And if you bothered to look up the definition of atheism, you wouldn't find the word religion anywhere in there.Ei Em wrote:
Strong answer. I would google Atheism and start finding non-god believing religions.FEOS wrote:
Name a religion that doesn't have something to do with a God or Gods. There isn't one.
Their belief in the holiness of a rat makes that rat a god. Their belief in nature as an entity of some sort makes nature a god/gods.Ei Em wrote:
African tribe religions, such as belief in nature. In Africa, there's HUGE amount of religions that has nothing to do with god's, existence or anything that is not seen. They can believe in rat and its holiness but it still isn't god. It is just rat.
Now you are confusing an aspect of a philosophy (Taoism) with religion. Philosophy and religion are not synonymous.Ei Em wrote:
Religions based on Qi. There's HUGE amount of religions believing in some form of Qi. Some religions have the essence to believing that everything has no start nor end. It is just flow of Qi.
You seem to think that it takes a defined deity to be considered a god. It doesn't.Ei Em wrote:
Bad thing with internet is that it's difficult to find religions without God/Gods because everything seems to be explained for western/modern people. Getting information about religions that has nothing to do with deities is very difficult unless you travel in Africa, China, India, Nepal, Laos, Cambodia, etc. It's all because of western people who believe that every religion has something to do with deities. After reading one 100 page book with elephant sized letters, that some western fat ass wrote, we go and write in Wikipedia how we know everything about Laozi and his doings.
Nice rant about the internet, though. Have you personally traveled to all those places and studied their religious teachings? Have you taken a comparative theology course?
Do you KNOW that we will ever get to the point where science can explain (with LAWS, not THEORIES) everything in the universe? The universe is vast enough that we won't ever get there. There will always be something that can't be explained by science. And once it gets explained, there will be something else.Ei Em wrote:
FEOS wrote:
If you think we will EVER get to a point where science explains everything, you're not half as scientific as you think you are.Do you believe that your upper quote is true? Do you KNOW that people will never know everything?FEOS wrote:
Where the hell are you coming from? What you just typed made no sense in the context of what I said.
EDIT:Basically I want to know that if you really believe (or even better if you KNOW) this to be true.FEOS wrote:
Of course there is such a thing in science as "we can't explain". There's far more that can't be explained in science than can be.
It's relative. Your absolutist approach to science shows that you aren't as scientific as you think you are.Ei Em wrote:
I asked you because you said that I am not half as scientific as I think I am. So I thought you would to know how scientific I am... I'd like to know it too.FEOS wrote:
How scientific you think you are. Which is far more than--it appears--you actually are.
I never called you a stupid goon. If you choose to label yourself as such, I can't stop you.Ei Em wrote:
But can you explain anyway, as I obviously don't understand. Take it as a test, can you teach stupid goon (me) to understand what you mean.FEOS wrote:
Re-read what I wrote. It's perfectly clear. You are making an inference I did not imply.
Nonsense. Theistic religions do not disapprove of the scientific method. Some might disapprove of certain experiments on moral grounds, but the overall scientific method is not a problem.Ei Em wrote:
Basically that religions (theistic) does not approve scientific methods of explaining that "why". And it can be quite hard to explain everything if we don't even know it all. "Why" is the very last question to answer, before that we should know everything else.FEOS wrote:
That made no sense whatsoever...particularly in the context of what I was saying.
"Why" is the first question asked. Otherwise, there's nothing to pursue.
Depends on the religion. Some are more open-minded than others. Followers of the three major theistic religions have used the scientific method...showing that religion and science can easily coexist.Ei Em wrote:
Doesn't really. I just want to know what route religion is using.FEOS wrote:
Why does it matter what route religion is using? It's simply a way for people to gain comfort by getting answers that satisfy their needs. Science does the same thing in its own way.
I'm sure momma's proud. Don't dislocate your shoulder patting yourself on your back.Ei Em wrote:
Might very well be. This is my 4th needed language and I have hard time placing commas, prepositions and create fluent text.FEOS wrote:
Maybe there is a language issue..
The language issue I was referring to involved basic comprehension. Still not convinced you've got it.
“Everybody is a genius. But if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree, it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.”
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular
― Albert Einstein
Doing the popular thing is not always right. Doing the right thing is not always popular