Wow...ok, fair amount of arrogance going on in this thread whether anyone wants to admit it or not. >.>
Heck, how do you know we don't? Even Carl Sagan wrote in favour of more research into that topic to figure it out once and for all. Sure he was doubtful, but what scientific research that was done was enough to merit him thinking we should do more. But its hard to get any sort of scientific research into such things as its dismissed out of hand. What research has been done has been contentious, but did offer some odd results that merited further testing. Even Sam Harris thought it was odd enough to look into and the first book he wrote was "The End Of Faith". >.>
It isn't religion that makes me spiritual, frankly. Its largely a collection of musty old books of which only a handful of core beliefs are even relevant to the modern world. It's science that makes me spiritual. Science is amazing and the things we discover on even a daily basis are incredible. How you can dig into the universe and quantum physics and all that good stuff and not think there are powers beyond us that we are not yet able to discover or explain is what baffles me.
Before you go all staged intervention on me, I am technically Buddhist. I was not born into it ( I was born into a Catholic family, but my mom had had enough of that by the time I was 6 specifically because of how indoctrinating it was. ). I chose it after years of sifting through various religions and belief systems for ones that made more logical sense.
Buddhism doesn't have a creator god or any such thing, and Buddha himself was just a guy that wanted us all to not act like assholes to each other. Thats pretty good advice. I like it. So I stick with it. I've added other bits and pieces from here and there that work for me or have sounded reasonably correct. Also, Buddhists love the fsck out of science. ;p
I find it amusing that someone who forms a religious or spiritual opinion based on parsing several sources for what sounds the most reasonable or correct ( Instead of blindly following the entirety of their own doctrine ) strikes you as a problem. "Buffet" style beliefs as you put it sound more reasonable than blind devotation.
Originally posted by Ghel
It isn't religion that makes me spiritual, frankly. Its largely a collection of musty old books of which only a handful of core beliefs are even relevant to the modern world. It's science that makes me spiritual. Science is amazing and the things we discover on even a daily basis are incredible. How you can dig into the universe and quantum physics and all that good stuff and not think there are powers beyond us that we are not yet able to discover or explain is what baffles me.
Before you go all staged intervention on me, I am technically Buddhist. I was not born into it ( I was born into a Catholic family, but my mom had had enough of that by the time I was 6 specifically because of how indoctrinating it was. ). I chose it after years of sifting through various religions and belief systems for ones that made more logical sense.
Buddhism doesn't have a creator god or any such thing, and Buddha himself was just a guy that wanted us all to not act like assholes to each other. Thats pretty good advice. I like it. So I stick with it. I've added other bits and pieces from here and there that work for me or have sounded reasonably correct. Also, Buddhists love the fsck out of science. ;p
Originally posted by Ghel
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