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comment by thegouch
thegouch  ·  4125 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: Do physicists believe in God?

Many theoretical physicists use their imagination in order to have deep thought about the universe and its establishment, yet it rarely leads them to a "God." Are you saying in order to believe in God, you have to have an imagination--just like you would if you believed in Santa Clause? You have to have faith to believe in Santa Clause as a kid, but once you realize that it was just a story that old people told you when you weren't old enough to understand how things really worked, it probably wasn't that hard to disbelieve.

My view is the same as yours ("I don't have all the answers, and I'm okay with that"), and I have a pretty good imagination, but none of this leads me to any belief in a god that oversees our moral aptitude. If your definition of God is simply all that you can't understand, then I suppose I'd submit to that philosophy, but most God-fearing people don't stop there. May I ask, are you a practicing member of a religion?





BLOB_CASTLE  ·  4125 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I'd definitely say that in order to believe in God one must have an imagination. I can't really imagine someone believing in God and not having an imagination.

Yeah, I know what you mean. I'm not sure if this argument stands for a conscience God, but at least the existence of one.

I've grown up Christian (specifically Baptist). I hesitate to say this because of how many Christians have given the religion as a whole (and I dislike the word "religion" also, I prefer "spirituality"). I believe that the core of being a Christian is to love everyone. Too often people don't do that, which sucks. I try to live my life with this mentality and it's worked out so far.

theZproject  ·  4125 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    I'd definitely say that in order to believe in God one must have an imagination. I can't really imagine someone believing in God and not having an imagination.

I think it's quite easy for people to have a belief in God and have no imagination. For a large group of believers God becomes the answer for anything they can't wrap their intellect or imagination around. Don't have the imagination to think about tiny incremental changes over billions of years leading to complex and intelligent life? I'm not saying your particular belief in God fails prey to this kind of thinking, but I think it's quite easy to imagine someone having a belief in God and a complete and utter lack of imagination.

BLOB_CASTLE  ·  4125 days ago  ·  link  ·  

I think we both have valid arguments. In they end, it seems that we both have misconceptions about the other based on how the ill-taught of our kind portrays themselves to others.

theZproject  ·  4125 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Actually I don't think you have an argument at all, merely a broad sweeping generalization that is obviously false. And I think that claiming knowledge of me by my "kind" is the real misconception here.

BLOB_CASTLE  ·  4125 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Kind was used for lack of a better term. We both obviously come from two different schools of thought. What I was trying to say was that both of our mentalities have equal merit to them.