TopNotch wrote on 06/16/10 at 03:05:06:
I have found that for the most part, Scientists, Mathematicians, Doctors and many other people whose livlihoods depend heavily on empirical proof/proofs have the hardest time reconciling the fact that God exists in the absence incontrovertible evidence.
It's not that there is an absence of incontrovertable evidence; it's that there is an absence of
any evidence. The supposed god never does anything and never shows up; and prayer availeth not. You look at nature, and it manifests precisely no interest in the welfare of mankind, which is something mankind alone has to look out for. I scan my experience in vain for any obvious, or even faint, manifestation of a god. So while I admit that the world as it is is not inconsistent with some exceedingly retiring god's existence, it nevertheless appears to be empty of any spiritual entities. At least, I have never encountered any.
TopNotch wrote on 06/16/10 at 03:05:06:
The existence of God is primarily faith based and this is why religious arguments with non-believers always go nowhere. For most non-believers/athiests, agnostics whatever, it usually takes something dramatic to happen in their lives, for them to consider the possibility that there exists something in the Universe greater than themselves.
This really is a straw man, and it conveys the uncharitable assumption that unbelievers are self-centered. Obviously there exists something greater than ourselves, and that is the Cosmos itself in all its immensity and grandeur. It is something of which I stand in awe, fear even, considering its destructive capacity in relation to everything I value, but it is not something that I suppose to have a personality or to have any interest in me either malevolent or benign. See my post above in which I equate the set of all existing things to the Cosmos.
TopNotch wrote on 06/16/10 at 03:05:06:
I cannot prove the existence of God, but keenly believe we were not created by accident.
Look at the relative importance of our star on a map of this galaxy, then consider that this galaxy is but a middling one in a vast array of galaxies. Do you then suppose that if the Cosmos were capable of any concern, we would be central to it? Or similarly, this planet is 4.5 billion years old; our race, about 200,000. Do you think that 4.4498 billion years was but a prelude to us?
Finally, I assume you are aware that the standard scientific account of our origin on this planet is that it was indeed the result of mundane, unpurposeful processes mostly having to do with the combination of oxygen and hydrogen.
TopNotch wrote on 06/16/10 at 03:05:06:
I also believe we have a soul and that there is more to our being than simply life and death.
Really? Do you suppose that dogs have souls that go on to some sort of dog heaven? Birds? Fish? Worms? Bacteria? Algae? But leaving aside any notion of the soul, personally I think that our lives do indeed have significance beyond simply birth and death, and that is the purposes that we ourselves find worthy while living.