Robert_S wrote:... there is a Supreme Being slot that needs to be filled by something?

Robert_S wrote:... there is a Supreme Being slot that needs to be filled by something?
tattuchu wrote:Robert_S wrote:... there is a Supreme Being slot that needs to be filled by something?
Our life decisions are based on irrational feelings whether we like it or not. Reason can help predict but can't determine our feeling about the prediction. Whether you say God told you do it, or whether you pretend that you consciously decided to want what you want, neither is particularly truthful.amused wrote:Back to the question in the post title - No, I don't think that people who believe in god are inherently stupid. I know that I'm a part of something much bigger than I, and that there are parts of it we haven't yet discovered. Those parts might also include some sort of system-wide intelligence that could be called god. That is a matter of scientific discovery.
Religions, on the other hand, are man-made concepts that pretend to know things that are not now knowable. So yes, it would be stupid to base your life on a belief system that has no supporting evidence for its truthfulness.
Some of our decisions are based on irrational feelings, others are not.hiyymer wrote:Our life decisions are based on irrational feelings whether we like it or not. Reason can help predict but can't determine our feeling about the prediction. Whether you say God told you do it, or whether you pretend that you consciously decided to want what you want, neither is particularly truthful.amused wrote:Back to the question in the post title - No, I don't think that people who believe in god are inherently stupid. I know that I'm a part of something much bigger than I, and that there are parts of it we haven't yet discovered. Those parts might also include some sort of system-wide intelligence that could be called god. That is a matter of scientific discovery.
Religions, on the other hand, are man-made concepts that pretend to know things that are not now knowable. So yes, it would be stupid to base your life on a belief system that has no supporting evidence for its truthfulness.
If our actions are determined by our brains, and our brains are creating our experience, how could our decisions be rational and conscious? It can't be the experience of "I deciding" that is actually deciding.Coito ergo sum wrote:Some of our decisions are based on irrational feelings, others are not.hiyymer wrote:Our life decisions are based on irrational feelings whether we like it or not. Reason can help predict but can't determine our feeling about the prediction. Whether you say God told you do it, or whether you pretend that you consciously decided to want what you want, neither is particularly truthful.amused wrote:Back to the question in the post title - No, I don't think that people who believe in god are inherently stupid. I know that I'm a part of something much bigger than I, and that there are parts of it we haven't yet discovered. Those parts might also include some sort of system-wide intelligence that could be called god. That is a matter of scientific discovery.
Religions, on the other hand, are man-made concepts that pretend to know things that are not now knowable. So yes, it would be stupid to base your life on a belief system that has no supporting evidence for its truthfulness.
People pretend that God tells them to do things when our actions are determined by our brains and our brains' interactions with the outside world.
Are there colors in the world without our brain? Are there sounds in the world without our brain? Is there solidity and thing-ness without our brain or just a sea of molecules? Is there agency without our brain creating it, or just a physical caused reality that creates the experience of "I deciding" as part of the mechanism?Coito ergo sum wrote:Our brains don't "create" our experience. Our brains receive information from our senses, and sends impulses out to our muscles to move us around to do what our brains want to do. That's where our consciousness is - in our brains. The world exists irrespective of our brains.
I do like that image ,it would look good on my front doorCoito ergo sum wrote:
Yes, of course. We have machines that can detect colors. Colors are wavelengths of light. There are different wavelengths of light in existence with or without our brains. Our brains receive signals from our eyes which process wavelengths of light and interpret those wavelengths. There are shapes without our brains too - the Earth is still spheroid with or without our brains, and the same wavelengths of light bounce off the Earth whether we're here or not.hiyymer wrote:Are there colors in the world without our brain?Coito ergo sum wrote:Our brains don't "create" our experience. Our brains receive information from our senses, and sends impulses out to our muscles to move us around to do what our brains want to do. That's where our consciousness is - in our brains. The world exists irrespective of our brains.
Yes - what we call sounds are vibrations of air molecules. There would still be those vibrations with or without our brains. Our brains don't create the sound waves. Our brains interpret sound waves.hiyymer wrote:
Are there sounds in the world without our brain?
There is a solidity and thingness without our brain. If I die today, the world goes on without me. The universe went on for 13.5 billion years without human brains, and stars and planets became solid and formed quite nicely without a brain.hiyymer wrote:
Is there solidity and thing-ness without our brain or just a sea of molecules?
I don't know what you mean by "agency." You'll have to define that for me.hiyymer wrote:
Is there agency without our brain creating it, or just a physical caused reality that creates the experience of "I deciding" as part of the mechanism?
Indeed, but it is the nature of the interpretation that is fascinating. The "redness" of red - where does that come from? It doesn't exist in the universe outside of our brains/minds. Qualia bother me.Coito ergo sum wrote:Yes, of course. We have machines that can detect colors. Colors are wavelengths of light. There are different wavelengths of light in existence with or without our brains. Our brains receive signals from our eyes which process wavelengths of light and interpret those wavelengths.hiyymer wrote:Are there colors in the world without our brain?Coito ergo sum wrote:Our brains don't "create" our experience. Our brains receive information from our senses, and sends impulses out to our muscles to move us around to do what our brains want to do. That's where our consciousness is - in our brains. The world exists irrespective of our brains.
Yes, our brains create what we think of as red - the differentiation between colors. But, the brain doesn't create the differing wavelengths. Those are there whether we are here or not. Our brains don't create differing wavelengths any more than our brains create the chemical compositions of different materials.devogue wrote:Indeed, but it is the nature of the interpretation that is fascinating. The "redness" of red - where does that come from? It doesn't exist in the universe outside of our brains/minds. Qualia bother me.Coito ergo sum wrote:Yes, of course. We have machines that can detect colors. Colors are wavelengths of light. There are different wavelengths of light in existence with or without our brains. Our brains receive signals from our eyes which process wavelengths of light and interpret those wavelengths.hiyymer wrote:Are there colors in the world without our brain?Coito ergo sum wrote:Our brains don't "create" our experience. Our brains receive information from our senses, and sends impulses out to our muscles to move us around to do what our brains want to do. That's where our consciousness is - in our brains. The world exists irrespective of our brains.
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