Donn
Philosopher
Yes, but do your hols exist? Don't let any existential doubt prevent you from relaxing, however. 
I would say it mostly comes from the urge to assign agency to unexplained events. It was an evolutionary advantage to believe that the sound of shaking grass was actually a threat and not just the wind. It led to many false positives, and perhaps some stress, but when there actually was a predator stalking you you had a higher chance of survival.
Gods are simply the ultimate agency assigned to explain every unexplained thing. Especially the thought-to-be unexplainable things. Questions like "Why do we exist?" get answered by "Whatever I say God says."
Answering it like that is important. No god has ever said anything. Everything ascribed to gods was stated or written by a human, often enough as a way to increase their own personal power over other people.
There is no evidence that gods exist. There is instead evidence that gods are human creations. First to explain the unknown. Second as a means to control other people.
Gods provide the agency of ultimate justice and vengeance. ehcks' point still stands.
Well, okay. Neither is much support for an actual 'god' behind the scenes.
Why can't it be agency? We imagine other, bigger, wiser, human-likes that watch over us and ensure justice. I don't think that's at all radical.
It's agency in order to have a fairer life. You bow to the king, to whom does the king bow? A bigger king.
While I can't recall the details, a lot of Dennet's Breaking the spell is about this. Worth a read.
There was only one culture all along? Why did no one tell me?
Huh? Are you suddenly turning into Rip Van Winkle? What have we been talking about for the last 2+ pages? There's no one culture. Each of these ethics reformers jettisons the prevailing deity in their particular culture, in each case. That's been made crystal clear here.
My question is also crystal clear: Why does each social reformer go to the headache of always changing the culture's own particular "agent" instead of just sticking with the "agent" that each particular culture already finds comfortable? Dissing the culture's own "agent" just makes the ethics reformer's job tougher, not easier. So why do that?
Stone
His point is that cultures change. The religions change with them.
But why do the two so often change simultaneously, often due to one and the same individual?
Stone
But why do the two so often change simultaneously, often due to one and the same individual?
Stone
Because god loves humans and sometimes gives them a nudge in the right direction, right?
But why do the two so often change simultaneously, often due to one and the same individual?
Stone
That's only one explanation. Can you think of another?
Stone
why not properly establish your bottom-line thesis, so we can argue to the point.
I have no bottom-line thesis.
Stone
due to your apparent lack of ability to state it clearly