CoffeeDrinker
Bluelighter
^I definitely agree with you about the taste for the notion, though I'd probably say that I have a stronger distaste for atheistic nihilism (forgive me if that's redundant). I definitely have no taste for sheer determinism or sheer coincidence though. I'm probably an adherent to the Middle Way philosophy, if only I knew how to prove it.
I guess my main point in this thread is that since there's no way for science to really touch the question of god's existence then it makes having soft reasons like positive mental side-effects and so forth acceptable as reasons. If we're talking about something that is necessarily less than logical then it's really more about feelings than solid arguments anyway, that goes for any point of view though because even a refusal to believe anything without solid, substantial, evidence is the result of certain feelings reinforcing certain thought patterns.
Dislike for Christianity or monotheism probably influenced the OP in making this thread, and that undoubtedly came about as a result of some kind of baggage, and so it's not purely the result of dialectical thought.
I guess my main point in this thread is that since there's no way for science to really touch the question of god's existence then it makes having soft reasons like positive mental side-effects and so forth acceptable as reasons. If we're talking about something that is necessarily less than logical then it's really more about feelings than solid arguments anyway, that goes for any point of view though because even a refusal to believe anything without solid, substantial, evidence is the result of certain feelings reinforcing certain thought patterns.
Dislike for Christianity or monotheism probably influenced the OP in making this thread, and that undoubtedly came about as a result of some kind of baggage, and so it's not purely the result of dialectical thought.