Shadowy Man
Contributor
Sorry if I misread your post with respect to the target of your response.I may be missing *your* point, but that doesn't bother me.Exactly. It's like any other lesson learned based on observation and experience. It's not a big deal, except to religious people who think they have a god.I'm not an atheist because I find it appealing. It is just what makes sense to me based on everything I have learned and experienced in this world.
My observation and experience led me to atheism, but my experience of the world is, viscerally, very similar to those who believe in God. I know the world around me is material and can be mathematically modeled, but I don't feel like it's intrinsically empty of meaning, just an arbitrary 'nothing' which we assign whatever we want to.
You'll scoff, but that's what we call directly experiencing the divine. If you don't see it, that's fine.
But what I'm getting at is that there is a kind of logic and correctness to God belief. That doesn't mean there literally needs to be a guy with a beard, just people with a vague perception of the mystery of the world around them. For them it's easier to understand the mystery by giving it a concrete label and ontological system.
If you want to talk about hard material facts and why, mechanically, a God can't exist, you're missing the point entirely, imo.
If there actually exists *intrinsic meaning* as you suggest then an atheist might wonder from where this intrinsic meaning arises and what is meant by "meaning" if it is used in a non-subjective manner.
In case it wasn't clear, I was replying to T.G.G. Moogly, and not you.
But sure, you can still explore that meaning, and maybe if we take this logic to it's conclusion we decide that the universe is an arbitrary nothing. And that's fine. But what I'm getting at, is that the logical conclusion of reason isn't really nihilism, it's positivism, and the recognition that the world and our lives are ultimately a mystery tied up with a good amount of beauty, joy, and pleasure.
Those who are religious have a sense of this, but they give it concrete labels. Buddhists / Non-Dual Hindus experience it directly.
What I'm getting at is that by attacking theism, we're attacking an arbitrary label that is actually a placeholder for a real, human experience. To the hard atheist it's a cold game of logic, while missing the forest for the trees.
I agree that atheism doesn't necessarily mean nihilism, though many atheists may come to that conclusion for themselves. I do not. But I also do not believe that whatever meaning we may find in life isn't an intrinsic quality of reality that exists independent of our interaction with reality. I believe that there indeed do exist experiences that can be considered "spiritual", but that these are emergent properties of our own consciousness. Things like joy, beauty and pleasure may indeed be *subjective* in that they aren't absolute properties of an external universe, but that does not mean that they aren't real things that we as humans experience.