Question: What philosophers influenced you?

Stephen Fry: Philosophy is an odd thing. When we use the word in everyday speech you know you sometimes hear it hilariously. They say, “Oh, it’s never good to be late.” “That’s my philosophy.” You think that’s a generous description of that rather dull precept to call it a philosophy, but it’s odd how philosophers generally speaking, at least the ones I’ve read or the ones I you know value, don’t have in that sense a philosophy. There is no particular Socratic or Dimechian or Kantian way to live your life. They don’t offer ethical codes and standards by which to live your life. They don’t offer a philosophy to follow. They just simply raise an enormous number of questions mostly, so in the sense that you put the question is there a philosopher that’s important to me. Well I me I loved really the sort of the Bertrand Russell grand sort of tour of philosophy, the history of philosophy from the pre Socratics as they’re called, Zeno and so on through to Socrates and Plato and Aristotle. I never quite liked Aristotle. I think that’s partly… Although he was obviously a genius and brilliant and he invented logic, so what’s not to like. I think it was his influence on the medieval mind was probably rather pernicious and unfortunate and all those categories and things, but when it opened up with I suppose Spinoza and them, but then Kant and the enlightenment era. Oh and actually Locke. I did like Locke. He was a fine philosopher, but they don’t… I mean what is so great about them is that they just… They’re quite scary when you think of the word philosopher and especially if it’s logic and symbolic logic and it gets onto Hegelian philosophies, incredibly difficult to read I find and you follow it for about… Well it’s like trying to grab a salmon. You know the harder you clutch at it the more it springs, slips out of your hand and whoa, it’s gone and you chase it again and what was that and you feel very stupid, but the… I think the beauty of questioning and simplicity that you get from Kant in particular I think is just amazing because it’s like they say of simple mathematical laws that make fractals, the tiniest little elegant observation about or question about something just spins out these immensely complex things that make you rethink everything. So yes, I think philosophy is a really important dimension, but I think in our age we tend to be rather sloppy about it. We either think Buddhism is philosophy, which you know or some sort of eastern thing about being nice and spiritual and that will do, which it’s fine. I mean you know obviously I believe in kindness and niceness and lots of spiritual things, but the real intellectual rigor and quest of logic is something that I’m afraid takes incredibly hard work and we live in an age in which hard work is if not actively deprecated or denigrated it is run away from or ignored. It’s sort of people frown at you and say, “Well, that’s a bit dull and stupid. Why can’t we just short circuit it and talk about like spirit?” Well yeah, you can say spirit, but if you think that’s philosophy and if you think that’s good enough.

The most important philosophy I think is that even if it isn’t true you must absolutely assume there is no afterlife. You cannot for one second I think, abbragate the responsibility of believing that this is it because if you think you’re going to have an eternity in which you can talk to Mozart and Chopin and Schopenhauer on a cloud and learn stuff and you know really get to grips with knowledge and understanding and so you won’t bother now. I think it’s a terrible, a terrible mistake. It may be that there is an afterlife and I’ll look incredibly stupid, but at least I will have had a crammed pre afterlife, a crammed life, so to me the most important thing is you know as Kipling put it, to fill every 60 seconds with you know what is it? To fill every unforgiving minute with 60 seconds worth of distance run. You know absolutely, so that’s all I’m saying I suppose. Is that there is no point wasting time being lazy, though of course indolence in a divine way, actually has its advantages. Oh, shut up Steve. Okay, next one.

 

Question: What do you believe?

Stephen Fry: It’s interesting. Atheism comes into rather a bad press and I suppose I’d rather describe myself as a humanist, who human… I don’t believe in God. I don’t believe there is a God. If I were to believe in a god l would believe in gods. I think monotheism is the really ghastly thing. That is the absolutely staggering to me misapprehension. I can perfectly see why anybody might imagine that each thing, each thing that grows, each phenomenon that we… that accompanies us on our journey through life, the sky, the mountains, spirits of nature. I can imagine why man would wish to endow them with an inner something, an inner animus that they would call the god of that thing. I can see that. It’s a beautiful and charming way of looking at it and I can understand the Greek idea that there are these you know these principles of lightening or of war or of wisdom and to embody them, to personify them into a Athena or Aries or whichever god you want makes enormous sense, but to say that there is one only god who made it all and who is… Yeah, that is just… What? Why? Who said? Where? Come on. And I love how when people watch I don’t know, David Attenborough or Discovery Planet type thing you know where you see the absolute phenomenal majesty and complexity and bewildering beauty of nature and you stare at it and then… and somebody next to you goes, “And how can you say there is no God?” “Look at that.” And then five minutes later you’re looking at the lifecycle of a parasitic worm whose job is to bury itself in the eyeball of a little lamb and eat the eyeball from inside while the lamb dies in horrible agony and then you turn to them and say, “Yeah, where is your God now?” You know I mean you got… You can’t just say there is a God because well, the world I beautiful. You have to account for bone cancer in children. You have to account for the fact that almost all animals in the wild live under stress with not enough to eat and will die violent and bloody deaths. There is not any way that you can just choose the nice bits and say that means there is a God and ignore the true fact of what nature is. The wonder of nature must be taken in its totality and it is a wonderful thing. It is absolutely marvelous and the idea that an atheist or a humanist if you want to put it that way, doesn’t marvel and wonder at reality, at the way things are, is nonsensical. The point is we wonder all the way. We don’t just stop and say that which I cannot understand I will call God, which is what mankind has done historically. That’s to say God was absolutely everything a thousand or two thousand years ago because we understood almost nothing about the natural world, so it could all be God and then as we understood more God receded and receded and receded, so suddenly now he is barely anywhere. He is just in those things we don’t understand, which are important, but I think it just is such an insult to humanity and the Greeks got it right. The Greeks understood perfectly that if there were divine beings they are capricious, unkind, malicious mostly, temperamental, envious and mostly deeply unpleasant because that you can say well yes, all right, if there is going to be god or gods then you have to admit that they’re very at the very least capricious. They’re certainly not consistent. They’re certainly not all loving. I mean really it’s just not good enough.

You know if we empower ourselves with responsibility over our actions, responsibility over our destinies and responsibility for directing and maintaining and creating our own ethical and moral frameworks, which is the most important thing really isn’t it because perhaps the greatest insult to humanism is this idea that mankind needs a god in order to have a moral framework. There is a very clear way of demonstrating logically how absurd that is because the warrant for that logical framework, for that moral framework that comes from God is always tested against man’s own morals and it’s a complicated argument, but I mean that’s you know it’s the standard one which is pretty unanswerable, but the idea that we don’t know right from wrong, but we have to take it from words put down in a book two, three, four, five, six thousand years ago and dictated to rather hotheaded neurotic desert tribes is just insulting. It’s just no, I mean you know if there were a God he would want us to be better spirited than to take his word for everything. Wouldn’t he? If he gave us free will would he really want us to say, “No, I have to abide by everything that’s written in this book, all the laws of circumcision and of eating and of… and what to do with menstruating women?” I mean, “I’m going to obey those written down there.” “I won’t think for myself because that’s not required of me.” Come on. It’s just not good enough and you know I have no quarrel with individuals who wish… who are devout and who have faith. I don’t want to mock them. I really don’t, but damned if I’m going to be told by them what to do with my body or damned if I’m going to have the extraordinary battles won by enlightenment over the past 400 years, to have those battles abdicated by a new dark ages. It’s you know. The battle lines must be drawn.

 

Question: What is religion good for?

Stephen Fry: Music in its time, but I mean that’s a function of history you know. The fact is that composers always write for the power because… or power and money and it so happened that in the period when polyphony all the way through to the classical and early romantic era all the power and the money was with the church, so some great masses and some great choir music and some great oratories were written from obviously the Baroque age being the sort of pinnacle of that, but all the way through to Mozart’s final works and his requiem and Beethoven’s "Missa solemnis" and Mendelssohn and so on. There have been some marvelous religious works and in paintings similarly, but that’s because these were princes. They were princes of the church. They were prince arch bishops who employed Mozart. These were not spiritual beings who inculcated these composers with a sense of the divine that makes the music divine. The glory of Verde’s Requiem or Mozart’s Requiem or Bach’s pieces is that they are fantastic, incredibly human and like all great human’s thing they reach for the infinite. They reach for beauty. A religious person would call that the divine. You could call it the humanist. You could call it anything else, but certainly is that. Religion has been good for that and good for architecture because it is required that enormous… It required enormous buildings for the shepherding of people in, in order to do the services and they spend a lot of money on it and so they are rather glorious buildings. You’ve got to hand them that. Do they make the trains run on time? No, they didn’t do that. That’s about it really. And there are some kind individual people. I mean very kind people who give to the poor and look after the sick and so on, but it’s not necessary and sufficient as a justification for religion because there are plenty of people who are not religious who are also kind to the sick and good to the poor and care about people’s well-being.

 

Question: Are there religious leaders you admire?

Stephen Fry: Yes, very much so. I mean Trevor Huddleston and Archbishop Tutu from South Africa are two good examples who were both genuine men of their church, or let me see -- Huddleston is dead, but Tutu is still alive -- and who both fought a terrible injustice and used all the authority of their position amongst their believers and but very bravely spoke out and sometimes against the wishes of the church hierarchies. Some liberation theologist who are from, you know, some of them mad Communists, some of them just decent liberals who fought against the hideous doctrines of the Roman Catholic church for example, and there are individual voices who are raised in conscience against the bureaucracy and the dogma and the doctrine of the churches, and you know certainly of course individuals in, you know, Bonheoffer for example in Germany, the Lutheran minister who spoke out against Hitler. There are… Of course there have been good and fine religious people and the Dalai Lama seems rather charming. I don’t know. It’s terrible. I don’t want to come over as some terrible anti-ecclesiastical figure, but.

 

Recorded December 8, 2009

Discuss

Tom McCrum
Tom McCrum
Fry is going to burn in hell for being so reasonable, decent, honest and humane.
H Springer
H Springer
The trickery of Gurdjieff and his theosophists awakened hopes in pop culture, and in concert with Einstein's downgrading of Newton's time, paved the way for Teilhard's Darwinism to see a generalized potential within matter, tending to arrange itself via purely physical and historical/thermodynamic laws into new phenomena...... planet accretion.....atmospheric condensation....biogenesis....evolution.....culture..... history.......human media. The freezing out of current realities from the big bang soup was found to have been curiously biased. Of all the initially possible scenarios, many were adsorbed in Planck time, and never dominated (antimatter for one). These asymetries are now being puzzled out by CERN. The end result of this bias is the skewed nature of every reaction in all domains. (no area is free from it). It is therefore universal, all encompassing, and holds us in its grip. If we live, and think, these processes stem from the permissions physically accorded us by the bias, coupled with the earnest prompting of physical forces, from initial conditions mandated by history. If we are free, it is only within these boundaries. I sum it up as "The Tao"... the allowed way. Delusion, on the other hand, is not bounded, except by the limitations of the dreamer. Reading the dance cards of the angelic population partying on a pinhead gains no one any insight. Searching for Baal is a mental disease. The religious magisterium incites and allows delusive projection of biocultural memes as a deified absolute, removing each believer from his/her truly needed lifesearch. The scientific magisterium has lagged in pre Einstein error space, and therefore paints no currently usable picture for humanity. It ought to catch up. Cosmology now wanders in the desert of its own lack of data, spinning dozens of mutually exclusive fables, all unproven. Imprinting and right brain prallel processing allowed protohumanity to mime knowlege to each other via what would now be called art. (A dance, showing how to kill zebra .. the inspirational/instructional paintings at Lascaux). Using these methods, unanimity could be arrived at sans language. Intentionally fabricated icons holding visual & magical power for these right brain audiences were simply the next inevitable step, and so arrives "God" among the humans. When survival is uncertain, and cohesion is required, totems are extremely potent ignitors of the human "hyper self", acting as they do through the more immediate sympathetic pathways, undiluted by grammar, syntax, and the snags of mere logic. Mimetic influence makes 6 or 8 hunters act as a single super killer, more than the sum of its parts. Mimetic influence makes kings, pyramids, tribes, nations, crusades, jihads, and progressive movements. Religion and its devious twin, politics, operates mimetically via totems, and only pulls in language or logic as corrupted slaves to the totem. Shall humanity inwardly cleanse itself of totems? I say it is in the nature of the beast to rely on totems, and that people with no inner capital filling their totem space will always wither before the more integrated, trustworthy will of a true believer. Case in point: Obama versus Awlaki. (So far, Awlaki has the upper hand.) This is why the assertions of Islamic spokesmen cannot be disproven, when they frame western civilization as corrupt, and needful of islamicization. These willful proselytizers wish only to fill up our empty, starving totem-space with Allah, so that we may be complete. This innate need is so evident to them, that they easily manipulate young westerners into committing suicide, granting the Allah totem as a life's fulfillment. The reactive, totemless Bertrand Russell strain of anti establishment western thinking gives no gifts as numinous, and so motivates no one. We ought finally cast off Yahweh, and the endless acceptance/rejection the Yahweh totem, and seek out a viable post atheist philosophy. Teilhardian evolution can provide a viable starting point, and an exalted overview for this very needed exercise.
sean quinn
Thankyou Stephen, totally agree, unaugmented and as we are, we are more than those primitive prophets could ever have imagined.
Jim Stiene
You can have a more fullfilling life living as if it's the only one. But also a scarier death. I'm an agnostic. I like to keep my options open.
Josiah Royce
Well, I signed up only minutes ago (how could I not, having seen a quote from my great grandfather on the welcome screen?) and this was the first video I clicked on. Jim, I agree on the more fulfilling life comment. As to the scarier death, I can only say for those that on a certain level fear that there is nothing at all after death, that there likely won't be a nano-second to realize it...:) I also noticed his reference to what Dawkins said about the personality traits he would offer in describing God's, which ended with "... malevolent bully." :) I am looking forward to exploring the site!
Jonathan Fischer
Jonathan Fischer
actualfreedom.com.au
Sean Walton
Sean Walton
I remember this guy from the move "V for Vendetta". This is a smart guy. Very nice. Yes, this guy is enlightened. I'd bet he's experienced different planes of existance. To be able to appreciate all the vast complexities of life even the bad things. This guy was perfect to play that part. Great interview.
James B
Eloquently put, I wish Stephen could speak to my religious friends who, as Stephen pointed out, tend to atribute everything good to God and offer no explanation for the bad things that happen.
Al Clifton
Al Clifton
Consider him to be rifght about a few many things really!
Stephen Kamm
Where was God when the earthquake hit Haiti? He was weeping with its people, grieving outside its mass graves, sitting in sadness beside its collapsed buildings. He was there, though he provided no Hollywood or Superman-type rescue. Moreover we can be sure he will redeem what was lost. In God's time, eventually, not a single life or single dream that died in Haiti will remain unredeemed. In the end, all will be well and all will be well and every manner of being will be well.
Ahsan Khan
I don't think its a good idea to bunch all religions together and make generalizations about them. Different religions have different beliefs and expect different things from its followers. For example, everyone thinks there is a heated conflict between science and faith. This may be true for some, if not most religions, but as far as I know, this conflict does not exist in Islam. My Advice would be to learn about all religions from their perspective. From my experience you can cross off most of them, just by learning about their fundamentals. If you find one that makes sense (yes sense, not just faith) then follow it
Quinn Detweiler
A Response to “What Philosophers influenced you?” I’m a little curious at what Stephen Fry means when he says that philosophers don’t offer a philosophy to follow. He seems to be saying that philosophy is not so much about developing a worldview as it is about asking many unanswerable questions, and while philosophy certainly asks plenty of impossible questions, the purpose of philosophy is to form a fundamental framework for understanding life. The major questions of philosophy relate to the nature of knowledge, ethics, god, metaphysics, logic, etc. and each of these areas has an important bearing on the way a person lives her life. Fry names several philosophers who impacted his life, but he somehow fails to realize that from Aristotle to Locke, philosophers live their lives in view of their philosophy. To say that “there is no particular Socratic or Dimechian or Kantian way to live your life” does not really make sense to me. Admittedly, many philosophical systems fail to address all the fundamental aspects of life; however, if Fry lives his life in reaction to the tenets of Kantian philosophy (which Kant would obviously suggest he do), Fry will inevitably find himself living the Kantian way. Furthermore, Fry himself says, “The most important philosophy I think is that even if it isn’t true you must absolutely assume there is no afterlife.” Ultimately, Fry says without saying “according to my philosophy, life without the hope of afterlife is better, and you should all adopt my philosophy and live according to it.” That seems rather contradictory. As far as Fry’s discussion of afterlife, I wonder if he realizes that the laws of logic (which he praised as an accomplishment of Aristotle) do not support his main assertions. First, Fry suggests that believing in an afterlife will lead individuals to waste their lives here and now. He specifically believes that individuals believing in an afterlife will stop the search for “knowledge and understanding.” I wonder how Fry would defend these assertions logically, for many of the first and most influential philosophers believed in an afterlife. Does Fry mean to say that the men who formed the framework for much of our philosophical understanding failed to seek knowledge and understanding? Furthermore, many individuals who believe in the afterlife seek to, as they commonly put it, “spend their lives here wisely” because they only have “so much time to make a difference here.” Indeed, there is a “Christian” book series called “Live Like You Were Dying,” the purpose of which is to help individuals experience a “crammed pre afterlife, a crammed life.” Believing in an afterlife certainly does not necessitate that individuals live apathetic lives now. A Response to “What do you believe?” While I have many questions when it comes to Fry’s own beliefs, an interview snippet certainly does not provide enough information to allow real discussion. Instead of trying to address Fry’s religion (of which I do not have a comprehensive knowledge), I would like to point out one interesting points about what he does say. Fry essentially makes the assertion that atheism does not logically lead to moral relativism. Unfortunately, he does not provide any logic-based argument for this assertion because it seems counterintuitive to me. If there is no God and humans are merely the product of random chance and natural selection, where does a basis for morality come from? In a truly naturalistic universe, wouldn’t the only “right” thing be whatever helps me to survive and the only “wrong” be something that harms my ability to dominate others? I don’t know since Fry offers no explanation. The only thing he does say is a morally relativistic statement, “damned if I’m going to be told by them what to do with my body.” In essence, Fry says “I will do whatever I want.” How much more morally relative can you get? A response to “Are there religious leaders you admire?” I appreciated Fry’s approval of “genuine men of their church.” And I seriously wonder if bad experiences with inauthentic religious persons are the real reason for his atheistic perspective since his beliefs (at least the way they are stated here) seem to lack logical basis. I hope that if this is the case Fry will honestly ask his philosophical questions, not so that he has another bank of “philosophical” answerless questions, but in order to continue his own pursuit of “knowledge and understanding” until he can truly defend his position with logic.
Andrew Forrest
@Quinn: I don’t know exactly what argument Stephen Fry was referring to, regarding his statement that morality does not depend upon God, but here’s the argument I’d make: If you depend upon a god (or religion) for morality, you are in danger of following a wrong god; you must form a moral judgement about god to determine that His morality is sound (i.e., that you are following a good god). For example: Let’s say you worship Odin, and Odin is a bad god. (His morality is all about invading Scotland and raping villages.) If you depend solely upon religion for your moral compass, how will you know that what the priests are telling you is right (that raping and pillaging is Good) is in fact wrong? Conversely, if you follow the Christian god, and you believe that he created the Universe and that he is all-powerful, that does not automatically imply that, morally, you can take his rules for granted. He might be a bad god, or people might have corrupted his rules. You can’t form an opinion unless you have your own morality. I’m assuming that you’re Christian and American—(sorry about that, but your name sounds very American!)—so I imagine you might have heard of the God Hates Fags lot. Most people would agree that their moral philosophy is a pretty corrupted form of Christianity, but—and this is the important thing—they firmly believe that it’s god-given! A third point, which follows from the above, is that without a notion of morality separate from religion, it becomes impossible for people who disagree on religion to agree on law or morality. But somehow we can all mostly agree that theft and murder are wrong (for example). “In a truly naturalistic universe, wouldn’t the only “right” thing be whatever helps me to survive and the only “wrong” be something that harms my ability to dominate others?” My (and most other people’s) morality comes from the Golden Rule: “Treat others as you would like to be treated.” I think that’s a good basis both for forming ones own moral judgement, and for assessing the rules that are claimed to come from god.
Quinn Detweiler
@Andrew The unfortunate limitation of online forum discussion is the inability to have true conversation. I find that a back-and-forth debate on an internet forum does more to foster well-thought-out defenses than open discussion. For that reason I do not want to assert any set of beliefs or conceptions of my own; instead, my intention is to point out problems with the assertions of Stephen Fry in his interview. Though I understand the objection to a “Christian” morality and the idea of subjective interpretation, I do not mean to argue for the objectivity of morality, the Bible as the authoritative standard of truth, or any other foundational Christian doctrines. I only mean to point out the impossibility of any kind of objective moral standard without the existence of God. This assertion is my objection to Fry’s contention for a Godless morality. Without a true God, standards of morality are merely whatever strikes each individual as appropriate. You mentioned the Golden Rule as your standard for morality, and I think that is great; however, I do not think it possible for you to argue that everyone else must accept that standard if you do not believe in an objective God who holds everyone accountable to a revealed objective standard. Though you may think the Golden Rule is a wise standard, without a God the Golden Rule is nothing more than your personal preference. You mentioned murder as something widely recognized as wrong. What about a culture in which ritual sacrifice is recognized by all its societal members as perfectly legitimate? Is that murder wrong? If there is no God and everyone accept an unwilling victim agrees to it, what makes it wrong? (See The Lottery by Shirley Jackson). If there is no exterior, God-given standard, one man cannot tell another that something is or is not wrong; neither man is above the other; both are merely human. Ultimately, this leads to “good” equaling “whatever my society will allow me to get away with” or “whatever is socially acceptable.” This is the fundamental problem I have with Fry’s assertion that true morality is possible in a naturalist world. If there is indeed no God, our corporate morality is relegated to whatever the social power structure believes at any given time, and our private morality is merely what we feel is best. If Fry truly means to accept the naturalistic atheistic worldview, he must also accept relativism along with it.
seun adebowale
I have some philosophical questions: Could each of us have lived on earth before, with a different identity from the one we have today, and done things for which we will still be held accountable? Could some (or all) of the victims in Haiti have (in some previous life) been involved in some activity that could have led to the retribution (earthquake)? Would God be considered "a melevolent bully'" under such circumstances? What if the world created by God is perfectly programmed, such that even God does not need to interfere? What if we as human beings are expected to act in such ways as would only bring us joy, but when we choose not to, God only watches his perfect, automatically acting laws in action, without interfering in isolated events. And his only interference is to send prophets, teachers, etc to teach us about his laws and how to live in accordance, but leaving the final decisions (to obey or not) to us, in accordance with the freewill which he has given us? of course with the full responsibility that comes with it. Would he still be "a malevolent bully"? under such circumstances. The premise of our beliefs is most important
Don Duncan
Quinn & Andrew: “In a truly naturalistic universe, wouldn’t the only “right” thing be whatever helps me to survive and the only “wrong” be something that harms my ability to dominate others?” Yes, if you assume survival requires dominating others. I do not. People survive best by cooperation, not conflict and subjugation. Until this is universally accepted war and government will plague humankind. As for morality, I fail to see how a godless morality is "subjective"(relativism) but a god-given morality is "objective" (a moral standard). People still have to choose which god is the "true god" giving the "true morality". Since choices vary among groups no debate would be possible because religion is based on faith, not reason. At least that is the claim. But what is faith? It is defined as belief without proof, or in spite of proof. I challenge that as impossible! Faith is belief based on hidden reasons. Why? If one will not give reasons one's reasons cannot be challenged. Also, one may not fully understand his reasons to begin with because he only knows he "feels" he is right. The justification of one's belief system based on appeal to authority is an attempt to avoid a logical criticism.
Ernetso Marx
I'm going to be really shallow now, and it's my first post, but can't he possibly get his nose straightened, it would give my life more harmony.
Ernetso Marx
I know why his nose is bent... at 14:24 he flicks his nose like the 'Landlady' in 'Kung Fu Hussle', he needs to give it a break or do it the other way.
Alyssa Davis
I could listen to him talk all day
Munir Remahl
@Quinn: Third paragraph in your second post at 10.32pm. Hilarious. You're just on the other side of the mirror from Stephen Fry. You're not having a debate, you're having an opinion. Without a "true God"? What is the adjective 'true' doing with the noun 'God'? Did you ever ask yourself that question? That's quite the assumption don't you think? Seems a bit exclusive. Let's swap, for argument's sake, the noun 'Yardstick' for 'God'. "Without a true 'Yardstick', standards of morality are whatever strikes each individual as appropriate." Hmmm, seems to have lost that 'je ne sais quoi' when you remove that loaded term 'God' from the statement. It then begs questions about the 'Yardstick' and which one to follow. Might a 'Metrestick' or a 'Milestick' be better? Shall we put all 3 Sticks in a table and list their pros and cons to determine the "best practice of morality". Does Ancestor Worship, Wicca, Animism, Shintoism, Buddhism or Taoism count as a 'Stick'? How does Buddha fit into your exclusive 'true God' model? Buddha was just a man. So a 'Manstick' from India has provided a "best practice for morality". Or has your criteria for 'true God' rendered all Buddhism meaningless and all Buddhists are deluded. Where did these criteria for what constitutes a 'true God' come from anyway? Which then leads to the interesting question: Are your criteria for a 'true God' equal across all minds and hearts? The short answer is 'No'. They are not and never will be. Which means every relationship between a believer and his or her God(s) is personal, meaning each interpretation of the 'best practice of morality' is personal, regardless of all clerical effort or social pressure to standardise it. After all, then it is still the interpretation by an appointed "authority of Yardstick" or some sort of concensus among the 'Yardstick' believers. Hmm. Sounding less and less absolute and more and more relative if you ask me.
Munir Remahl
Better add what I was trying to get at with my post. Just wanted to take what Quinn said further and suggest that nothing escapes Moral Relativism. I can see non-Relativism working at the level of any God or Yardstick you please. It's the concept right? Some ultimate authority that makes some rules absolute? I have no argument with that. It's when you get to the human part of the equation that it all falls apart for me.
Chris Gi
good thing for Fry there is no hell
R J
Someone once described Stephen Fry as having 'a brain the size of Kent'. He certainly is very smart and talks a lot of sense and comes across as being a lovely, honest and decent human being.
Dominique Jeannot
Dominique Jeannot
I totally agree. I'm one who believes in an afterlife that KNOWS you've got to live life AS IF there IS NO afterlife. THIS is ALL there is.
Jason Mann
Jason Mann
True religion is treating others as you yourself would like to be treated. So all religion is corrupt. If you believe in killing, mocking or maming your enemies because their relgion is non Athiest and you are an Atheiest, then anyone who is a of a non Athiest persuasion has your permission to kill, mame or mock you, as your religion is non religious. In all fairness; if TRUTH is the culmination of philosophical questions and awnsers, which will become known science, then, without a higher power to judge the matter, the term murder is dogmatic and only relative to the phiosophy of either the doer or the reciever. If you believe in nothing, then by that very measure you have no indelible right to an opinion. You may only point to what another man believes and live your life by his example, if you so choose, and thereby, vicariously except the consequences of his truth. If you do or do not belive in God will not matter in the end. You will be able to Philosiphy your way out of or into anything.
John LeMond
This is my first contact with Big Think, and I was assured before signing up that there would be experts who would address various topics. I suppose Stephen Fry is an expert on British comedy, but hardly an expert on religion. His views on the subject are barely more than popular opinion, compared to those who have genuine credentials in the area. To paraphrase Fry, "In our age we tend to be rather sloppy about religion…The real intellectual rigor and quest for religion is something that I’m afraid takes incredibly hard work and we live in an age in which hard work is…run away from or ignored. People frown at you and say, “Religion's a bit dull and stupid. Why can’t we just be really rational people and talk about humanism?"
Monsignor Blunt
Afterlife is an oxymoron.
Michele Briere
That was interesting. I'd love to sit with him and discuss life.
Jaime Yarbrough
Far be it from me to entertain the concept of multi-verse. When you return from infinity you can tell me what it's like there. I knew Stephen was worthy of following from V. My county, the last of ALL the counties in California had it's first Tea Party organizational meeting last Wednesday. An overwhelmingly attended meeting hosted by none other than our county sheriff. It's about trust and personal sovereignty.
Ormond Otvos
Ormond Otvos
Let us consider just this, in order to determine if he is actually thinking about his statements: "I only mean to point out the impossibility of any kind of objective moral standard without the existence of God. This assertion is my objection to Fry’s contention for a Godless morality." How about a moral standard based on the universals of humanity, like blood, bone, muscle, cognition. Paying most attention to the commonalities, not the nitpicking (read ideological) differences.
John Farren
The problem that I have with this whole premise is two-fold: The first is that science cannot prove or disprove the existence of a higher being and second, science has no idea on how consciousness arises. Until they can explain
Beverly Johnson
Beverly Johnson
Thank you...totally agree with your truth...I am following you, no not stalking,..following, glad I found you here via Richard Dawkins...
Paul Buxton
@Jason Mann I will just point out that atheists are not religious, that does not imply that atheism (whatever that is) is a religion. Nor does it imply that atheists believe in killing, mocking or maming (sic) their enemies or that atheists even have any enemies. I will also assert that everyone has a right to an opinion no matter what they believe, even if they don't believe anything. As for the rest of your argument (I'm trying to think of a better word than "argument" without using "rant"): maybe you should lay off the drugs/drink/whatever it is that makes your thinking (and typing) so distorted before pressing the submit button as it's very difficult, even after debunking some of your more apocryphal statements, to see what point it is you're trying to make.
terry riley
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Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
If you truly believe there is no God - than the idea of a human "morality" is just wishful thinking. If we have learned anything about nature from evolution - it is that we got here by survival of the fittest. This implies "only the strong will prevail" is the true human moral code. Yet that is not how most of us live our lives. WHY ? Many people want to live in the safety of a culture that has a religious tradition of right and wrong, yet reject any idea that there is a God. It is a lazy type of philosophy that Stephen Fry himself seems to reject. I find there are some good ideas in his non philosophy, but the whole basis is mindless mush. I also see why many find that attractive in this current culture. It is the ME culture. Just because humans are poor carriers of the eternal truth - does not mean there is not one. If there is no God and no afterlife, than life itself is totally random and with no purpose. What difference does it make how you live your life ? Many are not willinging to face that this is the conclusion of their non belief. Dawkins fits this profile.
Jerry Barrington
Jim Schultz: "Fittest" in no way implies "strongest". Insects are far weaker than whales, yet there are probably trillions of insects and not that many whales. You could easily lift billions of bacteria, yet those bacteria may easily kill you. Humans are social animals, it's part of our "fitness". Real morality has to do with social interactions. Behaviors that disrupt or destroy society damage that fitness. This is why casual murder and theft are "bad".
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
Jerry Barington: You raise a good point about fit vs. strong. We did not study social evolution when I got my biology degree many years ago. Do you believe in an after life or something beyond our eathly existence ?
Bruce Roeder
As a gay man, it is neither surprising nor especially compelling that Mr. Fry would hold the views that he does. If He did not advocate rejecting traditional beliefs, it would require repentance and a change of lifestyle. The classic statement on atheism is, of course, that upon dying, the God believer can only be proven right (because if he's wrong, he's simply gone and will never know, but if he's right, he will know - forever) and the atheist can only be proven wrong (for the same reason).
kenneth holmes
All these great minds have something in common they dare to think differently than the common herd. Willing to risk ridicule. That will greet their new idea's.
larry ames
Quinn Detweiler’s comments interest me… “Without a true God, standards of morality are merely whatever strikes each individual as appropriate.” and … “I only mean to point out the impossibility of any kind of objective moral standard without the existence of God. This assertion is my objection to Fry’s contention for a Godless morality.” In his murder example, while the vast majority of us feel it is morally wrong, Detweiler’s point about another society’s practice of ritual sacrifice and their moral acceptance of it is important. What if there is no such thing as “absolute” morality, while there is such a thing as “objective” (clearly identifiable) morality. Detweiler appears to equate the two and I don’t believe this is valid. While an absolute morality would certainly depend on an absolute authoritative source (god for instance), an objective morality might depend on something more akin to the fat area in a statistical normal distribution. We are learning that static mathematics are far less helpful than statistics in predicting outcomes as we look ever more closely at the structure of our universe. Maybe this same approach should be applied to morality… and I think that is actually what has always happened. Detweiler’s focus on the individual also bothers me. I don’t think it is possible for an individual to generate an objective morality. Morality depends in interactions between people. Societies, not individuals, determine morality. Looking at a society as a whole, it is often quite easy to determine its moral code. There will always be outliers (criminals, deviants), but it is seems to me that one can effectively and objectively determine their moral standards within their consensual reality if one is not looking to find an absolute standard for all societies. The problem with this approach is the definition of “society”. As one broadens the scope to become more inclusive, the core objective morality is harder to determine. For instance, the United States as a society would objectively be against murder but it is much more difficult to establish its societal position on abortion. Narrowing the society to fundamentalist Christians, however, would produce a clear “wrong” on the abortion issue. Can there be an objective moral standard without an absolute moral standard? I think so. The Golden Rule reflects it. Treat those in your society (those you associate with) as you would be treated by them. Does this view of morality necessitate fluid and culturally based morality? Sure does. Will conflict arise among societies as a result of their interaction and conflicting mores? Yep, has and will. Can human civilization survive without absolute morality? We have this far.
Cullen Athey
Well, as to philosophy and morality, we mustn't forget the couple of million years of human physical and social/moral evolution that forms the basis of who we are and what we're about. Indeed, "fitness" isn't just physical strength but all the attributes that have developed that improved our survivability. Perhaps our investigations of philosophy and morals is simply looking into the question of how us and how now, in other words, an archeological dig into how we're wired, what underlies how we behave as we do, and how our particular branch of the evolutionary tree has survived. Yes, it's been a messy pathway to now with all the wrong turns and dead ends and assumptions about how it all occurred, but even philosophy doesn't happen in a vacuum--we have that prejudice of just happening to be the ones who survived. Unfortunately some people want to know why and to what purpose as though preordained instead of how and what I plan to do in my brief existence. I agree with Monsignor Blunt--"afterlife" is an oxymoron and would add "fairy tail" to that assertion. What survives of us is in our work and our interactions with others who survive us. What a wonderful long lived thread this is! I felt late to the party until reading down the posts to find a nice continuum of discourse. Thanks, Stephen. I, too, could listen to you all day.
Cullen Athey
Oops, I did mean "fairy tale", or not.
Janet Tyson
Today, April 11, 2010, my older son was confirmed as a member of our small, raffish congregation. He made a statement of what he believed that, like statements made by the other young persons, was uniquely his own, not forced by any dictates. This is not an argument about which is better or more or less rational -- belief or non-belief. I will say that I'm happy Jack chose to confess his faith, not only because I'm his mother but because I'm one whose own beliefs orbit around a Christian nucleus. This, BTW, is my first post and I'm glad to have the chance to participate in such a lovely conversation. I happened on to it because I'd been reading about Stephen Fry's portrayal of Oscar Wilde, a bit of Internet browsing that followed an evening of my family and I sitting around watching a DVD replay of "A Bit of Fry and Laurie". Anyhow, soupy twist!
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
A good thread indeed. In relistening to Fry, I understand him better as someone who may have a major problem with a religion that would tell what he could or could not do with his body. He must have really struggled. However his view of those who believe in God seems tainted somewhat by his experiences with fundamentalism. His idea that we should live life to the fullest and ask questions and experience life is a good one. As someone who believes in God - I totally agree. Where I disagree is when he states that we push God to only the things we don't understand. The more I understand about the wonders of the universe and all the laws of physics and how all these laws are incredibly fine tuned to allow the evolution of life, the more I believe it was not all an accident. Many of the brightest scientists believe in God. “The odds against a universe like ours emerging out of something like the Bing Bang are enormous. I think there are clearly religious implications. It would be very difficult to explain why the universe should have begun in just this way, except as the act of a God who intended to create beings like us". This quote from a brilliant physicist : Stephen Hawking. Einstein also believed in a God. I believe the peace of God passes all human understanding, so I agree we need to be careful with those who say they have it all precisely fiqured out - either on the relious side or the secular side. Fry seems to be more of an agnostic than an atheist. He says he does not believe in God, yet allows for the possibility of an afterlife. He also says the totality of nature is "absolutely marvelous" - on this I also agree with him. Again I don't think it was all a random accident.
Bruce Roeder
Whilst Mr. Fry wryly considers the good of unbelief, there is a dark side to consider, is there not? After all, Pol Pot, Hermann Goering, Mao Tse Tung, Josef Stalin, Kim Il Sung, were all unbelievers. “The true opium of the people is a belief in nothingness after death – the huge solace of thinking that for our betrayals, greed, cowardice, murders, we are not going to be judged.” ~ Czeslaw Milosz
Patricia Witherspoon
I adore Stephen Fry and have for years. So it makes me a little sad to see him seemingly embrace atheism with a certain gusto. Every point he made against God is one that in the past I have made, embraced and appreciated. I have 'been there and done that' so to speak, and have no words to refute him (he's much too articulate and brilliant for my limited abilities). He also has the weapon of wit, and extreme funiness. But I can only say to him that, if you have been Graced with the Holy Spirit, and a tiny glimpse of God, you know it is real. I can't prove God, or my faith, or anything. Proving what something isn't is always easier. But I can know so deeply it is almost on a cellular level, and I wish Mr. Fry had that knowledge and that joy. I also wish that C. S. Lewis were alive today and around to do a proper debate with Mr. Fry. Since Mr. Lewis isn't, I can only hope that Mr. Fry reads "Surprised by Joy" (if he hasn't already), because it explains things MUCH better than I ever could. And as Mr. Lewis came from a position of atheism into Christianity, it says what I don't have the skill to say. If Mr. Fry has already read it,and it did not change his mind, then so be it. Mine is not the judgement, only the responsibility to witness. I wish him well. As St. Paul would say "Peace be unto you, in the name of Christ Jesus."
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
Patricia - Thank You for your inspired post. I would like to read soemthing by C.S. Lewis and appreciate the suggestion of "Suprised by Joy". Any others you suggest ? I have never been an atheist, but have been agnostic at times in the past. My faith now grows with every day I am blessed. Peace be with you as well.
Patricia Witherspoon
Mr. Schultz, if you are now embarking on a C.S. Lewis trip, you have a great deal of pleasure awaiting you! I would suggest "The Screwtape Letters", and "A Grief Observed" for starters. Then "The Great Divorce", "The Problem of Pain" and "God in the Dock". Lewis can be very intense to read, and sometimes I have to read - digest - read - digest (you get the picture), but he discusses Christianity as something for which you do not have to give up your intellect. Enjoy, and I wish you well. PS: And for a change of pace, try the Narnia series! It's for children, but very readable for adults.
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
Patricia- Thank You for the additional suggestions. I read the "Language of God" by Francis Collins (former director of the Human Genome Project). He is a big proponent of C.S. Lewis.
Bruce Roeder
I loved "Theology for Beginners" by Frank Sheed.
Trinidad A. Williams
Stephen Fry: What bloody utterly, prattling non-sense ... and you're a contributing article writer to "Big Think"... one of the precept's I thought this group understand is: there is no empty space, material nor energy, physical nor mental, seen or unseen ... you state you're an atheist, fine you've filled your space with believing in not believing ... Stephen, everybody to his own "totem". You've managed to knock the "Big Think Tank" down to the mediocre-partial filled cranium level.
Trinidad A. Williams
Stephen Fry: What bloody utterly, prattling non-sense ... and you're a contributing article writer to "Big Think"... one of the precept's I thought this group understand is: there is no empty space, material nor energy, physical nor mental, seen or unseen ... you state you're an atheist, fine you've filled your space with believing in not believing ... Stephen, everybody to his own "totem". You've managed to knock the "Big Think Tank" down to the mediocre-partial filled cranium level.
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Serkan Serkan
Whilst Mr. Fry wryly considers the good of unbelief, there is a dark side to consider, is there not? After all, Pol Pot, Hermann Goering, Mao Tse Tung, Josef Stalin, Kim Il Sung, were all unbelievers. Serkan
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Stephen Fry: What bloody utterly, prattling non-sense … and you’re a contributing article writer to “Big Think”… one of the precept’s I thought this group understand is: there is no empty space, material nor energy, physical nor mental, seen or unseen … you state you’re an atheist, fine you’ve filled your space with believing in not believing … Stephen, everybody to his own “totem”. You’ve managed to knock the “Big Think Tank” down to the mediocre-partial filled cranium level.
Osman Murteza
Osman Murteza
I just liked theology for beginners by frank sheed seo,
davanna kilgore
Why do atheists always have such a simplistic notion of faith? Faith in "God" is a huge and various experience. Religious language is an absolutely gorgeous way for mankind to try to apprehend reality. I pity those who cannot appreciate it. At least even on an aesthetic level.
aspirinc masprnc
Quinn Detweiler’s comments interest me… “Without a true God, standards of morality are merely whatever strikes each individual as appropriate.” and … “I only mean to point out the impossibility of any kind of objective moral standard without the existence of God. This assertion is my objection to Fry’s contention for a Godless morality.” In his murder example, while the vast majority of us feel it is morally wrong, aspirinc’s point about another society’s practice of ritual sacrifice and their moral acceptance of it is important. What if there is no such thing as “absolute” morality, while there is such a thing as “objective” (clearly identifiable) morality. Detweiler appears to equate the two and I don’t believe this is valid. While an absolute morality would certainly depend on an absolute authoritative source (god for instance), an objective morality might depend on something more akin to the fat area in a statistical normal distribution. We are learning that static mathematics are far less helpful than statistics in predicting outcomes as we look ever more closely at the structure of our universe. Maybe this same approach should be applied to morality… and I think that is actually what has always happened. Detweiler’s focus on the individual also bothers me. I don’t think it is possible for an individual to generate an objective morality. Morality depends in interactions between people. Societies, not individuals, determine morality. Looking at a society as a whole, it is often quite easy to determine its moral code. There will always be outliers (criminals, deviants), but it is seems to me that one can effectively and objectively determine their moral standards within their consensual reality if one is not looking to find an absolute standard for all societies. The problem with this approach is the definition of “society”. As one broadens the scope to become more inclusive, the core objective morality is harder to determine. For instance, the United States as a society would objectively be against murder but it is much more difficult to establish its societal position on abortion. Narrowing the society to fundamentalist Christians, however, would produce a clear “wrong” on the abortion issue. Can there be an objective moral standard without an absolute moral standard? I think so. The ic reflects it. Treat those in your society (those you associate with) as you would be treated by them. Does this view of morality necessitate fluid and culturally based morality? Sure does. Will conflict arise among societies as a result of their interaction and conflicting mores? Yep, has and will. Can human civilization survive without absolute morality? We have this far.
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
God isn't dead because it was never born so "it" could never exist. Question? Why would something as awsome as the idea of "GOD" care anything about creatures like us? It is obvious that we are at the top of the "food chain" but that dosn't mean we have to occupy some kind of important place in the vastness of time and space....most 5th graders would agree...:)
Yossi Jackson
"Scientists love mysteries; they love not knowing; that's a key part of science- the excitement of learning about the universe... and that is so different from the sterile aspect of religion where the excitement is apparently knowing everything although clearly knowing nothing" -- Lawrence Krauss
Mike Robinson
I see this thread is beginning to be dominated by theists. Well I suppose it is a hopeful thing that they are watching Fry speak... however they usually go back to referring to "God" without describing which god they mean! Perhaps if they prefaced the term with "my" I would be able to accept is but they never do, implying that the god they believe in is the one true god and that any of the other deities in the pantheon are a product of someones delusion. Stephen hits the nail on the head when he says that the term "god" refers to all that we do not know. In my opinion, religion is simply the bureaucratization of the sense of wonder and awe that creatures like humans and dolphins feel at being aware of their part in the unfolding of the universe. With humans though there is always a middleman, be it a priest or a shaman, willing to make a transaction...
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either people believe there is current or people do not believe there is current, knowing the current is religion, knowing the use of current is science, believing or not believing both are philosophies. eternity is dancing on eternity like football. birth is like start of the film, death is like end of the film, life is to watch the film to know your role and my part. zero says film is neither real nor false, know your words and world of present film, no dialogue from past or future films.
Bruce Roeder
An insistence on choice between faith and science is a false dilemma. It is both. They are two wings of the same bird – reality. In fact, science is predicated on faith – faith in an ordered universe. For science to be valid, one must believe in a universe which observes certain laws - gravity, for instance. Or the law of non-contradiction for another. These cannot be proven, only accepted a true.
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
if i was to believe in the concept of a "God" it would be the Sun...i know it's up there, i can see it, feel it's warmth and i know it is keeping me alive. however, i would not waste time worshiping it because it was not created in the image of man...it can not think or change things here on earth and certainly does not listen to any prayers...it is not alive in the sense that believers feel that their God is alive. the only thing that has ever made me question the existence of a God is the unanswerable question - where did the first speck of anything come from? that speck of anything should never have existed yet the universe is full of this stuff. zero times zero will always be zero and the bible says that God always was and always will be. God therefore must be the "Universe". and I believe in the "Universe" but I would never worship it. too many people and not just house wives feel that to answer that question about the first speck of matter or dust or whatever, is mearly a cleaning problem and their thought never goes any further...people of faith probably have more relaxing and worry free lives my not dwelling on these cosmic questions. i believe that the expanding Universe did begin with the "big bang" but it was not the first or will be the last....the beat goes on and on forever....:)
Bruce Roeder
So what is the purpose of life? Man differs from other beasts in having reason. Reason aims at truth. By use of reason, man seeks not only the answers, but the correct answers. So what is man for? His reason aims at truth. So one objective that man is pointed to by his very nature is to know the truth. And God is Truth. For in God, there must be the true ideas of all things before they are created according to those ideas. So man is able to find truth in God alone. So the destiny of man is God.
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
The purpose of LIFE? It is IMHO to carry on the thread/pass on the genes/DNA, etc....in short to "continue the species". Anything else would be a subpurpose and an indiviual way of living. Each specie would have the same purpose which is to survive in a very hostile universe...but individuals within that life form or species would have their own notion of what is important to them and society. GOD was created in MAN's image...the concept of GOD came out of early man's desire to not just die and turn to dust...the idea of living forever in some state of nirvana is very appealing and seems to be to good to be true...when something seems to good to be true it usually is...:( I believe that Man made GOD...not the other way around.
Bruce Roeder
Yet across the globe and throught history, every society of human beings has recognized God (or gods) and has some belief in an afterlife. They all just separately arrived at this appealing desire? If an unbelieving (materialist) view is that passing on DNA ("continue the species") is the purpose of life, then one would think unbelief would have some reproductive benefit. But areas where unbelief is highest (generally Europe, North America and Japan) have the lowest birth rates - far below replacement level. Areas where belief is strong (Africa, Inda, South America, the Mid East) have higher birth rates. How then, does unbelief square with the purpose of life? It is difficult for me to accept a materialist view. Perhaps my faith is not strong enough. How does it explain altruism? How does it explain the placebo effect? How does it account for the creation of an idea?
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
Yes! The correlation of "unbelief" to a lower birthrate. On the surface it seems to make a point, but please dig a little deeper. In general, as education increases, ignorance (lack of knowledge) tends to decrease. By and large, more true scientists are either atheistic or at least agnostic. The more educated a person is, the more thoughtful they become. They think about the world's dwindling resources. They think about mankind as really being a parasite on the planet (polution)(using up nonrenewable resources) look at what has happened in the Gulf of Mexico...an accident has turned it into a crime scene. When I said that the ultimate purpose of all life forms is to survive as long as possible, I was refering to all life on the planet. Intelligent individuals within a specie would want to live in good health/happiness/and as long as possible. Our only shot at comming a bit close to being immortal is through our offspring that we pass on our general characteristics..."there is birth and death, but life goes on forever". Ignorant people have their Bibles (the imagined word of their God or God's). They are usually rather financially poor or even impoverished but at least they have their faith. The Bible tells them that the meek shall inherit the earth. They cling to this idea that their time will come. Their faith is strong at it helps them get through a rather hard life. They are ignorant about birth control, diet, exercise, politics, science and many more important subjects compared to an educated person (self or school taught). They make mistakes (don't often use condoms) they get HIV and other STDs. They have one kid after another. They don't consider what it costs in the long run to raise a child. All of this ignorance helps them make poor decisions. It is my opinion that this is the correlation that you refer too. I agree with George Carlin (now deceased) that the best thing to come out of religion is the music...the classic art wasn't bad either. Being an atheist dosn't make somebody a bad person. A true atheist knows that this is his/her one chance to live, so make the best of it. A true atheist is a person that "wills to live in a world that wills to live"...and a true atheist wouldn't ever try to change anyones faith unless they asked for a debate....:)
Bruce Roeder
Religion gave us weekends off as well, which is nice.
Harrison  James
Harrison James
@Bruce, Considering all the countries you listed, Their birth rates may be higher but quality of life is much lower. So they must have more offspring for their society or however you want to categorize them to be able to survive in worse living conditions. A survival of the fittest kind of terminology. Yet countries with the highest unbelief rates have fewer birth rates but they live a longer and better quality of lives. But I would have to agree with you on the explanations of the placebo effect and the creation of an idea. There is my 2 cents. Have a nice Day.
Harrison  James
Harrison James
But I would have to get my foot out of my mouth cause how would I categorize quality of life. They may be in poorer living conditions but they could be happier than I am because of their belief system. So alas I don't know. This is what blogs are for.
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
James, I agree. Sometimes the less you know the better off you are....quote from a Bob Seger song "wish I didn't know now what I didn't know then"...and I was much happier as a kid, more ignorant for sure but much happier... I wasn't born an atheist...it's just something that evolved from believer to agnostic to where i am now... My dogs (present and past) represent some of the happiest creatures on the planet and none of them can read or write although it is interesting that DOG is GOD spelled backwards...:)
şubeler oz
Considering all the countries you listed, Their birth rates may be higher but quality of life is much lower. So they must have more offspring for their society or however you require to categorize them to be able to survive in worse living conditions. A survival of the fittest kind of terminology. Yet countries with the highest unbelief rates have fewer birth rates but they live an extended and better quality of lives. But I would must agree with you on the explanations of the placebo effect and the creation of an idea. There is my 2 cents. Have a pleasant Day.
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
Larry - it is interesting that as some scientists and "the more educated" move away from god, they embrace Mother Earth as their religion. I ask if there is no god, no afterlife, no real purpose for the universe, just a random, meaningless void - why get so bent out of shape by "global warming" ? Why get so upset with humans who are just trying to exist as best they can ? Why the morality in the name of the environment ? Just wondering.
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
Jim - here's my two cents worth. I believe that mankind's offspring represent a kind of tepid immortality...and we want to continue as a species/life form as long as possible....then how can we do it on a dieing planet...As we try to keep our bodies as healthy as possible so do we try to do likewie for our planet...but evolution can work in reverse as we perceive the dumbing down of America...of the things are children feel are important to them compared to what we were taught in school...take "Beavis and Butthead" for instance...it seems that to a significant degree, stupidity is recognized as a good trait to some young people. The planet is evolving in the wrong direction mainly because the growing parasitical infestation (mankind) is growing...."over population"....decreasing resources.... WE ARE SLOWLY KILLING OUR PLACE IN SPACE. We are so overly dependent on oil for mainly transportation that we let somthing like this BP oil spill have a chance of happening....We may totally destroy the planet in our lifetimes...DOG forbid....:)
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Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
Larry - better humans than fire ants, bees, or spiders taking over. Insects are much more disciplined than humans. I feel I have a fighting chance in a human world. In an insect run world, you are totally screwed if you are not royalty. I agree we are overly dependent on foreign oil. We don't have a lot of good alternatives right now. We could try drilling on land - a novel concept. Solar and Wind are only practical, locally on a small scale. Nuclear is our best bet. France was wise, they are 80% nuclear and not dependent on Middle East Oil. I see a nuclear war on the horizon if Iran gets nukes. It will probably happen in the next 10 years. It is the best of times and the worst of times. I am trusting that heaven will be a better place, but living and enjoying life here on Planet Earth in the mean time. Best Wishes, I enjoyed the chat.
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You can have a more fullfilling life living as if it's the only one. But also a scarier death. I'm an agnostic. I like to keep my options open.
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Philosophy is an odd thing. When we use the word in everyday speech you know you sometimes hear it hilariously. Nothing is more true than that.
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For science to be valid, one must believe in a universe which observes certain laws - gravity, for instance. Or the law of non-contradiction for another. These cannot be proven, only accepted a true. berlin travel multi msn photoshop mario oyunları strateji oyunları
Colleen E Harrison
Colleen E Harrison
I can only speak from my own personal conscious experiences, my background (born out of the U. S. and lived in many different countries), studies (physics, mathematics, chemistry, pyschology, etc), what I've read (thousands of books), and what I have observed. I will keep this as simple as I possibly can. Every action or inaction has consequences. "Good" deeds as well as "bad" deeds have consequences. The consequences of trying to do good can backfire. Sometimes bad deeds benefit in positive ways in a very unexpected manner. No action also can have its consequences. Hopefully, I don't need to get into the definition of a good deed or for that matter the definition of a bad deed as many people vary in their definitions. If we live with the belief that our energy or "spirit" ceases to exist along with our physical bodies, we are mistaken. Our physical body changes form upon death. Death being the end of life of the particular form we define as the physical body. Our energy (that which functions within us) is the actual life force that has created the physical form. In most cases, this energy is not good or bad. The experiences we create with that energy are neither good nor bad just as are the consequences neither good nor bad. Each action and each inaction has multiple consequences that we can interpret as good or bad depending upon our point of view. It is all "relative". Killing under certain conditions is acceptable to many even though it can also be considered bad under different circumstances. I know this all seems very elementary. Child molestation is considered bad by many and yet many men advocate marriage to very young girls under the age of 12. Some men claim religious reasons for child molestation. Others claim not to know any better. Some men see nothing wrong with pornography and feel it is their right to have this available for their pleasure. Meanwhile they claim innocence or don't care if there is human suffering and misery behind it. Pornography can be seen as good if one views it as a means to pleasure or to enrich one's self financially. It can be seen as bad for equally obvious reasons. If we remove religion from the equation, the facts stay the same in that our actions continue to have consequences. As long as we have the courage to accept the consequences and the strength to stop blaming someone or something else, then we will find within ourselves the means to our own happiness. If we have the courage not to believe in God that is our choice, but what if we are wrong? The consequences remain.
Emiel de Lange
@Don Duncan You are partly right and partly wrong. The only 'right' is indeed that which enables you to survive but it does not necessarily mean dominating others. Yes competition within species does exist, but the bigger picture shows that survival is not about yourself but about the eventual survival of your species or even life itself. Therefore many animals have developed social behaviour which allows them to survive without necessarily dominating other. Take for example Bee or Ant colonies, or possibly a group of Meerkats, how about many school fish? Despite our closest relatives often showing extremely aggressive dominance behavior, our intelligence provides us with a capacity to feel sympathy for others and to help others. This is possibly an important evolutionary tool designed to aid the survival of mankind as a whole and therefore your concept of wrong and right does not need to exclude this.
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
Colleen - excellent post. Thank You for sharing your insights. "We are not physical beings having a spiritual experience, we are spiritual beings having a physical experience" as a wise scholar once noted.
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
Of course Colleen is right about right and wrong....Our mores or moral attitudes differ from one group or culture to another...e.g...what one group finds offensive could be perfectly "ok" within another group....this is why their are so many different interpretations of the Bible or so may different bibles....each reader thinking their religion or bible (words of their God) are right while the other myriad religions our wrong... "Religilous" is a movie which explains this concept in an unforgetable and humorous way... When we die are energy is transformed into matter which later is transformed back into energy....simple law of Physics, right? It can't be created or destroyed....so it's dust to dust....we can never be destroyed but we cannot live forever...that would be a collosal stretch.. what the movie then form an opinion....:)
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Michael Quallet
Michael Quallet
The stage is too large. In my experience, every religion has gotten it woefully incorrect.
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
The various religions are like a group of individuals all of whom are totally blind, and each of them is trying to describe something that not one of them has ever seen....but each individual professes to believe that their description of this unseen object is the only correct one...this is arrogance. About 7 % of the US Academy of Sciences membership reported believing in a God of some sort. This poll was taken in 98 but other polls show fewer believers now. Absence of belief on reasoned analysis does not constitute arrogance. It is arrogant to believe that a God who made the truly vast universe, with over 100 billion galaxies in the known universe, each containing billions of stars and planets, would personally care about you and everything you do every minute. That he listens to prayers about a passing a test, having your favorite team win, and so forth. When there is an accident with many killed, except for a few, we hear that these people escaped miraculously, and that God listened to their prayers (but not presumably to those who died). THAT'S ARROGANCE. Many leading scientists are well aware of our limitations and the small place we have in space. They are fully aware of how much they don't know, but they seek to learn, prove and understand how the universe and it's parts work so insofar as it's possible....."an unexamined life isn't worth living"...and I hope we all agree....:)
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I think philosophy brings absolutely nothing, it is useless and it is not the science. The interview itself is quite interesting, but i do not agree on many things with Fry. como agrandar el pene
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
The opposite of the religious fanatic is not the fanatical atheist but the gentle cynic who cares not whether there is a god or not. Eric Hoffer (1902 - 1983)
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Derek C
Good stuff Stephen!
Osman Murteza
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Bill C Andreas
You think that’s a generous description of that rather dull precept to call it a philosophy, but it’s odd how philosophers generally speaking, at least the ones I’ve read or the ones I you know value, don’t have in that sense a philosophy. There is no particular Socratic orpeninggi badan
C Fisher
It seems that a lot of this debate is about the existence of “self” after death or weather there is a “God”, oh and morality. Stephen Fry’ is concerned with the importance of unbelief, an argument that could not be stated fully in the short time he spoke. I feel that his mention of the great philosophers was to draw our attention to the fact that most people do not engage in thinking seriously about ideas that have merely passed from one generation to the next with a sense of certainty. The private or academic study of philosophy offers you the “tools” you will need to examine your own beliefs and since no man is an island most likely a hell of a lot of other peoples to. Studying Philosophy (I am talking about what some refer to as Academic Philosophy and not anything to do with faith), slowly strips us of our beliefs since all beliefs rest on unsound evidence and therefore argument and are simply a matter of faith. Stephen Fry I think, is trying to convey the importance of the role of philosophical thought in leading us to a state of unbelief, and that a state of unbelief is the only position anyone ought to be in if they have honestly and thoroughly examined their own ideas, especially but not exclusively, their metaphysical thoughts for truth or certainty.
C Fisher
Oh and just a quick one about morality, I am pretty sure it was my parents, peers, and fights with my brothers and friends that gave me a basic understanding that others can suffer. Then empathy kicked in and I was all set to become a good person as long as I paid attention and was aware of other, there seemed to be no need for the written word, laws and so forth. Do the people who look for objective morals think we all have severe autism, or a bad gene that means that we are only good to others because it is written, an external force acting on us or there are metaphysical laws floating around. Use your intelligence! JIM, Beavis and Butthead was actually a very intelligent satire, Mike Judge the writer is a very observant and clever satirist.
C Fisher
Sorry Jim it was Larry who made the Beavis and Butthead statement. Apologies
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The freezing out of current realities from the big bang soup was found to oto ses sistemleri have been curiously biased. Of all the initially possible scenarios, many were adsorbed in Planck time, and never dominated (antimatter for one). These asymetries are now being puzzled out by CERN.
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
c fisher - no need to apologize, just reread what i wrote....i was talking about the "dumbing down of american teenagers"....and used beavis and butthead as an example....i worked as a school bus driver for several years and have a daughter who teaches highschool alternative education....evolution can work in reverse and stupidity is not always deleted from the gene pool...not to say that the vast majority of young people are not interested in science and mathematics....maybe i was just exposed to a nonrepresentative sample....we can always hope....take care and understand what you read...
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The private or academic study of philosophy offers you the “tools” you will need to examine your own beliefs and since no man is an island most likely a hell of a lot of other peoples to. Digital Slr Camera Studying Philosophy (I am talking about what some refer to as Academic Philosophy and not anything to do with faith), slowly strips us of our beliefs since all beliefs rest on unsound evidence and therefore argument and are simply a matter of faith. Stephen Fry I think, is trying to convey the importance of the role of philosophical thought in leading us to a state of unbelief, Carsand that a state of unbelief is the only position anyone ought to be in if they have honestly and thoroughly examined their own ideas, especially but not exclusively, their metaphysical thoughts for truth or certainty. Game Cheats
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Essay Writing
About 7 % of the US Academy of Sciences membership reported believing in a God of some sort. This poll was taken in 98 but other polls show fewer believers now. Absence of belief on reasoned analysis does not constitute arrogance. It is arrogant to believe that a God who made the truly vast universe, with over 100 Lottobillion galaxies in the known universe, each containing billions of stars and planets, would personally care about you and everything you do every minute.
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
If God can create the universe - I am pretty sure he can be everywhere at once. Do not try to create God in YOUR image. God is far more magnificient than you ever will or could imagine. I do think it is somewhat arrogant for scientists to reject the concept of God out of hand. I understand they are trained to need scientific evidence. However they accept many other concepts without scientific evidence. Prove to me scientifically that justice exists or where is it located ? Can you touch it ? Can you see it ? I do not have a problem with agnostics, or even most atheists. It is the crusading atheists that concern me. WHY are they so intent on trying to prove there is no God ? Even Richard Dawkins said “There could be something incredibly grand and incomprehensible and beyond our current understanding”. He went on to say “If there is a God, it’s going to be a whole lot bigger and whole lot more incomprehensible than anything that any theologian of any religion has ever proposed”. I agree with both of his statements. It represents solid logic.
Thinking Man
@Jim Schultz..... Your post..."If God can create the universe-I am pretty sure he can be everywhere at once." Me---Your IF/Then rationale is not good logic....It is based on your personal opinion. But you are arguing as if it is fact. You---God is far more magnificent than you ever will or could imagine. Me----Again, your presupposing that there is a god, etc... You are using faulty reasoning and logic throughout your post and acting as if it is real... factual. As far as I know..... there may be some 'crusading atheists' but your useage of the word 'crusade' I believe belies your beliefs ...well...as some kind of believer. The 'christians' and the atrocities that occured during that time period weren't called the crusades for no reason..... Atheists as a rule are not trying to prove there is no God...... They just don't believe in something that doesn't exist. Whereas, the marching orders of most monotheistic religions are...THERE IS A GOD...AND MY BELIEFS AND GOD ARE THE RIGHT ONE, AND IF YOU DON'T BELIEVE IN GOD/JESUS, YOU ARE GOING TO HELL, ETC.... That is what most atheists, agnostics, and even some very moderates of faith hate.......in fervent fundamentalism.
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
@essay writing....you wrote what i wrote weeks ago word for word....guess this is how you wrote your essays...i.e. "parroting word for word what someone else has written"...not to worry though because imimtation is the sincerest form of flattery...but it would be refreshing to form your own ideas/thoughts....:(
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
@ thinking man....well said and logical.... i would like to add something about the catholic church....the church built places of worship out of gold plating and some out of solid gold (south american countries)...in panama we have the church of the golden altar....in costa rica we have even more opulence with a church that is gold plated on what i remember as the whole interior yet we have old beggar women begging on the steps leading into the church...my point is that vast sums of money have been spent on places of worship rather then on the people to better there lives in a real physical way....and what if the subject of their worship does and never did exist...this is arrogance...and their have been many many gods throughout recorded history and most have fallen by the wayside.... religion is based on myth and superstition and has no logical argument....and to jim schultz....scientist don't reject the "concept" of god....most of us reject the certainty of god...and that is not arrogant....
Thinking Man
@Larry Lundgren......THANK YOU..!! I appreciate your kind words. Re: Catholicism----Yes, I agree, the finite physical resources used on this planet, which include 'vast sums of money' on churches to worship a supposed 'super-being' that apparently is in need of such opulence and attention is mind boggling. In a bigger reality....actually, it is NOT just the catholics, but quite a few others... Just take a look at what the Mormon's do as far as buildings of worship. They are certainly starting to rival the catholic church as far as who has the best and most opulent worship sites to god. The list could most certainly go on naming all of the many varieties of religions, and what you have pointed out...and I certainly agree....... Resources should be used for the betterment of people's lives in measurable and physical ways. Now...Some have argued....look at all of the good 'we'(people of faith/organized religion) do for people, and they name off all of these projects and organizations, etc... and their missionaries...! Well, in the news, quite often, some of the missionaries for the churches are in trouble for trying to 'convert' a certain country or culture, while instilling in them their beliefs about jesus, no contraception should be used, etc....etc... Yes, religion is based on ever-changing myth's and superstitions that cannot be ever based in any kind of logical framework. re: @jim schultz.....your comment about scientists don't reject the "concept" of god....most of us reject the certainty of god....and that is not arrogant... VERY WELL SAID..!!!
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
@Thinking Man - I agree with you, most scientists are not trying to prove that God does not exist. They are just non-believers. However even YOU, while saying that I treat the existence of God as fact do the same in reverse. "Atheists as a rule are not trying to prove there is no God...... They just don't believe in something that doesn't exist". If I knew God did not exist I would not believe either. My concern as I mentioned earlier is with the "crusading" atheist. And you again are correct - I should use something less inflammatory like the "Campaigning" Atheist, and there are those who are out to prove that God does not exist. My main point is that religious people by and large, are not ignorant and delusional (obviously some are). There are a sizeable number of scientists who are religious, including me. There are two ways to think - rational and intuitive. Many of the biggest break throughs come from intuitive thinking. I will soften my position to God as a theory vs. fact, since we can not prove God through science, at least at this point. There are a lot of questions - creation of the universe - that are nicely answered by my "theory". I enjoy the debate with you and Larry. Cheers.
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Thinking Man
@Jim Schultz- Hi there..... Nice post... I think we are in agreement on virtually everything. I am 'not' an atheist, by the way.... I was merely trying to state what I have seen as the 'pure' atheist arguement. And, that is as I stated...which, yes I am aware, they are as polar opposites of the fervent believer. Actually, i am an 'agnostic', which leaves me free to comment on what I consider in your post "do not try to create god in YOUR image.." I absolutely agree..! I believe, in my opinion, that this comment by you is very profound. I think being agnostic, allows me to continually not start to 'cement' something possibly so grand and so far beyond any of our understandings in my brain. I think this is where the 'believers' have to be careful, as you can see that, as far as I can tell, 'most' christian believers are stuck with the bible and the mental re-presentations that they create and cement without changing and growing. I am definitely with you as well on the rational and intuitive issue.... So, looks like we are very much in agreement.... I am looking forward to reading and posting with you, and Larry and ever widening evolution of what we are exposing/creating inside ourselves...and...'out there'.. Cheers to you as well...and Peace.....
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
@Thinking Man - the first time I read your July 17th post I missed the satire. I had just come from a thread where this was stated without satire. After I replyed to you, I re-read your post and it was then that I thought that maybe you were just using satire. Thanks for confirming this. How could I doubt the "Thinking Man" even briefly :-) Yes - we agree on almost everything. I did consider myself an agnostic for a period of time. I now consider myself a Christian, but not a fundamentalist. I am also open to most other religions. I study science, and consider myself to be open minded, although for purposes of debate I do not always appear so. I consider the Bible as inspired by God but fed through an imperfect filter, or as Francis Collins says - Truth is like pure water but on earth is contained in a rusty vessel (humans). I do not believe you can read the Bible literally. It is a spiritual guide, and even there you need to be careful pulling out to select quotes to make a point. What I find interesting is how close in many ways the Genesis account fits the current scientific explanation. The Universe may have had a beginning. God in that case would have to exist outside of time and space in order to be the Creator. THAT is a very difficult thing to get our minds around, especially since our brains were so recently evolved from primordial mush. It is rather arrogant of some to get a little taste of knowledge and then proclaim they are smarter than the Creator so to speak, or to say there could not possibly be a Creator. I just find it ironic that many atheists attack religious people as ignorant, but their own logic is very faulty. There is a large middle ground where I believe most people fall. I truly appreciate the discussion. I will return with a food for thought in the next day or so.
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
Thinking Man or Larry - Bertrand Russell, a famous 20th century atheist offers an honest view of a world without a god in "A Free Man’s Worship". He says - “That man is the product of causes which had no prevision of the end they were achieving; that his origin, his growth, his hopes and fears, his loves and his beliefs, are but the outcome of accidental collocations of atoms; that no fire, no heroism, no intensity of thought and feeling, can preserve an individual life beyond the grave; that all the labors of the ages, all the devotion, all the inspiration, all the noonday brightness of human genius, are destined to extinction in the vast death of the solar system, and that the whole temple of man's achievement must inevitably be buried beneath the debris of a universe in ruins – all these things, if not quite beyond dispute, are yet so nearly certain that no philosophy which rejects them can hope to stand. Only within the scaffolding of these truths, only on the firm foundation of unyielding despair, can the soul's salvation henceforth be safely built.“ THIS is the logical conclusion of a true Atheist. While I do not agree with him, I can respect Russell and his logic. Many want to reject the possibility of a god and yet still live in a world of morals and evolving "enlightenment". If the universe is a quirk of luck and is totally random and directionless, accept the consequences of your belief. What say you ?
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Thinking Man
@Jim Schultz..... Hi Jim, sorry for the delay in posting.....off to a busy start this week...I hope that you are well...! Wow... Lot's of food for thought I see... Let me start with your post on: July 18, 2010 10:54 a.m. (after my post)... Yes.... seems we are in definite agreement on virtually everything, and I would consider us not so much 'debating'(to your comment, about when you debate you may not appear open-minded..'i am paraphrasing here'), but more that we are 'refining and evolving' our conceptions and thoughts, in my perception. So..... let me comment on and question respectfully, if I may a few things from your post. 1) You stated..."I did consider myself an 'agnostic' for a period of time. I now consider myself a 'Christian,' but not a fundamentalist." You go on to state that.. "I am open-minded and open to science and other religions, etc..." I gotta say here that it appears from what you posted in the above comments that you 'maybe' contradicting yourself here. My question is how is one an 'open-minded' christian...? Oxymoron....? Contradiction in terms possibly...? I know that you talked about 'interpretation', etc.. But, being 'A Christian' comes with pretty 'dogmatic' non-changeable beliefs. If one states that they are a christian, as far as i am aware, that invariably means that you believe in God, as discussed in the bible,(F. Collins 'rusty vessel analogy, notwithstanding')... believe that jesus christ is the son of god, and died for your sins, as mankind was full of 'original sin' .i.e...genesis...etc... and by 'believing' in JC, and repenting and believing that he died for your sins and was resurrected, you have 'Salvation-and eternal life in 'heaven.'... So, how do you reconcile being open-minded to other religions and science, while flat out stating "I now consider myself a Christian."....? Being agnostic allows you to be continually open-minded, but once you tip to a certain religion, you are no longer in the realm so much of open-mindedness, but any other scientific facts that come in goes toward your, by virtue of 'claiming yourself as a christian now, I would assert, reinforcing your christian beliefs. Basically, in critical thinking and logic, I believe that you have laid out what is known as a 'self-sealing' arguement. 2) Also, you stated.... "I do not believe you can read the bible literally. It is a spiritual guide. What I find interesting is how close in many ways the 'genesis account' *fits* the current 'scientific explanation.' With this one, it seems like you are saying on the one hand.... 1st part of your assertion... 'one cannot read the bible literally....then you go on with your 2nd assertion... 'how interesting you find that genesis *fits* current science, etc... Really...? It 'appears' to me that you are making a claim that genesis is virtually=current scientific explanation. You can't take the bible literally, but....your unquestioned assumption is that what is written in the bible fits current scientific explanation. That isn't true as stated. I would understand if you said......" I, personally, can 'read into' the book of genesis and create a model in my head, etc..etc.... I think you get what I am saying. Also, you discussed "being careful to select out quotes to make a point"... Which parts of the bible should I take as fact and interpret as is....and which should I look for other meanings and interpretations... ? Which are metaphor...and which are not....? And if it is all metaphor open to interpretation, then whose interpretation is the right one...or even the closest one to reality....? It seems that you go from non-literal interpretation to saying unequivocally that genesis=current scientific model. Basically.... I am suggesting that you are 'Rorsharking' (I know I brutalized the spelling on that one...sorry.. 'rorshark ink blot' test..) the book of genesis into science. Seeing what you want to see 'into' the book of genesis, so it 'can' match for you some kind of fit with science. 3) Also you stated...."The universe may have had a beginning. God in that case 'would have' to exist outside of time and space in order to be the Creator. THAT is a very difficult thing to get out minds around, etc.." O.K Jim...again, it seems here to me that you are assuming your statements as facts. I will go back to the issue that I suggested in your first posting that I re: you on about your faulty If/then...logic. Let me specifically reference the part.... (If)..the universe may have had a beginning. (then) God in that case 'would have to' exist, etc.. And how do you know that just 'because there was or may have been a beginning, (then) God 'WOULD HAVE TO' exist outside of time/space..? Why...? ANYTHING you answer from here on is assuming YOU KNOW. i.e...God, etc.. As a matter of fact a lot of the cosmological and metaphysical 'models' suggest that a Creator/God/Higher Power/First Cause/Infinite Energy-Intelligence, etc... Could, and just very well may be part and parcel 'a part'... indivisible from it's creations. Quantum Physics seems to be telling us that there is no separation from the ALL. As we discussed and as you so eloquently put it...let's not create God in OUR/YOUR IMAGE..... Seems or appears like you are doing that to me. Basically, in my model.....God...is so far beyond anything we can comprehend, which fits your statements by the way, but I am not *limiting* nor *assuming* from my limited model, what God 'would have to do'.... In fact, I know for me, that I cannot even come close to speculating what God, would 'have to or not do, etc..' This is also known a 'map/territory' violation... Anyway, that is it for know on this one post... you really did give me a lot to ponder and think about.. thank you.. Looking forward to your response... Peace to you Jim...
Thinking Man
@Jim Schultz.....2nd post of yours on July 18th, 1:09 pm... O.K.....I am going to have to keep this one short after the last one... I also totally respect B. Russell and F. Collins.... Also, I don't agree with Russell's 'map' or 'world-view' of reality. 1) You stated....."Many want to reject the possibility of God, and yet, still live in a world of morals and evolving enlightenment." So...Am I to assume that, according to your statement, (IF)...One rejects God, (then) they can't live in a world of morals and evolving enlightenment...? Why not...? Are you saying...'A belief in God is an absolute requirement to live on earth...and...live with morals, etc.... I know of many atheists that are absolutely moral and some of the most kind and thoughtful people I have know. It seems that you are saying anyone who does 'not' necessarily believe in God, cannot be or live in a world with morals..... Is that what you are saying Jim....? If so, I think you 'may' want to re-think that one...just a suggestion, with all due respect to you..! 2) You stated...."If the universe is a quirk of luck and is totally random and directionless, accept the consequences of your belief. What say you..?" It seems to me Jim, that there is another If/then violation, which I believe relates back to statement #1..... And.....If one did 'believe' that the universe is luck/random, etc... 'accept the consequences of your belief.." And ..what exactly do you 'believe' those consequences to be exactly...? And are they facts, or are they...possible faulty if/then logic flaws...? O.K...Jim, the ball is in your court....Looking forward to hearing back from you. I am quite sure you will have some good stuff to think about... Peace to you Jim.....
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@Larry (or anyone)Religious institutions using there vast wealth for their own self endorsing mission, instead of the needs of the people who truly might need it is a travesty. However, in saying that, we both make an assumption that human suffering is inherently a travesty, even if the many are benefiting and the few are not. If you were to take a different perspective, ironically one that is easy to entertain without a belief in a god, that a human life is insignificant and therefore any suffering of the few is irrelevant as long as the many are benefiting, than what the catholic church does with its extravagant decorations is not wrong at all, but in fact great, as they provide a sort of anosognosic drug to the masses, keeping them ignorant of their own ignorance. Something that appears inevitable in our sociology throughout our species history.
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
@ Robert LUN....i wasn't saying that organized religion hasn't done some very fine things over the course of recorded history...some good/some bad and it's probably a wash.... i was trying to get home the point that the catholic church has built many beautiful cathedrals all over the world...some in the poorest of the third world nations and it is quite nice to be able to come inside once a week and worship in such splendor...the churches were built to glorify god...sadam husseins temples were built to glorify him....if god exists...IF? god wouldn't care if you worshiped it/him/she/whatever in the finest most expensive cathedral or the dingiest cow barn...god wouldn't care... the pyramids were built to glorify the kings of ancient egypt...and don't kid yourself that the people were so ignorant even back then that they didn't see that construction as a total waste and anthropologists speculate that they were built with slave labor..."death is the great equalizer" and it levels the playing field be it pharoh or slave. i feel it is a travesty but what do the people say about it? what can they say? what can they do? NOTHING... it is a well known fact that there is more wealth belonging to just one percent of this nations population then all of the other 99 % combined. Capitalism be damned...look what it has turned into... and Jim, i can't imagine how anything can exist outside of time and space but if "IT"...it would still have to have come from something.... pure logic tells us that 0 times 0 is 0....always was and always will be....so everything in the universe was always here...there was no "DAY ONE"...all parts of the universe can be thought of as the center because it has no boundarys....and the only constant in life and in the greater universe is change...there is life and death but life goes on forever....are basic purpose is to continue our species...every kind of animal life has this same distinct purpose but while we are here mankind feels we should make the best of it and in some small or large way leave our footprint in the sand. abraham lincoln said that in the end it is not the years in our life that are the most important but rather the life in our years and thinking men shouldn't need moral scriptures to show us the way....:)
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
sorry Robert...LNU not LUN...old fingers....:(
Erich R. Thompson
So this is where Larry has been. ;)
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
Larry - you can believe what you want about the universe, however, most scientists believe the universe was "born" 12 - 14 billion years ago in the Big Bang. On another note - if you believe the universe has always existed, why not God ?
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
@Thinking Man says "Basically, in my model.....God...is so far beyond anything we can comprehend, which fits your statements by the way, but I am not *limiting* nor *assuming* from my limited model, what God 'would have to do'.... In fact, I know for me, that I cannot even come close to speculating what God, would 'have to or not do, etc..'" It is natural to speculate, that is what makes life interesting. I am saying that if God created the universe, he would most likely need to exist outside time and space. I do not know anything for sure, especially the mind of God. I do not need to have the Genesis account match science to believe in God. Nothing in the Apostles' Creed says "I believe in the Genesis version as written in the King James Bible.." It says "I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth". Now that leaves a lot of room to accept scientific explanations. I am just saying it is interesting that over time, science has come closer to the Genesis account then when it started out. Originally most scientists believed the universe always existed - now they believe it had a beginning. "In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.. ". I will respectfully respond over time to some of your other musings. Thank You for making me think.
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
Thinking Man asks“It seems that you are saying anyone who does 'not' necessarily believe in God, cannot be or live in a world with morals..... Is that what you are saying Jim....?” Answer - No, I am not saying if you do not believe in God, you cannot live a moral life. What I am asking is - without God where does the moral standard come from? Our current society was generally built from a religious morality – Ten Commandments, etc. You can live in that society and accept those morals without believing in God. But if we were starting over in a purely secular world, what standard would we use ? While some naturalistic philosophers have developed ethical systems without God, many other naturalists acknowledge this doesn’t work and that such ethical systems are entirely arbitrary. Thinking Man also asks “And.....If one did 'believe' that the universe is luck/random, etc... 'accept the consequences of your belief.." And ..what exactly do you 'believe' those consequences to be exactly...?” Answer - That humans are not unique. There is no real thing such as good or evil. (Evolution cannot explain WHY moral law should have any real significance. If it is solely an evolutionary convenience then there is really no such thing as Good or Evil). This is IT – a lot of the potential mystery evaporates. THANKS for keeping me on my toes. I don't have many answers, mostly questions. I argue like I am sure of myself, but I am really not nearly that confident - mostly speculating and musing. I believe in God - but I am not trying to tell anyone else what to believe in.
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
Thinking Man – sorry for multiple message - but let me step back and give you my core beliefs. I believe there is a veiled mystery, a transcendent presence, a powerful force, a divine or ultimate energy in the universe. Let’s call it THE FORCE. We as humans are to varying degrees, conscious of this force, and at times can connect to this force. Joseph Campbell, the author of The Power of Mythology, believes religion is like software. You can choose software to help you connect to THE FORCE. While there is only one force or ultimate source, there are various types of software. A fundamentalist believes that there is only one correct software, the one they have chosen. I do not believe that, and that is why I say I am “open minded”. Now, I personally have chosen Christianity as my basic software. Christianity says there is a God, the almighty, maker of heaven and earth (the Force). It says that Jesus was a historical person who provided us with a pathway to connect to God - compassion for our fellow humans, etc. His life was a model for others to follow. We are also connected to God though a spiritual force (The Holy Spirit). Anything beyond this core creed are the “bells and whistles” of a more specific version of Christianity (Catholic, Protestant, LDS, etc), and with it come the traditions, rituals, etc. I am open to learning and even using other software. Where the challenge comes in, when you try to explain software that you do not really understand – read the Bible without a spiritual guide, or you can get very confused trying to switch back and forth between various software. Science, on the other hand, tries to explain the physical workings of the universe – Big Bang, evolution, gravity, relativity, etc. Science actually does point to a force that MAY have created all the physical laws of the universe (Einstein believed this), or the physical laws may have been and always will be. Either way, I do not see an inherent conflict between science and religion, others may. You, the Thinking Man, appears to be someone who recognizes something greater than the human dimension, a transcendent presence so to speak, but have not chosen software. You do not need to choose a software program off the shelf, but in order to think about these things, you need to have some sort of a mythology or way of thinking, visualizing, explaining it. What say you ?
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
@Robert - I found your post very profound -"Religious institutions using there vast wealth for their own self endorsing mission, instead of the needs of the people who truly might need it is a travesty. However, in saying that, we both make an assumption that human suffering is inherently a travesty, even if the many are benefiting and the few are not. If you were to take a different perspective, ironically one that is easy to entertain without a belief in a god, that a human life is insignificant and therefore any suffering of the few is irrelevant as long as the many are benefiting, than what the catholic church does with its extravagant decorations is not wrong at all, but in fact great, as they provide a sort of anosognosic drug to the masses, keeping them ignorant of their own ignorance. Something that appears inevitable in our sociology throughout our species history". It is a slippery slope, once you take God out of the equation. WHAT is inherently wrong with torture ? It appears to be a rather efficient and timely way to get information and makes sense from a purely logical point of view. And why all the concern about suffering ? It must be part of the randomness of evolution. How can you rail against a universe that is inherently random, accidental, directionless, and with no purpose. It would not be logical.
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duygusuz
[url]http://www.duygusuz.com[/url] Larry - you can believe what you want about the universe, however, most scientists believe the universe was "born" 12 - 14 billion years ago in the Big Bang. On another note - if you believe the universe has always existed, why not God ?
Erich R. Thompson
Oh I like Jim. :) Nice to meet you sir. "Software" and "THE FORCE" indeed. I have aspirations to be a pantheologist and I have panentheistic views. My original Operating System was Christianity. Atheism, at least for myself, was like DOS 1.0. Abort, retry, ignore, fail?
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
Nice to meet you Erich. Panentheistic - would that be some type of Apple software ? I don't think I have ever met a pantheologist. Do you ask questions like "What is a flower ?" Seriously, I would like to learn more.
Erich R. Thompson
Pantheistism can be attributed to Buddhism, that the earth and universe and everything around you, the keyboard in front of you, the light coming from your monitor, is God. And so is that flower you are holding in your hand. ;) However, this God does not respond to us. In Panentheism, this entity is anamorphic and responsive to us. I usually picture God as a "giant brain in space" LOL or a "figure with galaxies in it". These are just metaphors for the consciousness of God. Omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent. Pantheology is the study of all the religions you can get your hands on. Since I am young and beginning my college career, I have a long way and a long time to learn more religions. Particularily, the big ones (Abrahamic religions, Hindi, Jani, Buddhism, Taoism, etc.) In my reality, and since reality is whatever I choose it to be since it is my brain interpreting the world, all the religions are wrong and all the religions are right. Ergo 4200 religions can't be wrong but they may have the concepts wrong since we are just evolved primates and flawed. Spirituality is the link to this consciousness and religion is a paradigm to reach this connection. Maybe not everyone likes a set of rules and regulations, but some people do like order to their God. Who is anyone to judge these people? Who is Sam Harris to judge these people? To me, guys like Sam Harris, are on this mission to convert people to atheism. To me, this looks exactly like some Christians trying to convert people door to door. Every human being has a complex mind that makes our current computers look like retarded cockroaches. Ask anyone who does A.I. When this brain is programmed a certain way, that individual may believe their programming to be absolute and final. Thus individual may make it their endeavor to convert people to this ideal, concept, belief, though, etc. This definately applies to mankind and every definitive belief, and nothing makes people into little converters like religion does. Atheism is a religion so it falls to this decree. My philosophy: save your beliefs for people interested. Besides, why waste your time bashing your head against the brick wall of another person's psyche vis a vis a closed mind. People argue if the planet would be better or worse without religion; maybe instead of worrying about semantics we should just learn to coexist. This can only be achieved by more emphasis of coexistence on subsequent generations. These views are subjective and they are my opinions. I let people interested in reading my cathargic rambling make their own opinions with their beautiful minds :) Go, BigThinkers, go! :)
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
Erich - Thank You, that was a very enlightening post. I find much I can and do embrace in your message - "the consciousness of God. omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent". I would rather not think of God as my computer though, as I often bash and swear at my computer. I would also like to study all (more) religions. "Spirituality is the link to this consciousness and religion is a paradigm to reach this connection". AMEN. I also believe Atheism is a type of religion or faith, with a number of denominations. I also totally agree with your emphasis on coexistence. My goal is to be a bridge - especially between "the religious" and "the scientists". Cathargic rambling - I love it, and can relate to it "Totally". Coexistence - I say chill out people, NO one has all the answers. It is our EGOs that get in the way - MY way or the highway you jokers. OK Erich, seriously, now let me set you straight on a few things ....
Robert Lnu
@Jim But you make my point! Not to bring politics in it, but if there was some truly moral god, and people were following its morals, than how do you explain the paradox of George W. Bush, one of the most evangelical appealing presidents of the past two decades, getting evangelicals to accept torture as something they cheer for? You say its a slippery slope without a god, but look at how slippery the slope is with a god! I don't sit here and say human suffering is irrelevant because I want it to be, I make the claim that human suffering is irrelevant because I observe nature and the world around me. The difference between me and a religious person, is I have no doctrine to follow, but only my inner strength to fight against nature, to define and defend things that don't inherently exist, like justice, love and empathy, to carve those ideals into nature because thats what I want the world to be, and thats the world I want to live in.
Robert Lnu
@Larry I guess I wasn't making a point for or against religion, but rather that a fight against religion just seems irrelevant. A fight that must be fought with religion in its current state perhaps, but with total victory unattainable. My remembrance from what I was trying to get at, was that it seems to me that humanity on a macro social scale, will always need a community organization, whether it be religion or government or the boy scouts, that brings people together, and gives them answers, so that they can remain ignorant of there ignorance, so they don't have to question or figure things out, but rather can just focus on their micro social lives. It is my firm belief, that the majority of people don't try to enlighten themselves not because they don't have the capacity to do so, but rather choose not to do so. If you want a movie analogy, it would of course be the matrix with the red and blue pill choice. So the catholic church gives people a blue pill thats aesthetically appealing with its gold and decorum, and in that sense they serve their function for society. I don't make an argument for or against whats happening, rather declare these things as an observation, similar to "people like sugar, therefore it sucks if you have diabetes" or the like.
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Thinking Man
@Jim Schultz and @Eric R. Thompson I think that we are all in agreement. If... we all agree that we are just stating our 'world view'..or re-presentations of reality. Then, we can go off on all kinds of creative theory's, etc.... I think that the problem comes when anyone, begins to create dogma..and cement in their brains that this IS reality. Hypothetically, for discussion sake, if we take the world view(which seems to fit in with the 3 of us) that a Force/God, etc.... is infinite and so far beyond our understanding, then, we 'may' have forever to keep surching and making up in our minds forever....as God, is possibly always way ahead of us. That is a playground that works for me.... How about you guys...? Peace....
Thinking Man
@Jim Schultz Hi Jim.... The posts are getting longer and longer..! I wanted to go back to your posting to my post above regarding a comment you made. You---"I am saying that if God created the universe, he would....*most likely*need to exist *outside* of time and space. This is where I have a bit of a conundrum.... It seems that you are (in my perception) 'leaning' towards, again, an IF/Then statement. You seem to be stating 'as if' it is more of a fact in your world view. If ...God created the universe, why would it(God) *Need to exist* outside of time and space. I would assert that the theory's, especially with quantum physics, strongly suggests that everything is ONE.. and if there is a God, he just 'maybe' part and parcel 'a part' of everything. Where does God end and everything else exist...? It seems that you are making God 'separate' from everything. Maybe, God is so craftily hidden and at one within its manifistations. If...EVERYTHING is GOD(hypothetically), then possibly there is nothing that is not God....? If there is something else that is not God......well, I am open to hearing this.....what is it...? And by the way... you shifted your, what seemed like dogma(to me anyway) to speculation... I have no problem with speculation.... As long we keep it on the level of ...speculation..... No Beliefs... Hey Jim... Lot's to think about..... I enjoy our musings. Hope to hear from you soon.... Peace....
Thinking Man
@Erich R. Thompson...... Hi Erich.! I wanted to follow up on a point you made about Sam Harris. I have read his books, and I don't get that he is trying to 'convert' believers to atheism. If you read his works, he makes it very clear that he is not so concerned with the beliefs, but what flows from the christian/islam, etc.. beliefs. He, and others, don't want to see the U.S. become a theocracy like Iran and such. He sees the believers, as the ones actually pushing their beliefs on to others and trying to use the bible to get it into schools as 'science', get into politics, etc.. Not everyone wants that. Not everyone believes that. Sam has the right to offer his opinion, just like everyone else. He just doesn't seem to believe in something that doesn't exist. That's his opinion. He has emphatically stated that there has been some good done by religion, and some very bad by religion. Erich.... I like your posts.... I hope to hear from you soon...! I very much like exploring and keeping an open mind... Peace to you...
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
To Thinking Man - just to clarify I do BELIEVE in a God, a transcendent presence. Belief based on intuition not scientific proof. On the other hand I am SPECULATING on how God may have created the universe. You raise some excellent concepts. God may not have to exist outside the universe. Quantum physics have introduced some fascinating concepts that could potentially give a scientific explanation to free will. There could also be other dimensions to the universe that we are not conscious of yet, as we may lack the requires sense to perceive it. (Earth worms may not be aware there is a whole nother world above ground). Thank You for challenging my if/then asssumptions. I truly enjoy our interchange of ideas.
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Nice to meet you Erich. Panentheistic - would that be some type of Apple software ? Saglik cinsel pozisyonlar oyun I don't think I have ever met a pantheologist. Do you ask questions like "What is a flower ?" Seriously, I would like to learn more.
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Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
There is the story of a man who stood before God, his heart breaking from the pain and injustice in the world. “Dear God”, he cried out, “Look at all the suffering, the anguish and distress in Your world. Why don’t you send help?” God responded: “I did send help. I sent you”.
Robert Lnu
@Jim No offense, but that saying doesn't help your point of believing in a transcendent presence at all. If you want a similar quote that defends the lack of a god I quote the movie Zulu, as the soliders stared at the massive army of Zulu warriors who loomed on the hills overlooking Rorke's Drift, Pte.Thomas Cole said "Why is it us? Why us?" Colour Sergeant Bourne without turning simply replied, "Because we're here, lad. Nobody else. Just us."
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My philosophy is Atheism because if god exists there weren't religions. web
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Erich R. Thompson
Thinking Man, I'm pretty sure America has been moving away from theocracy not towards... hence the whole removal of prayer from schools and reduced emphasis of God talk. Which is for the best since politics and religion should not be mixed! Politics are already opinionated as it is, no reason to mix in more opinions of religion into them is the way I take it.
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Erich R. Thompson
Thinking Man, actually that's a very acute assertion you made about what is reality. Also, I enjoy you pointing out we shouldn't let a dogma call the shots! Truthfully, I contemplate the creation of this so called God of the universe. I do this despite choosing to believe (at least for the time being) in this God, who requires blind faith. If It does exist, then It is always a step ahead of me due to being outside the flow of time. Another possibility is IT is so intelligent that it actually forsees inevitable events derived from calculating the next action in whatever said timeline relating to whatever subject or object. The fact of the matter is, God is imaginary. It only exists in our minds as It is a concept introduced to each of us in many, many ways. This supposition of this entity that takes care of us and created us is quite loveable for some and not so much for others. Alas, since none of us truly know what reality is (for some, they say they know but this is only within bounds of what they try and interpret, or comprehend) then none of us can truly dismiss imaginary concepts as not being real. If the only definition of what is real is something we touch, see, hear, taste, smell then we are surely doomed to being reliant on such senses and subsequently ignorant of other objects to be sensed by other means of detection. Unfortanutely these senses don't really relate to identifying subjects other than hearing or reading about them i.e. justice, good, love, string theory, God. The paraGodx that boggles my mind is an a priori line of reasoning... why is God imaginary, who can say that imaginary subjects and objects are real or not, and finally, what is up with "blind faith?" I mean, why put mankind in such a loop that makes investigative minds explode in a veritable mess of grey goo!? Unless there is something beneficial to said "blind faith." Of course, I make the assumption that this would be beneficial, but with that being said, what is to be gained when we believe in this "Lo and Behold" entity? Especially when said being can not really be "Lo"ed or "Beheld!" Is this what it takes to believe in God? Is this because we are not intelligent enough to perceive all the clues at once and piece them together and say "Ah, what a great puzzel of God." Would any being with a materialistic (I literally mean made out of matter) brain be able to do such a thing anyways? Or is something gained when we choose to believe in such imaginary concepts that only us, mankind, has created? Afterall, when we take somebody's word for granted and believe what they are saying then we learn at an alarming rate! Or, maybe at the end of the day, all of this is "God" is just suppositions and propositions with a devious, crafty paradox behind it to make it seem undefeatable for mankind: "Blind faith" Well, for now, it (or IT, SHE, HE :) ) has me hooked!
Jamie Kishtelle
We are always trying to make sense of our world and each religion was put together at times when their explanations were our best shot.
john westbrook
If we cannot make sense of our world, it is unlikely we could understand its creator. An ant crawling on the ground does not have the mental capacity to envisage human society and the bridge between us and the formation of the universe is far larger A large dose of humility is the answer our brain is simpley not developed enough to cope with the problem Relax and leave it to God to sort out Amen
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
John - I agree we need a large dose of humility. Relax, enjoy life, and show compassion for your fellow travelers. That is a good plan.
Marcus James Vaz
Marcus James Vaz
I don't know if there is a God but if God does exist I rather suspect it is a God of supreme indifference.
Barrie Collins
Barrie Collins
We could create an afterlife for ourselves, not necessarily in the guts of a humungous computer but something else. Or we might extend our lifespan indefinitely which could become monotonous. It would be interesting to see conscience experience evolve beyond what we know now in our limited lifespan. One hopes wisdom would have something to do with it.
Stephen Spiros Stavropoulos
Stephen Spiros Stavropoulos
I am amazed at how we as human beings are so sure of what we cant see, touch, smell, hear, or prove! As I go through life in this stage of my time here on earth, I wrestle again about the reality of "God", whether or not there is an afterlife, and the consequences of my actions, whether they be good or evil.....like a debt unpaid when I die. I "gave up my life" as it was in my 20's and "followed the Light" as an Orthodox Quaker would've in the 1600's, and I was so sure of the existence of God and Heaven and Hell. I left that faith in my 30's and have ever since been perplexed by every thought and opinion by my fellow man, and the "still small voice" in my heart, that pre-warns me of every "evil" thought or machination my heart can conceive of....and how they are in direct conflict with each other. There are the small faithful voices that say, the wisdom of God is foolish with men, and the wisdom of man is foolish with God...but then man says.... faith enables us to believe what we know isn't true, or that faith enables people who don't know anything to believe that they have all the answers.... I have to admit that something in my heart sort of thrills when I read Sam Harris, in that I can see the logic of all his arguments against religion, and the utter foolishness of how man cherry picks what he likes out of the bible, yet disavows any belief in the God who wanted adulterous wives stoned, every man , woman, and child killed in "enemy" cities, or one who would send the majority of mankind to hell for absolute unending torture and teeth gnashing! Then, I don't have to "follow the light!" I used to argue that the definite proof that there is a God is that if one had a 55 gallon barrel of all the letters and punctuation signs needed to write pages of correct words, and were to throw them on the floor like the big bang, and they would come out in order like the printed page, then they could prove to me that there was only the random big bang that created the order of our universe, but that I maintained that there had to be a creator that put everything in the order that it is in, from the largest galaxies to the molecules and quarks that we know make up our universe! We know that every single discipline that we create or fix anything from mechanics to medicine is limited by the fact that we live in a physical world, and we know nothing at birth, and that everything has to be taught to be perfected and realized. How arrogant we are to think that the universe can exist in our faces, and we reject the idea that there was no one putting it in order from time immemorial.... The one thing that bothers me the most is that we think we can lie, cheat, and steal on our own little ways, and that because we might have our being in a loving creator who cannot lie, or have his hands in our evil, would not require is to answer and make it right somehow! That he could keep is alive in our "wickedness", and have our deeds shared with him, while he sends the rain, and food and health our way to just murder, torture, and lie in billions of ways daily as a planet of beings created by him is perplexing to say the least! So....I pick agnosticism for now, as far as religion goes, but I am sure there is a creator who will set the record straight, for we "see through a glass darkly" now, but we will all see clearly in the afterlife.....I cannot believe that this much would be invested by a creator only to have it end at death, and we can just do whatever we want until then! I believe we will all see that it was mans hand in all the mess we have created, and somehow we will all give account for our actions, whether they be good or evil, just like we do now in front of mankind, the law, and in public opinion. It's as though we are all Gods created in this world to learn good from evil, light from dark, pain and pleasure, so that we may all learn how to make sound judgements in our own universes after this life. As for me, I will live by the golden rule, and thank my "creator" for every breathe I have in this life, which I almost lost on May 7th with a burst aorta, 14 hours of surgery, and 50 days in the hospital with complications....as I looked over the edge of my pending infinity, I was made to realize how fleeting my time is here on the earth, and my arrogant self assuredness vanished in an instant! One thing I am sure of is that if there is a God, it isn't what we think in our finite minds in this life!
Steve Frazee
Steve Frazee
Mr. Fry is a wonderful rambling wit! He’s so much fun to watch! His perspectives are well educated and insightful. I will suggest however there may well be meta-organizing forces in the universe beyond human understanding. The Numinous may always be beyond human understanding or rational thought. It is not unreasonable to hope that the transcendent is slightly biased toward the good, true and beautiful. Spirituality need not require the suspension of critical thinking, but neither should it dismiss that which is not provable. Maybe spirituality should be considered the pursuit of meaning making systems that inspire us to our best lives. Yes, we may need to jettison the personal gods of our pasts, and adopt less specificity and more humility in our spirituality. But let’s not make the mistake of giving up our spirituality just to exit religion. There is a reason why millions of people are calling themselves, SBNR, spiritual but not religious.
Stephen Spiros Stavropoulos
Stephen Spiros Stavropoulos
Mr. Frazee, looking forward to the SBNR.org website! I dont feel its a cop-out attitude, as I've seen referred to elsewhere, but a realistic, and positive one. Excellent!
Johannes Planko
fry is amazing and a great person .. even though I don't completely agree to him, no one needs to, it would be boring if ;-) religion was a tool for evolution, thats it .. animals becoming aware of themselves and realizing, that they can construct things, change their environment and so on - so without better knowledge everything around them "had" to be "constructed" as well and be done by someone else .. the birth of superstition and religion - the first social frameworks, rules and so on next point is the fact, that we as humans have not found an answer to the oldest questions of human mankind - who we are and what we want .. if we as humans don't find an answer, we will be lost and time (in this case technological development) is pushing us forward to the wall of unanswered questions and will crush us .. i in fact don't think high about philosophy .. we are nothing else then biological created machines, who are able to think independent. every influence from our environment is received by our "sensors" and as well the reactions to our own behavior. we learn from the beginning of our existence and have to face brutal existence .. as help our body creates chemicals and emotions by instinct or acquired abilities and we can "create" our own world of thinking, imagination, view of the world and manipulate our mind ourselves we humans are nothing else than machines - turn of the power, we cease to exist on every level .. it's over .. but this fact doesn't make us less outstanding or unique - quiet the opposite! we are not mass products of narcissistic gods, who created us to bless them for their own amusement! and there are no souls or energies floating around! we are plain alive and have to take responsibility! philosophy is a nice simulation to play "what if" in our minds, that helps us to interact better with our environment ..
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Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
mr. planko has it right as does mr. fry....we are not created in a god's image but the inverse is totally true....it was MAN's evolvement from a thinking primate (not a monkey) that allowed man to form the concept of a god....a god that somehow created itself out of nothingness....how absurd is that? MAN CREATED GOD...GOD WAS CREATED IN OUR IMAGE THROUGH OUR EVOLVED THOUGHT... energy becomes matter and matter becomes energy....the Universe is GOD and it cares nothing about creatures on earth be they one celled animals or the likes of albert einstein....we must care for ourselves while we temporarily walk the earth...the golden rule is of course the only rule for the thinking human...there is birth and death but life goes on forever....our immortality is through our progeny...the dna we can pass on to the next generation as a species.... in the end it is gravity that is the winner....as abraham lincoln once said..."in the end it is not the years in the life that are important but only the life in the years" and we don't need any type of organized religion to brainwash us into doing the right and honorable thing....:)
Erich R. Thompson
Hello Larry, How absurd is it for a human being to address a paradox and say, "Well I can't figure it out so it must not be true."? No offense good sir, I cherish your intellect and wisdom, but this reminds me of Stephen Hawking. This is because Stephen Hawking says there is a grandfather paradoxical analogy (as in, you go back in time and shoot your gramps that means how would you be able to do this, now that you don't exist?) doesn't mean if we ever get to go back in time the universe will be ripped apart by a time loop. We will just have to find out when and if we ever do! When I was a child, I was told space was infinite and now that I study astrophysics I realize that this is possibly untrue. Visualizing in my head that our universe is a big bubble with bounds has helped me see that while the appearance of space being infinite may not quite be infinite but rather a spherical object of continuity. But for years I wrapped my head around the concept of infinity. And I don't mean 0-infinity but negative infinity to positive infinity (relating to positive and negative integers). No beginning, no end. This concept was a supposition with space in mind but most modern cosmologists, in both physics and metaphysics, agree that there may be bounds on our universe. Now, for the fun part, another ParaGodx. ;) Who is this supposed creator of life and the universe and how is It suppose to be infinite? Like you say, something from nothing. The absurdity of it is almost facetious! But I can think of probably 10 ideas just off the top of my head that can attribute to a possible beginning of God. Wait? Did I just say beginning? Ooooops... that isn't the infinity that I know of. Once again if God says It (I refuse to say He since as far as we know It doesn't have any reproductive organs considering there is just one "God") is infinite then I guess it must be -infinity+! So let us muse over a conceptual paradigm of creation of our creator! Sounds a lot like fiction to me but who knows maybe one lucid theory may be right! Of course, in the end, there may be no God and we may just be recognizing patterns and trying to pin something tangible to these strange coincidences that happen in life. This is an argument of atheistic neuroscientists, Mike Shermer and others, one that has resurfaced but is not entirely new as psychologists came across this concept along time ago. As did I when I was a young boy sitting in church! How ironic! Imagine the desparity and anger if I had blurted out "What if we are imagining all of this because of these coincidences in our life?" in the middle of Sunday sermon! Of course, I say to the one's who claim this argument of us recognizing patterns, aren't you recocnizing a pattern right now with your Positron Emission Tomography device and Magnetic Resonance Imagining machine??? Deepak Chopra pulled "my dictum" in an argument with Sam Harris, "Science without Religion is lame, Religion without Science is blind." which Albert Einstein said. For quite some time I thought like Deepak, I thought to myself "Wow, we should come to a compromise with these fundamental learning tools." This can not happen since the principal behind Science and the principal behind Religion are not covalent. I see it like this: Science= "Seeing is believing." Religion= "Believing is seeing." I don't think it's possible, nor should it be attempted, to merge these learning tools of mankind. Nor do I think it prudent of anyone to say one or the other is "bad" when the definitions of these two words are different for many people worldwide. Just like the doctrine, "Guns don't kill people, people kill people." I can reitterate with a new subject, "Religion doesn't kill people, people kill people." Same can be said for science as well! What do you think, BigThinkers?
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
erich? who created god if it was not us? if it was not the evolved thought of humankind's evolutionary journey through time then who was it? was it god? did god create itself? did god create god and if so how do you get something from nothing? i like math, pure logic and common sense, not that you don't have common sense because anyone can tell that you have an over abundance of everything a "big thinker" should have. we will never know all the secrets of the universe and einstein knew this and probably said it several times....something from nothing? now don't tell me that we have a built in govenor in our brains that won't allow us to get beyond this paradox....we do have logic....and logic tells even the most ignorant of us that it is impossible to create yourself as this god must have did... so? what would have to be the logical answer? not talking here about energy, matter and antimatter? not talking about any cosmological thing at all....just talking about pure logic...:) THE UNIVERSE WITH ALL OF IT'S MATTER AND ENERGY AND ENERGY AND MATTER, AND EVERYTHING ELSE THAT IT CONTAINS THAT IS SIMPLY MADE UP OF VARYING DEGREES OF ENERGY AND MATTER....THIS UNIVERSE THAT WE ARE OH SO SMALL A PART OF, HAS EXISTED FROM THE DAWN OF TIME....NO, THERE WAS NO DAWN OF TIME... THE UNIVERSE IS DIFFERENT. ALWAYS WAS AND ALWAYS WILL BE. and i know this sounds familiar, right? so i'm with einstein in that i believe in the universe as god....not a personal god....call it what you will but it was not created....it (universe) always was and always will be...this is what albert said...and he was usually right...:) and as far as going back into time? give me a break....that is stuff that science fiction is made of just like the invisible man....and don't get me wrong because i do love science fiction...peace...:)
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
i hope you have seen bill maher's movie called "Religulous), if not click here...http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3791007322683758535# and you will understand the difference between "prophecy and self fulling prophecy"...this movie...documentary...didn't sway me one way or another because my mind has come to it's logical conclusion concerning religious prophecies and the bible along time ago....enjoy! and try to keep an open mind....peace out...:)
Hari Srinivasan
Stephen you are a brilliant and eloquent person. And you are mostly justified in your opinion. But I'd like to point out that Eastern philosophies are not only about ethics. They predate even the Greeks in their treatment of various philosophical subjects and their approach. They ask more questions than answer. The six ancient schools of India philosophies include - Nyaya, the school of logic Vaisheshika, the atomist school Samkhya, the enumeration school Yoga, the school of Patanjali Purva Mimamsa (or simply Mimamsa) Vedanta (also called Uttara Mimamsa)
george klein
What is the point of learning something that one will forget by dying . Experience is the only item we can take with us when we move on . What is the logic of thinking you are logical any person that uses the word logic in conversation uses it to bolster their failing theory . Being truthful would seem the aim as the truth is by the most part not logical at all . Bone cancer in children is the way it is whether there is a god or no god . Tell a dyeing child that they will be completely erased when they die that they will become nothing .
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Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
to george....how can we take experience with us when we move on and where will that be? where will we end up....and weren't we all a bit disapointed when we found out that santaclaus, the easter bunny and frosty the snowman didn't really exist....agnostics are not advocating that you burst a dyeing childs bubble...wouldn't that be cruel and unusable punishment for something they had no control over....but to lead a child on from birth to the point of learning they are terminal does not make much sense either....i told my children that there are at least two points of view and that they have a whole lifetime (be it short or long) to establish in their own minds what they want to believe in....I CAN'T BELIEVE THAT EVEN THE MOST JADED ATHEIST WOULD WANT TO BREAK A CHILD'S HEART AND IT PROBABLY WOULDN'T WORK ANYWAY BECAUSE WE ALL KNOW THAT THERE ARE NOT NONBELIEVERS IN FOXHOLES....IN THE END WE WANT TO BELIEVE....IS THERE ANY OTHER OPTION?
petkov petkov petkov
I'm pretty sure America has been moving away from theocracy not towards... hence the whole removal of prayer from schools and reduced emphasis of God talk. Which is for the best since politics and religion should not be mixed! Politics are already opinionated as it is, no reason to mix in more opinions of religion into them is the way I take it
Larry Lundgren
Larry Lundgren
i agree...the problem with most religious people (the way i see it) is that they think they will be thought of as bad people by their peers....people who won't work for the collective good of society...if they don't profess a belief in a personal god....so they go with the flow....but the flow is losing momentum as science clarifies the superstition, myth and legend...but as long as you have to be a christian to even think about running for president of the United States the trend will continus....just like with gay marraige....all major religious arguments will be broken down with the passage of time....John lennons beautiful song "Imagine" will go from imagination to reality but it will all take time....how long is anybody's guess
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Justine Moga
Justine Moga
Great interview! Some people comments are sadly mis-informed about Evolution. Evolution is a fact, and it is not about "the strongest" "the meanest" will survive. People, please read before you show your ignorance.
Heath Dimmack
Heath Dimmack
Brilliant post and some very insighful comments, thanks.
Jim Schultz
Jim Schultz
Larry says "John lennons beautiful song "Imagine" will go from imagination to reality but it will all take time". Larry - you need another hit. Lennon says imagine there is no heaven - then goes on to describe his own vision of what most religious people consider heaven to be like. I like the music, but the lyrics really make no sense. If you do not believe in God, but you believe in evolution, then why would you think there is some predetermined outcome. Evolution is the result of a random series of accidents or mutations. If the mutation helps an individual survive they are more likely to pass on their genes. Why would you think we are evolving toward a vison articulated by a heavy LSD user ? It seems to me if you look at the world today, we are headed toward a very different future in which a nuclear war is an increasing probability. Number 9, Number 9, Number 9 .... With regard to being disappointed by finding out there was no "real" Santa Claus. I disagree - the fact that a parent's love for their child would inspire them to perpetuate a fantasy that would please a young child is the source of real magic. I rather prefer a parent's love than an old man flying around behind a bunch of farting reindeer. As a yound child, I always appreciated the gifts, but found the Santa Claus story rather implausible and impersonal. The real Saint Nicholas story is also much more inspiring than the secular Santa Claus version. P.S. WHO told you there was no Easter Bunny ??? :-)
Osiris Akkebala
Osiris Akkebala
Belief only demonstrate a weakness of mind, because it leave you with an opening for doubt, which prevent you from knowing that which is Divinely True. What is philosophy other than that which contemplate that which is not standard belief, in search of getting to know that which transcend belief. Belief hang like a mill stone around the mind. Knowledge begin only after belief is conquered. Philosophy imply the use of created freedom of thought, having no guideline to restrict the Mind that think. Such a mental exercise allow the Mind to venture into the knowledge of the unknown, there where Divine Truth and Reality to be known without the doubt of belief. To philosophy is to freely think in order to get to know about that you are thinking about, and such knowledge come without standards or restriction to s0o call ethical obedience, as is so established by the restriction of belief, a use of mind that allow for excuses for not knowing that which is Divinely True and Real, beyond life.
Erich R. Thompson
Petkov, thank you for reiterating my emphasis that America is moving away from a theocracy. It is not necessary to initiate a correlation between the unknown and God, which is what many believers do, but, what is necessary, at least to the minds of investigative personality types, is to study the unknown so that we can completely remove the "un" and get ourselves to the known. Wherefore, does any one secular group of studious human beings believe that it is only within their expertise and discipline of their tool of discovery (math, science, philosophy, faith, etc.) to tackle this problem or that problem? What frustrates me is the lack of cohesion between said disciplines of discovery and why these champions of each said tool, bicker and squabble as if they are still children at recess. Evidently, each of these constituents of comprehension are vital to the massive symbiotic organism which is mankind. For countless years, the tool of faith was the dominant discipline of discovery, but as more and more people gathered together in bigger and bigger cities, other tools of learning rose. Excuse the preceding pun, but thank God for atheists and their courage in staring at a supposed man in the clouds and saying, "You gave me this brain so I am going to use it to how I see fit and if it means I am skeptical of this "blind faith" paradox, blast me with a lightning bolt then!" Suffice to say, the lightning bolt never comes. It is apparent to me that the biggest problem between different forms of discernment is the lack of faith in each other's, human beings, credentials and expertise. Just as a religious leader should respect and keep an open mind and REALLY DIGEST what a scientist is teaching, vis a vis, a scientist should respect and keep an open mind and REALLY DIGEST what a religious leader is teaching. This applies to any conflicting means of apprehension, for the mind behind the understanding is so beautiful, so complex and advanced, that it is ignorant, in itself, to throw away a perspective, albeit even the most vague ones. For the complex operating system behind a truly believed concept or thought is truly complex and advanced from billions of years of evolution, or God. Either way, we as homo sapiens are intrinsically special. As science, mathematics, communication, philosophy, and other means of perceiving the world and understanding it, rise and take a place next to religion on more equal footing, mankind must learn to coexist or we will continue to evolve at a slow rate, let alone devolve or be annihilated. Ergo, the importance of unbelief is becoming increasingly evident for it is skepticism that leads to insightful advances in understanding our universe, our reality, our God- whatever each of those are!
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The Importance of Unbelief

Stephen Fry
Comedian

If you assume there’s no afterlife, Stephen Fry says, you’ll likely have a fuller, more interesting life.

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