[Ask the Gulch] If you have Creator endowed natural rights, natural and personal liberty, inherent powers, absolute ownership and immunities, what more would you want that would persuade you to surrender all that, by consent, to be a citizen / elector ?
Posted by jetgraphics 8 years, 6 months ago to Ask the Gulch
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I would also point out that if you look at most theistic religions, the concept of God is an ideal for man to strive to achieve. The notion that man can somehow become the universe is a little too hard to swallow. Could there exist a God who lived by the same laws as the laws of the Universe and yet be separate and distinct from the Universe? That seems the only plausible alternative.
There is nothing to surrender. Belief on faith does not provide the absolute guarantee they claim. It is a subjective decree that neither explains nor justifies anything. Centuries of religious wars have been based on such competing subjective faiths in the name of mystical 'absolutes'.
It is also not the basis of the Declaration of Independence, which took for granted Enlightenment thought. The reason and individualism of the Enlightenment overthrew the tyranny of religion. Not knowing any better at the time, they assumed that some force created the universe, and man's nature along with it, then let it run, which is what Nature's God as the source meant. Enlightenment thinkers did not simply pronounce 'rights from God', with no further discussion. They put a great deal of effort into figuring out what man's rights must be in accordance with his nature. The weakness was the failure to establish a rational ethics as the basis of political philosophy. They were undone by the contradiction between traditional altruist ethics and the implicit ethical egoism they relied on for the right to one's own pursuit of one's own happiness in his own life. This is all completely lost on the religious conservative's false historical and philosophical narrative.
Being a part of the universe, we are in god and god is in us irrespective of good or evil, where "good" is the pursuit of knowlege, "evil" is the repression of knowlege.
To "know, love and serve god" is why we're here. Perhaps scientists mining the mind of god are the only true priests.
Life is a "force" analogous to fire. It was always here and just needs the necessary conditions to express itself. It is not unique to one planet. Our mothers made our bodies from the elements of planet on which we were born in accordance with genetic specifications and passed it to us at the proper time--like one candle lights another. Perhaps, if the fire analogy holds, the first life on Earth could have occurred spontaneously when conditions were right?
Upon death it seems natural that the elements of our bodies be returned to nature from whence they were borrowed. The flicker of life may rejoin life, or per the First Law of Thermodynamics, it might become another form of energy. It pleases me to think that the ray of sunshine that warms my back on a chilly day, or the gentle breeze on my cheek on a spring day may have once been someone I loved or had once loved me.
But what of the soul? Is there really such a thing or is it a concept we made up to convince ourselves of immortality? Is it some kind of fundimental "force" like fire or life subject to the First Law? Is it the sum total of our knowlege, memories and experiences that exists somewhere? That's a mystery beyond science.
conjectures:
With "Creator" in the sentence, I am out before reading the rest.
I find Rands atheism a fools religion, and this is once again an example of a fool pushing it. I no more care for your unprovable belief to be crammed on me than you care for mine to be crammed on you. Prove to me a creator does not exist and we can talk further on the subject. Otherwise I will respect your views that you cannot prove (no creator exists) and perhaps you can respect my views (creator does exist) that I cannot prove. There is no proof that a creator does not exist, or that he does. There is evidence of both viewpoints in the world we see everyday. You think what we see happened by random chance, I think it had to have a mind behind it in order to occur.
The failure to respect the view of others that cannot be proven, when yours also cannot be proven only creates a rift between rational thinkers who would on nearly all other aspects unite and that simply reduces our ability to make real and useful change.
for my own view rights come from a creator; they do so by a a natural process that the creator created. Even that creator must follow those natural laws and those laws would be rationally identifiable.
There is absolutely no reason to get stuck on the issue of if there is a creator or not. Either way the natural rights would be able to be identified through a rational process.
Either way, it is possible to look at the randomly generated world, or the intelligently designed world and rationally identify ones own rights.
Ultimately anyone whom can exist in a free society has to respect the individual ability to seek out and accept truth as can be rationally approached and scientifically proven. In those areas where no proof is available, you have to accept that people will and should have different views.
So long as their views respect the individual I would rather get along with them. I would rather work together and most importantly make changes to the world around us together.
Those that have an anti-creator view point and would like to force atheism down my windpipe can take a long walk on a short pier, something like a character from Atlas did at a run.
Our founders said it best in the debates leading to our Constitution. If men were angles, we wouldn't need Government. Also if our leaders were angles, we wouldn't need checks and balances.
Bit I fear they were also right in that when the Government gets too large/powerful, the people will vote themselves gifts from the Treasury, and bankrupt the Nation.
As to the question: Mankind's amazingly rapid evolution via science has not caused a commensurate evolution in society. In many ways it has caused a regression (putting a gun into the hand of a 5 year old.) Therefore, for pure survival men have invented governments, which by their very nature restricts freedom. The attempt of the Founders to allow as much freedom as possible while still keeping order was (is) a noble experiment. But the very fact of current events illustrates why total freedom is not viable.
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