RE: christian looking to understand athiests
August 18, 2015 at 4:31 am
(August 18, 2015 at 2:25 am)msid Wrote: hello, i am a born again christian who is looking to understand and discuss your reasons for being an athiest. i am NOT here to argue or change your mind.
Welcome aboard, oh born again person... Years after hearing that expression "born again", I still find it weird.
Oh well...
Reasons for being an atheist? None.
Reasons for believing other people when they tell me about the gods they themselves believe exist? None.
As I see it, all believers start out believing in other people's tales about their god(s). Then they develop what they call the actual belief in that god or gods.
Since I can't bring myself to believe such wacky tales, I am unable to come to that belief in any god.
Some knowledge of actual history, some practical psychology, and a bit of common sense tell me a likely story of how mankind developed all religions, from the simplest shamanism, to the most complex Buddhism... And you knew what? They all claim to know something about that which most humans fear the most: game over, the end, death. And yet, how could the people claiming all that know about it? It's far more likely that they made it up instead of actually finding out, taking advantage of a few psychological pitfalls in most people's reasoning skills...
Once the story is sold, it gets passed on by convincing the most gullible, the most vulnerable among us: the children.
With a story rolling through generations, it is expected to evolve, and develop into something ever more complex and, with objections from several individuals, become more abstract.
As an abstract construct, it can be used by the ruling class to implement a celestial baby sitter, thus facilitating law enforcement and control of the people's behavior, at a time when people are discovering agriculture and are starting to live in ever growing urban centers, this kind of control is required.
The immensity of the urban center can lead to a feeling of loneliness, given that people stop connecting as they did in a tribal setting... The temple, and gatherings within, fill that need for community.
So, all I see is a very human fear of death, coupled with a very human ability to lie, coupled with a very human gullibility, coupled with a very human thirst for power, coupled with a very human desire of belonging to a group.
Nowhere, do I see any magical, or otherworldly interaction.