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Richard65 · M
It's understandable to wish for something more, something beyond our ordinary existence. Science and modernity have offered answers to many things our ancestors couldn't understand so turned their minds to supernatural causes or spiritual influences. Anyone who says they have seen spirits or experienced supernatural phenomenon are talking purely subjectively. They might actually believe they saw or sensed something extraordinary, and, yes, there are real elements of the spectrum that exist but cannot be seen by humans (such as infrared). But to imagine there are supernatural spirits is just that - imagination. We crave something akin to a fairytale or a ghost story, just to make life seem more profound, more interesting - more MORE.

I'd suggest you might be denying yourself the myriad fascinating aspects of your life that ARE there and DO exist. You're just looking in the wrong places. You're seeking out one imaginary colour within an entire rainbow of real possibilities. I went for a walk in a local forest yesterday after reading that trees do actually communicate with one another through chemical interactions. That's not supernatural, that's scientific discovery. If a tree is infested with insects that threaten it, other trees transmit chemicals through their roots in order to help that tree rid itself of the infestation. Fungi effectively build entire communication networks right under your feet. This is extraordinary revelation, yet it's real and science exposed it and explained it. Look for the real, because real life is truly extraordinary if you can just see it. It's that reality that remains just out of sight for you. Not the supernatural.
DLight · 31-35, F
@newjaninev2 What smug nonsense. This is how it goes.
When a person makes a claim, whether that be a positive one (ex. "God exists") or a negative one (ex. "God doesn't exist") it's incumbent upon that person to present his or her reasons for why that particular claim was made. Evidence is always helpful, because you're trying to convince another person, and so recounting a personal experience, for example, won't be enough.
However, when it comes to personal beliefs, and you're not really concerned with winning someone over to your point of view, just living the best life you can in the only way you know how, an event that affected you personally is usually far more convincing than any evidence that some self-proclaimed sceptic may come up with.
Whether you like it or not, that's the way most people (like around 96.7%) on Earth construct their worldview; i.e. they rely upon their intuition, past experiences, and what makes sense to them, and not any "evidence" that some smug atheist thinks will win them over. They don't care about that crap.
newjaninev2 · 56-60, F
@DLight
...you're not really concerned with winning someone over to your point of view ... an event that affected you personally is usually far more convincing...

Why be concerned with convincing if you're not trying to win them over?

The motto of the Royal Society is Nullius in verba (Latin for 'take nobody's word for it')
DLight · 31-35, F
@newjaninev2 I'm not. I don't care if we don't agree on whatever it is we do not agree on.

Kwek00 · 41-45, M
In any case, I now believe that there is just so much more to reality than most of us will ever realise, and to simply dismiss that likelihood is nothing short of stupid and arrogant.

Just let me know, when you have evidence of these things that I dismiss so you can proof not only that those things excist but also that I'm stupid and arrogant. I'll appreciate it when that ever happens... but I won't hold my breath.
Kwek00 · 41-45, M
@DLight Is that another presupposition? That I'm childish, and now your life is suddenly better because this believe saves you from ever having to answer the hard questions.

Well, I guess when the feeling of Virtue doesn't help out when defending an indefensible position, you can always pretend that your interlocutar is somehow beneath you so you don't even have to have the conversation.

The vast majority of us believe there is much more to reality than just what our five senses can detect. The mature response to this fact is of course to just accept it and move on,

Why is it the "mature" responds though... I guess you really like to play the "child" "mature" game... but it ain't really going to help you. Espescially not when you want to use your brain and come to valid conclussions.

What are you trying to prove?

That the idea you formulated is bad and doesn't work. And therefore the "mature" stance, is to reevaluate where you stand on the issue, and form a better idea.
Kwek00 · 41-45, M
@turtle777rescuer My apologies, your responds also got locked out because of a word. I'm not sure it was the D-word though... but i guess SW is hyper sensitive these days. There was a good reason why I labeled it that way though, but I already tried to convey that.

Yes... in that story, the line you gave me, makes perfect sense. Altough, I admitted to Dlight that never read the entire thing. I'm not opposed to everything inside of the bible from a reader likes a good story. I think the Bible is a treasure trove, for good prose from an ancient time.

I agree with your last part too. That's also, why I think that the line you quoted works with people that already grew up with the story. Hence, they don't "just believe", they were primed to do so. That's only for the majority though, that got born into a religious sphere. Outsiders can also get emotional apeals to the story... and that particulair line is often used to promote "virtue" in ignorance. And I don't think that's a smart thing.

The reason why it's not a smart thing... is because every charlatan creates some good emotion in their victim. The victim is either longing for something that they bought for a "cheap" prize, but will never receive. And it makes the victim feels good about themselves, because they made a "great deal" or "a good descision"... but only later found out that they are dooped out of money.

So I don't think the idea of "just believing" something... is convincing at all. And I think religious folk, also don't live their life like that. But for some reason (emotional attachment, growing up inside a certain atmosphere)... this one part of their life escapes scrutiny for arbritary reasons. And I question that aspect.
turtle777rescuer · 36-40, M
@Kwek00 I don't think it's just believing for believing sake... if God exists and he created us, He is (whatever word u want to use here that conveys ownership). Some people say Lord others say Master, He is above us and in if we appreciate life and living, He deserves our attention and gratitude. If u believe than He will receive that gratitude from us and reward us for it but only those who acknowledge that he is our creator/owner.

Now if He really is our creator and he owns us it's crazy that He lets us make our own decisions at all if you think about. He gave freewill to choose and thats what this whole life and trial is all about... there is a test of faith for every man. The spirit of evil is constantly at work to hinder the faith of man in God. Which will pass and which will fail?
Beetlejuice68 · 56-60, M
I love and appreciate science, but I also like the magic of the undiscovered or unexplained.
turtle777rescuer · 36-40, M
I clicked becauae I thought it said playstation
It makes sense to feel left out when others report experiences you haven’t had. Openness like this is healthy, it lets you stay curious without pretending to know everything. Thanks for sharing such a vulnerable realization.
Also as for genuine unexplained experience, some people interpret these occurrences as non-ordinary or spiritual events, that interpretation is valid for many. The few I experienced, I’ll toss up to (Emotional/psychological coping) the mind can generate comforting apparitions as a way to process loss.
Evidence is detectable, measurable, testable and falsified. Our five senses are not reliable data collectors, which is why we invented machines that can collect data accurately and without prejudice. These instruments are far more sensitive and reliable than any senses of human and animal. Reality hasn’t had an additional increase.

What can be asserted without evidence, can be dismissed without evidence.
DLight · 31-35, F
@BlueSkyKing By "evidence" you no doubt mean "scientific evidence", but where is the scientific evidence for the claim that we should only ever accept such evidence? Upon what evidence is it based? None. And the reason for this is because it's actually a philosophical position, a stance that can't be justified because it's self-refuting.
DLight · 31-35, F
@BlueSkyKing Do you have any thoughts of your own? I've noticed atheists just love to quote the people they apparently admire, but rarely do they come up with something original, or at least an argument that is interesting.
Anyway, do you really need evidence before you'll believe anything at all? I don't. For example, I believe in and accept the, purely philosophical, concept of objective reality. And the reality of the past, and the existence of other minds, and so I'm not a solipsist or dogmatic materialist. There's a name for the attitude expressed in the "meme" you've posted above, and it's called Logical Positivism, and it has gone out of fashion because it can't be justified.

 
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