Fluffy, on Dec 12 2007, 03:54 AM, said:
all this babling about finding out if god exists by doing something is nuts.
If you do something to see if god exists your intention is not to do something, is to see if god exists. And it won't work. You have to really mean it.
Intention is very important.
Oh I meant it! I took my religion very seriously, I came to doubt that it was true, I was strongly warned about the ill effects such doubt might have on the well being of my soul, and I decided to take on the issue directly. The fact that I came to the conclusion that it was not for me is not proof that I wasn't serious about it. I was very serious and my transition from believer to non-believer took place over a number of years.
One of the effects of taking it all seriously, I think, is that I am completely comfortable with others who have taken it seriously and have come to different conclusions. I don't care much for people like Robertson who browbeat and threaten in order to impose their views on others, and I am unhappy with someone running for president as the Christian candidate just as I would be if he were running as the Protestant candidate or the Baptist candidate or as the White candidate. Either you want to be president of all the people or you don't. My discomfort is not with their faith but with their attempts to push their faith onto the rest of us who do not share it. I am not at all uncomfortable with, say, John McCain's faith, one of the reasons being that he seems to feel no need to inform me of what it is. Or to ask about mine either, for that matter.
My suggestion that we ask for an experiment to resolve the issue was to see if anyone thought that this could be done. You seem to think it cannot, and I agree. I am no more likely to develop a belief in God as a result of a scientific experiment than a religious person would be likely to drop his faith as a result of science. Possibly someone can come up with an experiment that would cause me to rethink this, but I doubt it.