ozemc wrote: Well, I will agree that equating God with Santa Claus is just plain silly.
I never said that. Again, you misread.
ozemc wrote: So, once again, you make the claim that God is just "made up".
Of course the god idea is made up. Nobody can prove they've seen him or that he exists, therefore, it follows that he was, at some point, made up. Lots of gods have been made up over the centuries (Zeus, Aries, Poseidon, etc). It's not my idea that he was made up. He just was. Even you said we don't know what god is, so whatever anyone attributes to a creator is made up, as is the creator itself.
ozemc wrote: Basically, your argument is that "my idea of no god is better than your idea of a god." And you're very condescending and elitist about it, even to the point of questioning the sanity of those that would believe it, using your Santa Claus analogy (not really a very good one, in my opinion).
Again, it's not an idea. God, in all his separate incarnations, was made up. There is no proof otherwise. If you can't prove he exists (or anything else, for that matter), the default position to take is that he doesn't.
Sorry (well, not really) that you don't like the style of my delivery of this message, but it's just a tad annoying that people equate probabilities of existence with probabilities of nonexistence when they simply aren't equal given the available evidence. The Santa Claus analogy is absolutely perfect in demonstrating the fallacy of equating probabilities of existence and nonexistence.
ozemc wrote: I know, these poor dumb idiots who actually believe there might be something, or someone, that created all this. How stupid of us, right? I guess we don't have the scientific training that you have or your particular insight.
I would argue that all of what we've learned about how the universe works, the immense distances involved, how evolution works, etc. all point to a creator. I just can't see how it could all happen by accident. It seems too methodical. Could I be wrong? Sure.
I don't know that I'd characterize all that believe in a creator as dumb idiots as much as I'd attribute it to poor training, lazy thinking, indoctrination and conditioning, and a measure of ignorance of the facts about evolution and the nature of the universe. What I will say is that if the proper information and training was provided a person and they chose to *really* think about it... and they *still* came away from it with a belief in god, then yeah... dumb idiot.
There are several examples in nature where planning is clearly not present, and no supposed "evidence" of real forethought exists, but I notice that people who do believe in a "planner" tend to ignore those.
ozemc wrote: The point is, no one can possibly know completely, one way or the other. Science no more discredits the idea of god than it can claim it.
It all boils down to faith.
I have faith that there is a creator. Can I prove it? No. Am I absolutely sure? No.
You have faith that there is no god. Can you prove it? No. Can you be absolutely sure? No.
We both hope we're right, but we'll never completely know 100%. At least not in this lifetime.
I don't have any faith at all that there's no god. It doesn't require faith to not believe in something for which there is no evidence. Do I need faith to not believe in the tooth fairy, orcs, goblins, the Easter bunny, or the flying spaghetti monster? No. Do I know they don't exist? No, but their probability or existence is extremely low, based on the evidence. It's not that difficult a concept, really.
Does it take faith to feel confident about walking through a wall that doesn't exist without hurting myself? Of course not. Well... what if most people in the world tell you the wall is there but you just can't see it? Does it still take faith? Perhaps, but only to disagree with them, not that the wall doesn't exist. If you're making a case that it takes faith to disagree with a whole bunch of people, I'd buy that, but that's not the same as having faith there is no god.
While I understand your agnostic point of view (I was an agnostic for a very long time myself), I think it's mostly based on a feeling your comfortable with and not on what the evidence around us really says.
And given the fact that you seem to be lost on what you perceive as my delivery and are avoiding the main message, I’m not sure why I wrote all this, except to say that it was purging for me.
God belief is for people who don't want to live life on the universe's terms.