behind every claim of evidence lies qualification, and key factor to establishing qualification is applying the correct theory.What material evidence supports the existence of God?
not sure what you are asking hereWhat reason do people observe the existence of God?
Like any claim of knowledge you will find three kinds of responses from three catagories of peopleDid mankind create God or did God create mankind?
What material evidence supports the existence of God?
What reason do people observe the existence of God?
Did mankind create God or did God create mankind?
behind every claim of evidence lies qualification, and key factor to establishing qualification is applying the correct theory.
sorry kid....
knowledge and the pursuit of, is all i do..........
and string theory is a joke
perhaps you are unaware that 'theories' get crushed too
perhaps you are not aware of items such as caloric from lavoisier and how the model was crushed but yet most all foods are idntified by calorie content
this thread is about the existence of God and inquiring on intelligent debate and you trying to play with me like i am just a kid
we all can see how the monkeys (unevolved idiots) go ad hominem because they don't have the intellect to articulate an argument
swivel go snivel :bawl: eleswhere
quit following me around
:shrug:
This is true. Theories get crushed. I wonder. What you think God is. What you think the search for truth is. What is so important or imperative about the philosophical search for gods search for truth. I wonder why you think it should be crushed (to give numerous examples), of your search.perhaps you are unaware that 'theories' get crushed too
I think humans have a built in neurological bias to interpret events in terms of intention. It's similar to how we tend to interpret certain visual inputs as a face (the famous Mars rock face, for example). We are left with a thousands year old mis-diagnosis called theism. Science has long superceded this idea, but popular culture hasn't cought up.
I think humans have a built in neurological bias to interpret events in terms of intention. It's similar to how we tend to interpret certain visual inputs as a face (the famous Mars rock face, for example). We are left with a thousands year old mis-diagnosis called theism. Science has long superceded this idea, but popular culture hasn't cought up.
There could be some evolutionary advantage to such 'wiring'. That would explain a few things.
There could be some evolutionary advantage to such 'wiring'. That would explain a few things.
That is one of the leading theories. It encouraged greater unity and teamwork, which obviously is a positive when you are hunting a large animal.
I do not think we are hard-wired for religion. I think it arises from an interplay of two other modules which each have evolutionary benefit, but combined have bizarre secondary effects.
One is the superstition module, which has enormous benefit. This module is what makes us draw hasty conclusions on ephemeral data. It is why we confuse correlation with causation. If Thog eats a red berry on the "bathroom trail" and gets sick later, it is better safe than sorry: Don't eat red berries and don't eat anything on the "bathroom trail".
The incorrect and paranoid reproduce more than the scientist who tests every hypothesis and poisons himself. Nature doesn't reward being "right", just being hyper-aware. Note the paranoid delusionals in the WTC thread.
The second module is the "human agent" module. This is the one that assigns blame and credit for all changes to our environment. If a tool is moved, it didn't move itself, a person moved it. Probably Thog, the thieving bastard. This module is responsible for our culture, our sense of reciprocity, our alliances and our wars. It is also why we assume that if a tree moves, a bigger, stronger "man" must have moved it.
These two modules are well known to psychologists, and their interplay results in religion. Superstition guided by human agents. The way these religions are modified over the years has to do with the evolution and natural selection of memes, as stronger gods (stronger concepts, anyway) win out over weaker gods. Militant monotheism is the result.
It would also help a people to stick together in the face of adversity.
Would this also explain the negative disposition of theists towards atheists ?
I don't think that that assumption is entirely fair, but it is possible.
What material evidence supports the existence of God?
What reason do people observe the existence of God?
Did mankind create God or did God create mankind?
Why is it not fair ? This has been true throughout the ages, and not only in the religion department. Groups frown on outsiders, sometimes suppressing them or outright exterminating them. But especially so with religion.
Groups also accept those from the outside, religion is also about conversion, which in some respects makes you tolerant of outsiders. Although I still see your point; I'd just like to see further study into that idea and neuroscience in general regarding religion. Neuroscience hasn't made a lot of progress with examining the origin and sustenance of religion, throughout the ages.
Reason tells me that a strong case can be made for your argument. The repeated occurence of religious wars provides a little basis for it.![]()
I'm just improvising here, of course. But I don't think I'm far off![]()
i could see 'cultures' being hardwired... but babies learn from people. Meaning children are not born idiots, they learn it from their environment.I think humans have a built in neurological bias to interpret events in terms of intention.
It's similar to how we tend to interpret certain visual inputs as a face (the famous Mars rock face, for example). We are left with a thousands year old mis-diagnosis called theism. Science has long superceded this idea, but popular culture hasn't cought up.