love to be a fly on the wall.
Scratch that, Aussie spiders are beasts. So I hear.
jan.