Showing posts with label pluralism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pluralism. Show all posts
Full audio and some text from my HACS talk
On July 17 of 2012, I appeared as a special guest for a philosophy class titled "Atheism and the New Atheism" for students at Holy Apostles College and Seminary - an evangelical Catholic university in Connecticut. More details are here. I delivered an opening speech and participated in a question and answer session which followed. The entire event lasted one hour and thirteen minutes.
As promised, the full audio of the event was released and has been made available to the public thanks to Dr. Mahfood. Stream the audio here or download the ZIP file here. The audio is unfortunately spotty at points. I may release a re-mastered version of the audio at a later date.
A text version of my speech can be read here:
Holy Apostles College and Seminary Atheism and New Atheism Speech
Timestamps:
(0:00 - 0:25) Introduction by Dr. Mahfood
(0:25 - 0:47) Opening prayer by Dr. Chervin
(0:48 - 1:50) Introduction of Justin Vacula by Dr. Mahfood
(1:50 - 17:50) Opening speech from Justin Vacula
(17:51 - end) Question and answer session
Some of the questions and sentiments (paraphrased) in the question and answer session:
(18:13) Do you use science to determine what is true and false?
(20:33) What good reasons would be sufficient [for you to believe in God]?
(23:30) Do you only believe in something when all the contrary arguments have been resolved?
(27:06) Is there an objective standard for belief or do you have a personal standard?
(29:08) Do you believe something can be universally true?
(30:16) Are you dogmatically opposed, given your commitment to naturalism, to supernatural explanations?
(37:20) Would a supernatural experience lead you to belief in God?
(39:00) Are you looking for hard evidence to believe in God?
(40:52) What about faith?
(42:05) Discussion about the problem of natural evil and omni-attributes
(46:55) Theodicy: This is a fallen world/God's goodness was evident, but is no longer
(49:20) Theodicy: There is a good that supersedes an evil world. Perhaps suffering leads to good beyond this earth? Perhaps suffering is just a prelude to the afterlife?
(52:00) Theodicy: Evil serves a purpose. We see examples in this world in which suffering is required to achieve certain ends.
(54:00) Omni-attributes seem to be a different matter from God existing.
(55:48) Are you an agnostic?
(59:40) Theodicy: Eternal happiness, in light of limited suffering in this world, seems not to be a problem.
(1:01:43) What about metaphysical arguments for God's existence?
(1:04:00) Your philosophical studies seem to start with the Enlightenment. What about before that?
(1:10:45) How do you know that your reason without faith fulfills you?
Have diversity initiatives sabotaged higher education?

Diversity initiatives in higher education, with the intent to foster harmony and understanding of others, seemed to have undermined some of the primary goals of higher education: leading students to critically self-reflect and hold justified true beliefs. Some diversity initiatives have reinforced the very harmful idea that disagreement is disrespectful and have also assented to indefensible epistemiological ideas including 'all perspectives are equally valid' and 'people are justified in holding a belief because it is a product of their culture.' Harmony can be had -- and perhaps better so -- as a result of critical discussion that should be encouraged and welcomed instead of discouraged and viewed as disrespectful.
(This post follows a recent discussion I had with philosopher Peter Boghossian. We have very similar views on this matter! I was aiming to write a post like this for some time, but haven't formulated my ideas in writing...so now is my chance.)
Readers who are familiar with my work should know that I value truth and critical discussion about beliefs. In many blog posts, podcasts, and speeches of mine, I argue for a reframing of the commonly assented to idea that disagreement is disrespectful...and the we just shouldn't disagree with people. Instead of viewing disagreement as something that must be disrespectful and viewing disagreement as something that should be avoided we should view disagreement as an opportunity to learn something, challenge our own beliefs, and perhaps lead others to reconsider their beliefs. We all have blind spots, after all, and could learn something by speaking with people whom we disagree with.
Diversity initiatives, though, from my experience, seem to buy into the 'disagreement is disrespect' meme and have led many to commit intellectual suicide concerning the nature of truth while sabatoging one of the chief goals of higher education - namely that students, when exposed to different ideas, should modify their beliefs and hold only that which is justified and true...all in the sake of some sort of harmony not worth wanting by any in the intellectual realm because many, it seems, don't believe that we can disagree about major issues and maintain harmony.
In my final year of high school -- and even in many of my introductory college courses such as 'first year experience' -- I was told time and time again that college was a time in which students would be exposed to people from all around the world with different worldviews, religious beliefs (or lack thereof), sexual orientations, political ideas, and so much more. Instead of being a member of a 'small town insular community,' college students are exposed to an entire different climate. While in college, the hope, I was told, was for students to consider others' beliefs and self-reflect so as to learn something and better understand the world, other cultures, and so much more. Self-reflection, it seems, should be a byproduct of exposure to new ideas.
All of this, though, while it seemed great at the time, seemed to be only partially true. I was exposed to different ideas and persons, but the self-reflection aspect simply wasn't something that was being promoted. Instead of critical discussion of ideas and self-examinations, faculty and students alike seemed to be brainwashed into accepting indefensible positions such as 'all perspectives are equally valid,' 'everyone is justified in believing what they believe because that is their right,' and 'we should, instead of challenging others, celebrate differences.'
All perspectives, though, as my philosophy classes have taught me, can't be equally valid because we would be lead to accept contradictions and be forced to accept ideas which fly in the face of our moral intuitions and logical reasoning. In my "Ethics and the Good Life" class which probably was one of the most influential classes in my second year of my undergraduate career, I learned that ethical cultural relativism -- the idea that a position is morally justified because a culture assents to it -- is one of the most indefensible ideas in ethics because, for example, cultures can assent to the idea that wife burning is morally acceptable.
"Who are we to argue with that" some will say, "because you aren't from that culture and people decide what's true for them." Unfortunately, this sentiment is all too common - and seemingly embraced by persons in the modern 'diversity movement.' Apparently, because I am not from a certain culture, some will contend, I am not qualified to share my ideas -- and just should not -- and truth just flies right out the window. In the name of not 'criticizing' ideas that are foreign to Americans, we're apparently supposed to tolerate intolerance and just 'leave ideas alone.' What a catastrophe.
My philosophy classes have also taught me that, when evaluating the merit of a belief, it's important to realize that not all opinions or beliefs are equal in weight; many opinions are uninformed, flawed, ill-formed, do not cohere with reality, and are outright fallacious. The simple fact that someone holds a belief does not lead to the belief being warranted. Persons ought to consider objections to their beliefs, whether a belief coheres with reality, whether the assumptions that lead to the belief are warranted, and so much more. While persons may have a legal right to hold a belief (and certainly won't be arrested for thinking about something), a moral right and whether the belief is a justified true belief or not is an entirely different matter. In the name of harmony, perhaps, and 'respect for beliefs,' diversity initiatives and other considerations have undermined higher education and have convinced so many that people are moral monsters to challenge others' beliefs.
Perhaps, as I mentioned, a major motivation people have to object to disagreement is to preserve harmony (as if the only way to do so is for people to sit down and shut up). Can't we just all live together and keep our beliefs to ourselves? Why can't we just live and let live? Why do people like me continue to write and do what I do? Aren't beliefs just private matters? People ask these questions quite frequently. It's quite difficult, I would respond to contend that many or most of our beliefs are solely private matters when it's quite clear that our beliefs inform our actions and have the ability to harm others and ourselves. Persons like me are concerned with what others believe because their beliefs impact others' quality of life. I care about whether or not people hold justified true beliefs when certain matters are of paramount concern.
Refraining from disagreement with others and assenting to the idea that all perspectives are equally valid seems to be quite an easy and attractive way to deal with disagreement, but it's an incredibly intellectually dishonest position and something that higher education should never maintain. What progress is had when people lack self-reflection? If all perspectives are equally valid, what is the point of challenging our own beliefs? Why should we even attend school and be concerned about holding justified true beliefs if this is the case?
Open-mindedness is a term that often gets thrown around by persons in diversity initiatives, but this term is largely misconstrued and quite relevant to this discussion. I am told, after I voice objections to people who hold untenable beliefs (often after they start a discussion with me and reveal that they haven't critically examined their own ideas and/or understand very little about epistemology and admit that they aren't concerned with truth), that I am closed-minded and that I should "accept others." Excuse me? Since when is asking questions about someone's belief a horrible thing [in the realm of higher education]? Do not teachers do this in almost every class and encourage students to self-reflect? True open-mindedness is a willingness to admit that you can be wrong about something and a willingness to change any and all ideas provided new evidence, reason, and argument comes in...and this 'being wrong' isn't a bad thing; admitting one is mistaken about something is a sign of progress and intellectual courage - and this is really something to respect and admire.
One thing that leaders of diversity initiatives and I can agree on is that it it more important that we live together than we all agree. Diversity initiatives, though, seem to take a drastically different approach to this matter and work from many flawed ideas about epistemology and a harmony 'worth wanting.' It is quite possible to be respectful toward persons while having a conversation about important and often contentious matters. A primary problem, though, is that people view 'attacks on ideas' as 'attacks on persons' even when said 'attacking' is done in a very civil and calm manner with regard to the person who holds the belief. Perhaps diversity initiatives should change the focus and maintain that critical disagreement is something that we should strive for and work on becoming better at. If we can 'step back' from our beliefs and understand others' perspectives, it seems that society will be a better place and that a true harmony can be had in which people -- instead of viewing disagreement as disrespect -- can have the intellectual courage to understand others instead of demonizing them...and an 'everyone is right and no one should disagree' attitude isn't going to get us there. This is not the goal of higher education and should not be the goal of diversity initiatives.
Leaders of diversity initiatives, instead of maintaining that all perspectives people hold are equally valid and that we just shouldn't assert that people are mistaken (or otherwise engage in critical discussion), should start to focus on how to respectfully disagree and prioritize justified true beliefs. We can 'bring our differences to the table' and consider meetings between differing individuals to be great opportunities for challenging our own beliefs and the beliefs of others rather than missing this great opportunity and hopelessly and dishonestly maintaining that all perspectives are equally valid and disagreement is just disrespectful. Critical discussion should bring about more understanding than does sitting back at a table and refraining from asking questions. If this is not the case -- and diversity programs continue to convince others that all perspectives are equally valid and discourage critical discussion -- it seems that diversity programs have sabotaged the aim of higher education and they are harming us more than they are helping us.
For more thoughts of mine, both in writing and through podcasting, on this matter, please utilize the following links:
Blog posts:
"Disagreement, not disrespecting: Attacking beliefs, not persons"
"A response to those who claim offense"
"Belief Intolerance"
"On being wrong, intellectual honesty, and acquiring belief"
"Truth relativism and liberal religion"
"Think for yourself already: A discussion I had with Muslims"
(During an inter-faith/diversity event I attended while in undergraduate career, students objected to me asking a Muslim man -- after he had asked for any question from the audience -- whether he believed that it is justifiable for non-Muslims to burn in Hell for eternity soon after the Muslim man had practically preached about how non-Muslims would burn in Hell for eternity. Some students thought I was the disrespectful one and was in the wrong to ask that question...)
Podcasts:
"Respecting Beliefs"
"Discussion on religious faith"
As always, please feel free to share this content, offer your own ideas, and give me some feedback.
Truth Relativism and Liberal Religion

(Jesus is astonished by your heresy!)
Many 'liberal religious folk' I have encountered have bought into the attitude of "God loves everyone no matter what, so everyone goes to Heaven no matter what people believe." This, I think, fuels the "I don't care about what's true attitude" and might be responsible for so many believers knowing little to nothing (or simply not caring) about their faith. If God loves everyone and everyone will be saved, what's the point of bothering with any religious claims or caring about what should be believed about the supernatural, they may think. Those of the "spiritual, but not religious" or "religious, but I don't go to church" communities love this stuff.
There are several problems with this line of reasoning, when considering Christianity: it has little to no Biblical support, negates/ignores/contradicts the idea of Hell and punishment after death, makes Jesus a liar, and Jesus dying on the cross makes no/little sense. In order to buy into the "God loves everyone no matter what, so everyone goes to Heaven no matter what people believe" sentiment, one has to throw away a great deal of the Bible, theology, Church teachings, and so much more.
If God loves everyone no matter what and everyone goes to Heaven, individual believers have to do a great deal of mental gymnastics. One ought to wonder how this attitude is compatible with Jesus dying on the cross to forgive sins; if this attitude were correct, what was the point? As always, we can offer ad hoc explanations to try to excuse away contradictions such as Jesus' death was a symbolic reminder, served additional purposes, was needed so that people can truly know God [although this runs counter to the William Lane Craig and others' apologetics of direct intervention by God would take away free will], etc. Confession, in the Catholic Church, can similarly be excused away by saying something like "Confession is an affirmation of trust in God's promise."
When these mental gymnastics are used, the believer starts to sound sillier and sillier...and very similar to a conspiracy theorist. While many of my atheistic/non-theistic readers might find the entire enterprise of Christianity untenable, the person who enters into the 'unbiblical' territory may seem 'even worse.' 'Traditionalists' like Michael Voris and those of the Westboro Baptist Church, especially, have called this attitude for what it is: a lie inconsistent with the Bible and, in the case of Voris, a heresy against the Church's teachings. In addition to saying "God won't hear your prayers," the Westboro Baptist Church is at least right on two counts.
Some believers might even say that they "believe in something [supernatural]" and all persons are simply viewing this "something" in a different way, but all views are valid. This simply can't be justified because contradictory accounts are not compatible.
While 'liberal Christianity' is certainly 'better' than a traditionalist version, the idea of God loves everyone no matter what and everyone goes to Heaven is simply indefensible and incompatible with the Bible. While anyone is 'free' to invent their own versions of religion, the questions should be "Is this view even tenable?" and "Does this cohere with the book I regard as being a foundational document of my religion?"
Even if it is the case that God really does love everyone and everyone can go to Heaven [and/or we can't possibly arrive at a truth], it should still be important to pursue knowledge and hold justified true beliefs. Philosopher Jonathan Kvanvig says the following beautiful quote (that rivals the quote from Nagel that I have at the top of my website): "[T]here is no reason whatsoever to think that believing the truth is always impossible; the best that could be claimed is that there is no guarantee in any given case that we have achieved the state of believing the truth. Perhaps it follows that we should not hope for the chimera of infallibility."
I generally don't like discussing Biblical themes (at least not anymore) because the discussions seem to go nowhere and the mental gymnastics believers can partake in could easily win gold medals at Olympic events. While there can be some 'bad theology' such as using the Bible to justify racism because of the 'curse of Ham,' there can be many, many, many, many theological conclusions in a very wide sea. With individual believers and sects all believing they are right and others are all wrong, how are we supposed to filter the sense from the nonsense? We obviously can't have two 'versions' that are right because there would be contradictions (and potential violations of the Law of the Excluded middle). So, shall we 'wager' that one version of theology is correct or believe that they are all wrong [about the supernatural]. My money would go with the latter.
Non-theistic readers: Have you heard the sentiment of "God loves everyone no matter what... and everyone goes to Heaven" from believers before? How do you respond to this and what are your thoughts?
Theistic readers: Do you think God loves everyone no matter what and everyone goes to Heaven? If so, how do you defend this?
A Response to "Christianity is truth-ful" and criticism of Christians who 'make up their own religion'
About a week ago, I had a discussion with a woman at the Pages and Places book festival prologue party. I told her that I was a local writer and blogger after she asked what I do and talked I began to speak about my article regarding the contraceptive healthcare mandate and why the arguments against it are very problematic. She asked me if I was an atheist, I replied in the affirmative, and she was quite disgruntled. She said "Jesus still loves you and doesn't want you to go to Hell." I told her that I find no good reason to believe in her god or Hell and raised several objections to her statement: If I'm going to be punished for non-belief (especially when God gives me no good reason to believe he exists and he could), Christianity is quite an immoral system, it's not just to punish people from other religions, and if God doesn't want me to go to Hell, why would he send me there?
The woman replied and said that people from other religions can be saved as long as they 'believe in something.' This type of response of common from people known as religious pluralists or otherwise those who seem to 'invent their own religions.' Besides this sentiment of hers being very unbiblical, she provided no justification for her belief. I asked her why she believed this and there was no reply regarding justification. We soon entered into a discussion regarding the problem of evil (in light of the recent flooding that devastated the area that prominent religious persons namely Fr. Jack Ryan and Bishop Bambera had much to say about) and the women's defense for God allowing evil was that we need natural disasters to know what good is and to be charitable to others. I asked her, before objecting, if God created these natural disasters because we can have this good and charity without them (and would have more opportunities to do so) and she said that God isn't responsible for natural disasters!
While some theologians, priests, and laypersons may back away from belief in a literal Hell and a punishment for sins (although this seems to be quite contrary to the New Testament), it makes little sense for a Christian to claim that God is not responsible for natural disasters because one of the most common beliefs amongst Christians, I would wager, is that God created the universe. If God created the universe, it seems only logical to assume that he is responsible for the natural laws that guarantee the occurrence of natural disasters.
I try not to assume much about the beliefs of theists I happen to be having discussions with, but it seems reasonable for me to assume some basic ideas that a person might hold. When theists divert away from the standard teachings of their religion, I am quite lost because the person seems to have little justification for their claims from both their holy book/religious tradition (provided that this actually provided justification) and from 'standard reason.' If one calls him/herself a Christian, it seems to make little sense to use this label if one does not believe the standard 'set' of Jesus was raised from the dead by God, Jesus died for the sins of humankind, God created the universe, and God is omni-max (all-loving, all-knowing, all-powerful).
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Theologian John Haught, at his 2011 lecture at King's College, asserted that 'God likes drama' and that there is so much calamity in the universe and on earth because it's part of a beautiful narrative by God. Without calamity, he reasoned, life wouldn't be interesting...and there wouldn't be freedom, a future, or life. Haught says that without 'accidents in the universe,' there would be no novelty, evolution, progress, or meaning in life. All of this, of course, flies in the face of an all-loving, all-powerful, and all-knowing god who can presumably have the universe in any way he wants...which would allow a story, progress, freedom, etc.
As an atheist, I suppose I don't get to define what makes one a Christian or who can rightly use the label (and, again, I don't want to drift into no true Scotsman territory). There certainly is a wide diversity amongst individual believers, some people may interpret some passages differently, and the Bible can be the 'big book of multiple choice' as hosts and co-hosts of The Atheist Experience often say. Look at one verse and Jesus tells people to pray in private and look at others that support open prayer... Look at one verse and prayer is said to work if one has the faith of a mustard seed and then hear the commonly voiced 'God helps those who help themselves' (and one wonders how helping oneself can be distinguished from God intervening).
Theologians and individual believers, when they engage in apologetics, often seem to make God smaller and smaller when they gradually move away from the standard claims that Christians make. In my two years as an atheist at a Catholic college, I have heard believers say that Hell doesn't exist, but rather 'Hell' is separation from God. I have heard that Jesus didn't literally raise from the dead, but rather the story is 'truthful' in that the lessons learned are the real value in the story. I have heard that prayer is just trust in God and that God doesn't actually intervene in human affairs.
The list goes on and on... God seems to boil down to that little gap that we have left to put him in when it is most likely the case that that gap will fade and allow a new one to open up... God used to be the explanation for disease, droughts, lightning, earthquakes, and so much more. Now, though, we can explain these things without evoking a deity. Believers now look to the brain and the universe in order to slide God in somewhere while often not understanding that they are committing a version of the fallacious appeal to ignorance: just because we can't explain something does not give us any justification to assert 'God did it.' Yesterday's god-explanations are today's science.
When theologians and individual believers recognize that the challenges to main-line faith claims are too overwhelming and that Christianity reduces to a 'way of life' and 'truthful' because the stories teach lessons, why don't they just be honest and call themselves secular Christians, or just shed the label of Christian altogether? As I've noted before, there is a wide disconnect between theologians, priests, and laypersons. The theologians and priests are often claiming far less -- as far as metaphysical religious truth claims are concerned -- than the laity, but the laity are endorsing ideas like creationism, for example. Where are the laypersons getting these ideas from...and why aren't their ministers doing something about this?
It might be easy for priests and theologians to say "Well, persons x, y, and z can go out on their own and read what deep thinkers in the Christian tradition are saying, study on their own, etc," but these persons are obviously not doing this. Are the church services and Bible studies merely a 'pat on the back and let's all agree and don't actually learn anything' sessions? Are the CCD classes for children very similar to the ones i attended while I was in kindergarten (!) until high school? When I look back to my early religious education, I was taught about a literal hell, a literal Adam and Eve story, how I and my family members could go to Hell if we didn't confess our sins on a regular basis, and was very concerned about my great-grandmother's soul.
If Christianity really boils down to "living life according to the teachings of Jesus as individuals interpret them while cutting out all the bad stuff or redefining it away or making excuses for it and living life according to the metaphorical teachings of the Bible," there's really not much more to it than me reading Lord of the Rings and doing the same while not actually believing in a literal Gandalf and the label itself appears to be meaningless.
Further, this idea of Christianity being 'truth-ful' can be a 'move' known as equivocation - an informal logical fallacy that is committed when one uses a word in two different contexts and obfuscates meaning. Saying that Christianity is true (when we accept the standard understanding of true as meaning based in fact and in accordance with reality) and then saying it is truth-ful (meaning that the teachings one can derive have some semblance of moral truth to them) is to equivocate.
Sure, one can certainly gain benefits from a Christianity such as this (although I would argue that one can have the benefits without Christianity and be better off without the religious baggage), but it's quite empty of standard understanding and the common threads that believers share as far as metaphysical truth claims are concerned. This Christianity is certainly much 'nicer' than the standard fare, but it appears to be an incredibly dishonest position to take. Why don't those who believe in a 'truth-ful Christianity' shed themselves of the Christian label and just call themselves secular Christians?
Religious Pluralism
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When discussing the validity and truth value of various religions and religious claims, some people may affirm the idea that all religions are just ways of looking a one god differently or that one god is behind all religions, so everyone is right. Individual religions, from my experience and reading standard teaching, don't affirm this idea but believe with a very high level of certainty that their holy books and teachings are correct. Preachers don't approach pulpits saying, “Weighing all of the available information that we have learned, we're quite sure that God exists, but we may be wrong. People of other religions may also be right and we could be totally incorrect, but I want you to continue going to our church because our way of looking at God is valid...but everyone else may also be correct.” To say that all religions are correct seems to be very evasive and intellectually dishonest. Possibly even saying that one is correct may also be very problematic, especially if there isn't very good reason and evidence to establish truth value of the claim.
Some religious individuals may also claim that reality is different for them or that “My god exists for me whether or not you believe in him,” but these claims are dishonest. Either God created the universe and rules in Heaven or he doesn't. God can't be true for one person and false for another – the only thing that can really differ is whether or not someone believes.
We also have the possibility of a “divine conspiracy” in which one god created various religions, implanted memories in people, and wanted people to decide which religion was the real religion during life. I find this claim highly unlikely because I don't believe a just and loving being would do this. It is, of course, possible for a malevolent or chaotic deity to so such a thing, but why would an eternal being even bother? It's also possible that a being created the universe, went away, and was never seen again. There are gods that haven't even been thought of. A god may exist that makes no rational sense to us such as an all-knowing river made of tenderness. My favorite possibility is a possible god that does not interfere in human affairs, created the universe and left it on its own, and rewarded people after death for being skeptical and not believing in any gods while not punishing the non-skeptics. With all of the possible (and seemingly infinite) gods and religions, it seems very difficult to hedge your bets or even confidently choose one religion. Of all available and possible choices, is it rational to assume that one religion is correct, especially when none offer very good evidence?
A naturalistic and evidential approach can (and I believe should) be taken when considering religious claims. Pragmatic arguments and arguments from utility should automatically be dismissed, for what really matters is whether or not the claims are true. Does an all-loving, all-knowing, and all-eternal being who created the universe and sat around for about 75,000 years while humans suffered and almost went extinct and then decided that the hope for humanity was to send his son to earth to die really seem plausible? Or, perhaps, does it seem plausible that the intergalactic ruler Lord Xenu who is responsible for body thetans a fact? We ought to marshal evidence, really think about our beliefs, and find really good reasons for accepting them. The fact that all different cultures have different religions is very indicative of the hypothesis that religion is formed as a natural and cultural phenomenon, this should not though, mean that they are valid.
Some religious individuals may also claim that reality is different for them or that “My god exists for me whether or not you believe in him,” but these claims are dishonest. Either God created the universe and rules in Heaven or he doesn't. God can't be true for one person and false for another – the only thing that can really differ is whether or not someone believes.
We also have the possibility of a “divine conspiracy” in which one god created various religions, implanted memories in people, and wanted people to decide which religion was the real religion during life. I find this claim highly unlikely because I don't believe a just and loving being would do this. It is, of course, possible for a malevolent or chaotic deity to so such a thing, but why would an eternal being even bother? It's also possible that a being created the universe, went away, and was never seen again. There are gods that haven't even been thought of. A god may exist that makes no rational sense to us such as an all-knowing river made of tenderness. My favorite possibility is a possible god that does not interfere in human affairs, created the universe and left it on its own, and rewarded people after death for being skeptical and not believing in any gods while not punishing the non-skeptics. With all of the possible (and seemingly infinite) gods and religions, it seems very difficult to hedge your bets or even confidently choose one religion. Of all available and possible choices, is it rational to assume that one religion is correct, especially when none offer very good evidence?
A naturalistic and evidential approach can (and I believe should) be taken when considering religious claims. Pragmatic arguments and arguments from utility should automatically be dismissed, for what really matters is whether or not the claims are true. Does an all-loving, all-knowing, and all-eternal being who created the universe and sat around for about 75,000 years while humans suffered and almost went extinct and then decided that the hope for humanity was to send his son to earth to die really seem plausible? Or, perhaps, does it seem plausible that the intergalactic ruler Lord Xenu who is responsible for body thetans a fact? We ought to marshal evidence, really think about our beliefs, and find really good reasons for accepting them. The fact that all different cultures have different religions is very indicative of the hypothesis that religion is formed as a natural and cultural phenomenon, this should not though, mean that they are valid.
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