dartagnan wrote:The more I learn about evolution and sociobiology (I don't discount it, of course I have a degree in a field of social sciences...) the more arguments for God seem just patently absurd.
Since social science and evolution has absolutely nothing to do with the question of God, your attempt to connect these dots makes me wonder what it is you're studying.
I think I stated the more I learn about evolution the entire notion that God created anything seems more and more absurd, to me. I mentioned sociobiology because it delves into aspects of human social behavior. Understanding that human behavior can be traced to evolution, also, makes God dwindle, for me.
I was going to approach (on MAD) the evolution of bacteria and see if there were any that objected to the scientific fact of bacteria evolving. Then, from there work my way up and ask why man is set aside as not being evolved, yet, created?
Evolution has nothing to do with the question of God. That's a myth, and most theists seem to have no problem with evolution. It might have something to say about some particular relgious beliefs regarding the origins of man, but the question of God is entirely reasonable, as is evidenced by the fact that many intelligent and reasonable people, even former devout atheists, have reached the same conclusion.
I have never said evolution discounts God and I've stated the opposite on this board a few times, yet, for me, understanding social behavior, cultural evolution, and biological evolution strips away many of the arguments people have made for God belief, to me. I don't see how by using reason God belief is derived. I know there are those much more intelligent than I that believe in God, yet, I have never seen a convincing argument where they draw on evidence and reason to form this belief.
Something was mentioned that humans have always felt or sensed the divine, so, they sought it because somehow or another they knew the truth value of it.
This is more reasonable than Dawkins' disproved arguments that people simply become religious for the same reasons Muslims tend to be born on Muslm continents and children tend to accept belief in Santa Clause. His theory is decimated by the simple fact that intelligent adults from all corners of the world reason with the data throughout their lives and follow the evidence to the conclusion that a God exists.
Well, I think it's a combination of, perhaps, something innate and cultural.
I think it's possible that evolution and cultural evolution can explain God belief.
It can't, or at the least, it hasn't. Aggresive attempts by the New Atheists to prove that it does strike me as desperate because most of these rely on wild theories that are no more scientifically grounded than most religious beliefs.
Well, neurotheology most definitely looks at innate aspect to God belief. There is other scientific research that seeks out why people have spiritual experiences. Even looking at mirror neurons we can see how we just pretty much mimic those about us and emotions can sweep through crowds. Laughing is contagious. Crying can become contagious. We are social creatures and in light of that there can be innate aspects to us that predispose us to have experiences and then the culture pretty much dictates what we label these experiences as.
Was it advantageous for people to have spiritual experiences or is it just a leftover from a primitive mind?
False dilemma, because it s neither. The best way to understand the reasons for belief is to listen to their reasons. The argument from design is perhaps the oldest. And this was popular long before the cosomological evidence started to support the existence of God. How did they come to think this way? Via exposure to the natural world.
You don't know it's neither. There is scientific research that seeks to look into spiritual/mystical/numinous experiences and even some theists grasp on to this research as pointing to God designing us with an ability to sense him.
Reasons for belief? You think most people that believe in God throughout history and even now listed reasons for their belief and thought of cosmological evidence to support their belief? I rather doubt that.
In any event, these kinds of wild theories hoping evolution can explain modern beliefs, are untestable, so to accept them means to throw the scientific method out the window. Evolution doesn't explain "God belief," despite the wishful thinking from the New Atheists like Dennett and Dawkins.
Evolution explains changes over time. If there is scientific research that specifically looks to unlock portions of our brain that light up when undergoing religious experiences then why is this any different than looking into the other aspects of human evolution? We know language evolved. Culture evolves. Brains have evolved. This is fact.
I have creases in my palms. I can stare into them and attempt to unravel the mysteries of my fate and past by tracing them and interpreting these lines. Interestingly enough many, many, many other cultures look to palms to unlock hidden "truths".
Nothing to do with perceiving a divine creator of all that is.
I was attempting to draw a parallel between a part of my body that is apparent for all to see and everyone has pretty much similiar. My palms are the way they are because of genetic factors. Now, I mix a genetic factor with a cultural belief that "truth" can be found there and you get a way to see how the two mix to form false beliefs.
Because many people through out history, and different cultures, sensed a "truth" is this something I, too, should look to?
No, and that isn't why people get into palm reading. They get into palm reading because they were exposed to its bull. On the other hand, acknolwedging the existence of a superior being responsible for all that is, requires exposure to nothing more the natural world.
The palm is natural! I can see it, by God!!!