Bubbles said:
Actually, there have been a great many religions through history that have had little or no belief in life after death.
I would love to hear about one.
On the matter of wings and harps, I can only repeat what C. S. Lewis once said, that those who can't understand books written for adults shouldn't talk about them.
I was just joking, Bubbles. I know you can't play the harp.
You do realize the possibility that a number of religions believe in some form of life after death because there is such a thing, don't you?
How did they come to that realization? What message was transmitted from
the beyond to convince them? Life after death is a yearning for an intelligent animal that struggles to come to grips with its own mortality.
Either way, religion is, like philosophy, an attempt top find absolute truth.
Religion is mythology misunderstood.
Whether it is successful or not, that is what it is. The question of the existence and nature of life after death is part of that (would you agree that the question of the existence and nature of life after death is important to the question of the meaning and purpose of our existence?).
Our existence has nothing to do with a child-like yearning for a life after death.
I don't have a philosophical case for original sin. It is, like free will, an obvious fact of human experience. It is simply that all men are, to some degree, fools and that all men, under the right circumstances behave very badly.
Then you don't understand original sin. Ask your priest to explain it to you. It IS NOT an obvious fact of human experience. The eastern religions don't have the concept of original sin. It is an idiotic "fact" of the Judeo/Christian religion. (I don't know if muslims live in original sin - I'll have to check that out. I assume they do though)
There are people who are looking for Noah's ark. There are people who believe that the Earth is less than 10,000 years old. That is not my position, so it is irrelevant for you to mention those people.
I'm sorry, I didn't know which splinter group you were caught up in.
It is theoretically possible for someone to be raised from the dead, ...
Yes, but not by means of divine intervention.
...and it is theroretically possible for a woman who has never had sex to have a child.
You have me going here: What are you speaking of - some kind of turkey-baster device? The sperm has to get in somehow right? Your tricking me aren't you? I give up - please explain.
I suppose I could claim that the people who claimed to experience the miraculous are stupid, credulous people. Then someone could ask me why I think them stupid and credulous and I could proudly reply "Because they claim to have experienced the miraculous!"
Not stupid - ignorant. There is a big difference. Miracles to one person are perfectly explainable to another.
How do you know that I am afraid of death? You claim it as true, so I would like to know why you believe it to be true.
You said you were afraid of
dying - "Bubbles: I am afraid of dying". You said you are
not afraid of death. But if you ride a motorcyle head on into a Threshing machine they will both be the same.
The development of the sciences in the last several hundred years happened primarilly in Christian countries. Will you deny that fact? The culture that Christianity produced is the culture that produced great scientific advance.
I agree that scientific advancement did happen in Xian countries - no thanks to the xians. Here's an example - do you remember when Sputnik was launched by the Russians? Their technology caught us off-guard. Our country - on the other hand - had fallen behind because of the dampening of the sciences by the religious faction in this country. IMMEDIATELY, science books were reviewed and revised. Science was made the number one priority. We managed to work our way out of the opiatic religious haze, we had prayed our way into. So yeah, science managed to get back on track - no thanks to religion. But now you sit back and say, "Look what science did in a religious country". You sicken me, Bubbles! (Just kidding about that last part. I've just never said that before)
