Aquawhite
Retiring
How can religion be rational?
Seen in the documentary Religulous: Religulous - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. It is discussed that religion, in lay-man's terms is basically the human's way of trying to self prophesise answers to all their questions. Without the actual knowledge of a 'God' one is simply filling their doubt with other people and their own religiously biased opinions.
It's human nature to know everything. By filling the unknown with religion, it's self prophecy - it's blasphemy (ha!). Rather than making decisions and 'thinking' that we know the answer to everything, which are fueled by religious context, it is far better to stay in doubt and in modesty.
I find it hard to comprehend that people have 'faith', which they just conform and follow to something because they belong or fill their own answers with some other blo-joe's ideas from the Bible, Torah or whatever the religion.
Clearly, I'm not religious. I cannot see there being any rational thinking in providing 'make-believe' answers to things we don't know. Is it simply humanity's desire just to think we can tell you eveything.
And yes, before anyone says it, of course my ideas are biased - is not everyone biased by our own contexts and experiences.
Please discuss your thoughts.
Seen in the documentary Religulous: Religulous - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. It is discussed that religion, in lay-man's terms is basically the human's way of trying to self prophesise answers to all their questions. Without the actual knowledge of a 'God' one is simply filling their doubt with other people and their own religiously biased opinions.
It's human nature to know everything. By filling the unknown with religion, it's self prophecy - it's blasphemy (ha!). Rather than making decisions and 'thinking' that we know the answer to everything, which are fueled by religious context, it is far better to stay in doubt and in modesty.
I find it hard to comprehend that people have 'faith', which they just conform and follow to something because they belong or fill their own answers with some other blo-joe's ideas from the Bible, Torah or whatever the religion.
Clearly, I'm not religious. I cannot see there being any rational thinking in providing 'make-believe' answers to things we don't know. Is it simply humanity's desire just to think we can tell you eveything.
And yes, before anyone says it, of course my ideas are biased - is not everyone biased by our own contexts and experiences.
Please discuss your thoughts.