Taskiss wrote:
Religion is the answer, "Where did we come from" was the question.
And that's where you went wonky. Religion is not *the* answer. It is *an* answer. An answer that lacks any evidence at all. Hence the reason why it takes a leap of faith to believe in that answer.
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Pretty much impossible to debunk unless you make **** up. "All" is obviously here, so it's been created,
Post hoc ergo proctor hoc. Just because it's here does not mean it's created. It is not incumbent on people like me to *disprove* the contention that some being created the universe. It is the obligation of those asserting that such a deity does exist to provide objective evidence of his existence.
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Atheists insist that **** just appeared without any oversight.
No, Atheists insist that there is no evidence to support the existence of some sort of all powerful overseer.
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The deity they worship is a pair of dice with no intelligence. I'd argue that it's still a deity.
You could argue that, but you would be wrong.
Khross - I agree that the default state is ignorance. Ignorance is cured by knowledge. Knowledge is gained by observation, testing, and rational thought based on the evidence at hand. When man first saw thunder, he had no explanation. So he devised one. Reason, evidence, and rational thought brings us out of the dark and into better understanding. The belief that there is some omnipotent power waiting patiently in the heavens is no different than the belief that Prometheus brought fire to man. People in our history believed that myth with all their hearts, with equal fervor to the fundamentalists of today.
Evidence changed our minds. Now that deity, that mystical being, is merely a myth. We teach it not as a truth, but as a story. An allegory.
When we look at the long history of mankind, which is but a blip in the entire history of our universe, we can see countless gods and goddesses rise and fall. Each of these deities were worshiped with as much faith as our current crop of mystical overlords. THe faithful of today have nothing on the Aztecs, who sacrificed human beings to their gods. Modern christians would look upon that as a barbaric practice of a primitive people.
And so too will future generations look upon the faux blood rites of the catholic church, or the adult baptism rituals in protestant congregations. They will look at our Christmas feasts and our marriage rites with a bemused eye. We're a drop in the bucket.
And we have no objective proof that god exists in any form that we describe. No proof. None what so ever. The rational choice is to simply reject the notion entirely until Objective evidence reveals itself.
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It feels like all the people who want limited government really just want government limited to Republicans.
---The Daily Show