science is the pursuit of looking at what seems to be abstract and finding the concrete in it. religion is the pursuit of taking what is concrete and turning it into supernatural legend.
Yep. I'm with you so far. Both looking for patterns in the concrete world AND extrapolating from there outward to what could lay beyond, are both pretty normal, integral parts of the human experience.
What really shits me is when christians who favour themselves to be highly intelligent go and say shit like "you can't prove god doesn't exist." riiiiight. well, the christian god can be kind of an asshole.
Depending on what the Christian in question takes as their most reliable source as to the nature of God. This is going to vary quite a bit from one Christian Church to another. Back when I considered myself a Christian, I always considered most the portrayals of the Old Testament God as misguided, but understandable given the context the writers likely lived in. I was always taught (and still believe) that theology and metaphysics have come a long way since then.
if there's a chance he exists, there's also a good chance all the other gods that were ever prayed to since time immemorial also exist and thus, why continue praying to this one asshole god, in houses of worship long ago demented by the catholic empire? for crying out loud, the catholics even made a fucking medici the pope! what the fuck do they know about ANYTHING that JC was put on the cross for?
A very good question to ask, indeed. I'm all for taking to task those who claim to take someone great as their hero, but then, hypocritically, act contrarily to this person's stated principles.
Sure all gods ever prayed to since time immemorial exist. A god is nothing more than a human approximation (usually anthropomorphized) for the ultimate reality that binds and contains all being. This ultimate One is utterly without attributes, and thus not easy to put into words or images. How any given person grasps this ultimate reality and whittles it down to a manageable size, will depend on what life has handed him.
science may not be able to prove it's all a crock of shit, but that's only because religious zealots take any crushing defeat by logic as a reason to evolve the legend so that "god," his whereabouts, and his actions become even more abstract and even less possible to probe by scientific methods because all the religious convolutions leave the scientists wondering how sane these people must be in the first place!
No, that's not why. Science cannot confirm or deny the existence of anything supernatural, because statements concerning that which is by definition beyond the natural and observable are not testable or falsifiable.
this is the major problem with monotheism. there are literally so many fucking contradictions plaguing every mainstream religion that there's no way in hell a true man of science would ever sign up to worship a faith that can NEVER be reconciled with concrete proof.
If an article of faith were ever to be supplied with concrete proof, not only would it cease to be an article of faith, but it would cease to be supernatural too.
And I think if you read the surveys ebola? and I talk about, you'll eat your words. Plenty of people who approach the natural world with a very scientific attitude, give free rein to their hopes, dreams, imaginations, and inherited lore, when approaching the great unknown that lies beyond the natural world.
You're not one of these people. That's cool. I understand the thought processes that make this so for you. But please understand that this is a thinking style preference on your part, which preemptively says yes to science and no to religion. It's nothing intrinsic about being a scientist.
it's simply a collection of cults for which believers will say anything to defend and because of that, every single believer has their own interpretation of their religion. why not just take the cosmic being out of it, and choose simply to live by the virtues extolled by the mainstream religions? they're good, concrete virtues to follow, and i dare say that without the cosmic being and fervent sectarianism associated with these virtues simply because of a supposed deity standing behind them, we would have a lot less murder done in the world in the name of these cosmic abstractions.
We'd have just as much murder, for other reasons, if religion was done away with. It's perfectly human to search for meaning and relate back (what 'religion' literally means in Latin) to the source of all being any way one can, even if that involves putting a human face on the source of all being. This may not be your cup o' joe, but there's nothing odd or perverse about it.
given these realities, i think it's rather silly to say it's a false dichotomy when it's clearly a clean break.
What we're running up against is a difference in thinking style preferences. Not an ideological deadlock.