Understanding how humans interact and how this changes over time strips away God being a mastermind of why humans are the way they are.
Naturally, but this doesn't explain why humans
are. Evolution can only go back so far. It does nothing to explain how life came to exist, it only speaks on how life evolved.
Biological evolution strips away the God made me just the way I am argument.
Not really. All they have to do is see evolution as God's way of makng life the way it is.
I've seen people say that without God there couldn't be love, altruism, and the sort -- this can be explained by scientific theories that explore why humans interact the way they do and the benefits to these interactions in the continuation of our species.
No, not really. For example, acting in a loving way doesn't necessarily benefit a species unless said species was designed to benefit from love. In light of adaptation and ntural selection, there is no proven theory to explain the evolution of an altruistic species.
The personal experience is stated as proof of God and, yet, my understanding of cultural tendencies to assign a serotonin rush to a specific entity helps me to understand why people are swayed by personal testimony and their own experiences.
That is a very simplisitic and idiotic argument for a theist to make. Serotonin rushes prove God exists?
Essentially understanding how humans interact strips away my need for God as the one that passes down morality.
Need has nothing to do with it really. I can accept an impersonal God without needing anything from it.
Understanding how cultures evolve explains how these beliefs are passed down from generation to generation and gradually change.
But not all humans believe in God because the tradition was passed down. Cultures from all corners of the world believe in a divine source. It is universal, but not for the reasons some atheist scientists would like to assume.
So, you want to dismiss materialistic approaches that have not been shown to be valid, yet, are comfortable with going with the default of God did it?
Did
what, specifically? If you're talking about the design of the universe, the materialists approach has yet to produce a theory that explains why the universal constants are that they are. So there is nothing to dismiss in this instance.
As far as why do humans tend to believe in God, I think the fact that virtually all humans do believe in God, should stand on its own merits, and should not be dismissed as simple delusion or sarotonin rushes or what not. Any other scientific study would begin with the question, why is the minority different? not the vast majority.
Scientists can study the natural world -- what would you have them study?
Not sure why you're asking that. Of course they can.
Most religions started out not worshiping a supreme entity. What religion can you reach back to in history where there was one supreme entity that has stayed the precise same way?
What does this matter? You're delving into religious practice, theological precepts, etc. All of these changethrough time, obviously. The universal constant in theism is the acceptance of a divine being, something greater than ourselves.
Didn't most religions start out with different gods and goddesses (or spirits) being responsible for aspects of the natural world? As people learned more about the natural world how did these beliefs evolve? How did the deities evolve? Did the deities morph into one grand deity that became outside the scope of what was known?
Not sure what this matters, but the major religions today are generally monotheistic. Christianity didn't "start out" polytheistic, neither did Islam or Judaism. It is a popular myth among many online atheists that there is a direct connect with all religions throughout human history, and that they began polytheistic and ended up monotheistic. There is little evidence to support this.
I said, in my opinion, that I think God belief can be explained as an innate feature, as well, as cultural.
And I'm saying that ths hasn't been shown. If you think that it is true anyway, then OK. I'm just pointing out that none of the sciences have substantiated this popular theory.
If there is something else I can add in there add it. Could there be other things? Sure. What are they? God exists? Is that the one thing it should be narrowed down to?
No, but it seems to be the one possibility some people insist on excluding.
Yet, that we're understanding that our brains are responsible for how we perceive the world is not that radical of a notion.
But the brain remains a mystery and the more scientists learn about it, the more they learn how little they really know about it. We can dissect teh brain and analyze it at the atomic level, we can monitor it and watch portions of the brain light up when we experience certain emotions, and yet we haven't the faintest understanding of it. We assume it is like a computer that processes information in some kind of language, yet the more we study the brain the more we see there isn't an observable language at work.
If we know God how do we do so, Kevin? Through our heart that beats blood?
No, through our perceptions of reality.
Why not look to the organ that is responsible for processing our perceptions of the world about us?
I'm not saying don't look at it. I'm just saying you can't analyze the brain and expect to find answers as to why humans believe in God.
I admit I haven't read much on this,yet, from what I understand the fine tuning argument rests on the idea that so many things must have come together just perfectly to allow life to form on this earth and who else but God could be responsible for this? God formed everything just so in order to create a marvelous world for us to live on and life to thrive (just the life we see here). I've read arguments that delve off into multiple universes... and it's all over my head at this point. I need to read more.
Good idea. I'd recommend John Leslie's
Universes.
Okay, well, I don't see that quoting religious text can be looked to for explanations when it can be shown that there are places that religious text falls down in explaining the natural world.
That's not why I quoted it. I was simply pointing out that the anthropic principle is a very old argument. Some of the oldest religious texts explain why God is reasonable. They argue that God is perceived naturally. Most theists agree. Nobody I know says they believe in God because their Mom told them to, or because their sister is a Baptist, or whatever. Virtually all of them claim some kind of spiritual confirmation and/or experience. These are not evidences that can be transferred to other atheists, but then they're not supposed to be.
People who open their minds can maybe perceive things they otherwise wouldn't have. Atheists shut their minds off to the spiritual because they have already taken it for granted that its all a matter of emotion or brain juices gone awry due to some circumstance. So they are dimsissed before they are even acknowledged.
We know of only five or six senses in humans. If you close your mind to a spiritual sense, then you'll never experience it. The same is true for sight and smell. Wearing a blindfold enhances your sense of hearing and smell and taste. So who is to say that these theists claiming a perception of the divine, aren't really just exercising another sense that science hasn't explained because it is untestable? We know other senses exist in some animals, and since evolution says we're all related in some form or another it shouldn't be a greap leap to believe humans have another sense unknown to scientists, whether overdeveoped or underdeveloped.
It proves that if I poke you in the right place your brain detects it and lights up. It proves that this is the organ responsible for processing how we interact with the world.
And that's all it proves.
Let me assume for a moment God exists. How do people know God? Through the brain?
Maybe, maybe not. We don't know really. Some people claim out of body experiences, where presumably, their brains were left behind.
If people are saying they are experiencing a presence of God and a certain portion of their brain lights up (same portion of the brain in other subjects, as well) then we can draw a few conclusions about that, can't we?
Only that a particular area of the brain responds when the person has that experience. So? But I am skeptical of any experiment where people were tested while "experiencing God." What exactly does that entail anyway? Praying? Seeing visions? Speaking in tongues? What were these people doing while hooked up to the machine?
Okay, well, if I had a portion of my brain removed I wouldn't be me.
Why not? People who have had the entire left side of their brain removed, live perfectly normal lives after rehabilitation. Whereas, if they were shot in the left side of their brain, they would have died.
“All knowledge of reality starts from experience and ends in it...Propositions arrived at by purely logical means are completely empty as regards reality." - Albert Einstein