DrZoidberg
Contributor
That's saying a lot because there are some really dumb definitions of God. I like Dawkins' The God Delusion. Some people criticize it for not being sophisticated, but that's the fault of theology. They created a goofy God.When Dawkins style New Atheists attack the God concept they invariably argue against the dumbest definition of God.
No, they didn't. We created the gods. Theologians then have tried to interpret what these gods are. Scientists don't invent the laws of nature. They just describe what's out there, and do their best to make sense of it.
What the Dawkins crowd are doing is having a go at the dumbest religious people and letting them represent all religion. That's a straw man or reductio ad absurdum.
I've noticed that people's Gods tend to share the opinions of the people who believe in them. For example, I used to know a Christian woman who was racist and objected to racially mixed couples. She said that God objected too.Lacan has another definition which I like. "God is an empty projection space upon which we project ourselves onto". So it's a way to honestly talk about ourselves in a roundabout way without making ourselves feel vulnerable. And this acts as a totem that holds our communities together. A bit like how us talking about gods and atheism brings this online community together. For various reasons religions in various ways trigger insecurities in us. Real or imagined. And that brings us together here.
Yes. This would logically follow if we created God in our own image. Good example.
Even people who can't buy an anthropomorphic God still want a God. I suppose for them a "higher power" is better than no God at all, and even atheists need a God from time to time as long as that God isn't too obviously a God.I personally think that we need to get away from God ONLY being a supernatural being. It's certainly a definition. But it's such a rediculous definition that I don't think religions would have survived, if that's the only definition. Or as I have said many times, "It's gods is the least interesting part of any religion".
"Higher power" is a cop out. I also think it's wrong. Metaphors don't have any power that we don't give them. And wtf is "higher". It presupposes a hierarchy. I think "higher power" is just a sneaky way to insert the Abrahamic God without saying it.
I prefer just saying "god" or "the gods". Then we haven't painted ourselves into any theological corner. One thing I like about paganism is that they acknowledge both the metaphor and the real. A pagan can be an atheist, and the religion functions just the same. It's a form of religion that is open to everyone, no matter their theological education and beliefs. I think religion, at it's core, is about holding communities together. So we need something open to all. A form of religion open to both atheistic interpretations of God, as well as theistic ones. Ironically, this is how Judaism works. You can be an atheistic Jew, and the religion works just fine. So it's weird that two religions that grew out of it (Islam and Christianity) puts such extreme emphasis on belief in the supernatural.