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The Silence wrote:I've been thinking carefully about...well, pretty much everything in recent years. I came to the conclusion that religiously, I'm best described as a deist, while I cannot help but accept much of what existentialism has to say. I keep reading of an existential deism (or thomism?) but know nothing about it. Can anyone fill me in?

Only_Humean wrote:How do you reconcile the existentialist fundamental absurdity/irrationality of existence with a deist willed universe?
Only_Humean wrote:Moved to HoQ.
How do you reconcile the existentialist fundamental absurdity/irrationality of existence with a deist willed universe?
Only_Humean wrote:How do you reconcile the existentialist fundamental absurdity/irrationality of existence with a deist willed universe?
without-music wrote:Only_Humean wrote:How do you reconcile the existentialist fundamental absurdity/irrationality of existence with a deist willed universe?
Perhaps it wasn't willed so much as it was just accidentally created and subsequently abandoned. Then again, I'm no deist.
The Silence wrote: If we accept we cannot answer the "existence of God" question one way or another, but err on the side of caution (by assuming there is a God of some sort, but not one bound in definition by any particular religious belief system), then we can begin to see a way through this mess.

Only_Humean wrote:Sneezed into existence?
Only_Humean wrote:The Silence wrote: If we accept we cannot answer the "existence of God" question one way or another, but err on the side of caution (by assuming there is a God of some sort, but not one bound in definition by any particular religious belief system), then we can begin to see a way through this mess.
I'm apparently still lost... What caution are we erring on the side of? Can't I err on the side of caution and assume there isn't?
The Silence wrote:Because if we cannot prove either way that there is, or is not a God, what use is there to assume there isn't one and live a life in absolute atheistic apathy? There's always the unanswered - and yes, unanswerable - question of whether or not you're being watched.
Now, I do not advocate following any religious doctrine or belief system - I'm not saying that by believing in God you have to "not sin" or uphold Christian beliefs, or heaven forbid believe in any of the creation myths or what-have-you - none of that. All I'm saying is maybe it's best to be an open-minded, optimistic agnostic, aware that, given the possibility of the existence of God, it's probably best to believe in him rather than take the opportunity to deny the possibility all together.
without-music wrote:The Silence wrote:Because if we cannot prove either way that there is, or is not a God, what use is there to assume there isn't one and live a life in absolute atheistic apathy? There's always the unanswered - and yes, unanswerable - question of whether or not you're being watched.
Now, I do not advocate following any religious doctrine or belief system - I'm not saying that by believing in God you have to "not sin" or uphold Christian beliefs, or heaven forbid believe in any of the creation myths or what-have-you - none of that. All I'm saying is maybe it's best to be an open-minded, optimistic agnostic, aware that, given the possibility of the existence of God, it's probably best to believe in him rather than take the opportunity to deny the possibility all together.
This is called Pascal's Wager, and it is horribly unpersuasive. The first and most serious objection to the Wager should be immediately obvious: it argues for a belief in God, but doesn't prescribe which God to believe in -- there are hundreds of Gods, all of which require different faiths and different devotions. How do we pick the right God out of this multiplicity of deities? How can we find the right Heaven and avoid the right Hell when there are countless different ones to choose from? The Wager offers no help in making this choice; by its logic we should believe in any supernatural being claimed to have the power to reward or punish us. Do the theists who use Pascal's Wager believe in Santa Claus? If not, they're being inconsistent. By their own logic they should believe in him, because if he exists they'll be rewarded with marvelous presents, and if he doesn't, what do they lose?
At first glance, belief in every god and every religion might seem the most obvious solution to this dilemma, but in reality this is impractical - the tithes would be staggering, the sheer number of devotions impossible to remember, and the amount of time each day that would have to be spent on ritual and prayer would total far more than 24 hours. And besides, most religions have already eliminated this option anyway by making claims to exclusivity, each one claiming that people who believe in any other are damned.
The fact of the matter is that atheism is a single, unified position, but theism is not. There is no such thing as "generic theism"; one cannot choose to "just believe something". And the choice is not, as some evangelical Christians seem to think it is, between evangelical Christianity and nothing. There are hundreds of religions, and no a priori reason to choose one of them over any of the others. And the theist who chooses the wrong religion is in just as much trouble as the atheist who chooses none of them. Therefore, the Wager falls: one cannot assume that a person who believes in God and is wrong stands to lose nothing.
The Silence wrote:That whole argument falls on because you've started out on a totally false premise - that given the choice of deities between religions and belief systems, people must "choose" one. If anything, the diversity shows that there could be some truth behind all of them in that some force exists but sticking to one or another is just blind unthinking conformity.
Imagine your favourite TV show ends on a cliffhanger and you're in a discussion where people take sides as to particular ideas about how the cliffhanger will be resolved. Now, you could simply side with one of the pre-existing ideas, with it's assumptions and beliefs about the show as a whole, or you could say, "it will be resolved, and there is a resolution sitting on someone's desk right now, but we can't actually expect to know the real resolution so sticking to one guess or another is pointless." However, you do know there will be an answer.
The point is that life is not about choosing one religion (or it's ideas at least) to stick to, or choosing one philosophical school or another, or choosing a dogmatic political direction over another - it's about living life on the most agreeable terms. I believe, personally, that no religion is right but that there is a supreme being or force out there.

Only_Humean wrote:So you believe in a God that demands nothing, makes no claims, and doesn't affect your actions in any way? Surely "a nothing will serve just as well as a something about which nothing can be said"?
there is a resolution sitting on someone's desk right now
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