Le 21/04/13 00:07, Leigh Johnston a �crit :
>> There is no god.
>>
>> thank you
Proof?
On 04/21/13, jacob navia wrote:
> Religion is a mental illness.
I disagree. There is a book from a German psychologist Manfred L�tz
("Irre! Wir behandeln die Falschen", "Crazy! We treat the wrong ones")
that was confronted with the thesis that Francis of Assisi suffered from
schizophrenia because he had acustic hallucinations of imperative
character (he heard voices from the cross that told him to re-build some
church).
However, Francis of Assisi was a communicative and open-minded man who
did not break his connections with other people. Quite in contrast, he
founded a world-wide movement of poverty (Armut, don't know whether this
is the correct translation) and charity.
So from the perspective of a psychologist, Francis of Assisi would not
be considered ill because he did not suffer from his state. By that
definition, only very few religios people would be considered ill, and I
doubt that the percentage of ill religious people should be higher than
the percentage of mentally ill non-religious people.
> It leads to violence, reject of
> "non-believers", and delusions like believing in the existence of
> invisible gods, angels, demons, and all kind of creatures that no one
> besides the sick person can see or detect anywhere.
I can see your point. If someone walks around and says: "I can see
Napoleon", he is very likely taken to the next hospital. If he instead
said that he could see the arch-angel Michael, people would most likely
leave him alone. A bit unfair, isn't it?
> Some religions go through a specially violent phase, where they start
> waging war against "the infidels", for example christians with their
> crusades, or now islamists with their "jihad".
I believe that the Christian crusades were only partly motivated by
religious ambitions. I think most people joined the crusade for
commercial reasons.
> In the last month, buddhists killed musulmans in Birmania, islamists
> killed christians in Egypt, Jews killed musulmans in Gaza, etc. All
> those religious conflicts are manifestations of this mental illness.
> Those wars can go for decades, even centuries, with people killing each
> other because some invisible god tells them to do so.
It's hard to tell which of the modern conflicts are also camouflaged as
religious conflicts while secular interests are the driving force.
> The Boston terrorists were deeply religious people, as their 9/11
> counterparts, and many many others that killed their fellow beings
> to satisfy their god. In ancient times religion led people to kill
> children (sacred offerings) for their gods or to do all kinds of hideous
> acts because it is often the case that god needs human blood.
Sacrifice is a kind of violence where one can exclude any other
motivation but the religious. In that regard, sacrifice should be
condemned. However, there is one form of sacrifice that gives us some
headache: self-sacrifice. Apparently lots of people had been waiting in
line in order to get sacrificed for the Aztecan gods.
Is that bad? After all, it seems as if those people _wanted_ to be
sacrified of their own free will.
I don't know. It may be similar to the situation in World War I and II
where many people joined the forces because "everybody else did". It
would be interesting to know what would happen if one of the Aztecan
refused to be sacrificed. If he would then be sacrificed forcefully, the
whole aspect of the own free will would be moot.
> Let's stop this illness. Let's see the reality face to face:
>
> THERE IS NO GOD!
>
> Proof:
> -----
>
> It is said that god is "all powerful". Let's assume that: there exists
> an all powerful being.
And this is where the proof goes wrong: Even though divine beings are
often be described as "all powerful" it does not mean that divine beings
actually have to be "all powerful". Maybe those prophets who described
their deity as "all powerful" actually meant that the deity is far more
powerful than ordinary human beings.
> Then:
>
> Can this being forget?
>
> EITHER:
> He can't forget, then he is not "all powerful" since there is one
> thing he can't do: forget.
That doesn't hold water. I don't see why the deity in question should
not be able to decide to forget things. After all, Jehova's Witnesses
believe that people don't have a soul but are will be re-create by God
in paradise "from memory". If God decides to leave out people, He simply
forgets them.
> OTHERWISE:
>
> He can forget. But then, he can't remember what he has forgotten then he
> is not "all powerful" either!
>
> CONCLUSION:
>
> The existence of an "all powerful" being is a contradiction in itself.
I have seen lots of such "proofs". Probably the funniest is Douglas
Adams' Babel fish. The saddest one from Rolf Hochhuth's "Der
Stellvertreter" / "The Deputy".
> But logic will never convince the sick. They need religion as the drug
> addict needs opium.
>
> We are too tolerant with this illness. It must be neutralized, religious
> people need to understand that they are SICK!!!
>
> Thank you and pass the word: There is no god in the heavens, no devil
> at the center of the earth. There are no angels nor demons, there is
> NO JUSTIFICATION for any crime since there isn't any god to die for.
You seem to be very sure about that (like Leigh), even though I see no
conclusive proof from you. I think that there can be things that are not
perceivable by me (after all I do not claim that there can be no
gravitional waves because _I_ haven't seen them yet). Who knows.
Unless you can present some facts, I would say that you only _believe_
that there is no God. Of course, your claim is much harder to prove
because it involves a universal quantificator, whereas religious people
only have to deal with an existential quantificator ;-)
Regards,
Stuart