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Reason Not Religion Essay Research Paper Observations

Reason Not Religion Essay, Research Paper


Observations and inferneces from real life perceptions: My entire life


I have been a Catholic and have attended Church regularly with my


family, always believing in God and the stories and tales of the Bible


as pure fact that happened long ago, and of Jesus being the savior,


etc.


Just this past month I attended a Presbyterian church service with my


elderly grandmother in Johnstown, Pennsylvania. The church was small to


begin with, and only about one-third of the seats were filled. I would


have to say that at least 95% of the people were all over 65, with very


few young couples at all. My grandma made a comment on the lack of


young people who attend the masses now, and she kept referring to the


fact that recently less and less young couples and families ever


attended church.


At first I thought that this church would then seriously have to close


its doors when the current majority of the parishioners died, but then


I realized another aspect of human behavior and psychology.


The characteristic that I see and hear so much about that many humans


tend to possess and practice, is the fact that they become “closer to


“god”" the older they get. Why is this? It is because of one of the


same big reasons that we even have to have religion in the first place:


fear about death and what happens to us afterwards. These people seem


to be turning to the kind of thinking that inspired the dichotic idea


of PASCAL^S WAGER. Even if these people were not very religious during


their younger years, we can now see a trend of a large section of our


country^s population starting to attend church more and more and become


more “religious” as they grow older. What inspires this shift?–plain


and simple, the fear of uncertainty.


“QUESTIONING” ONES BELIEFS MUST GO BEYOND JUST WONDERING


When I used to attend Church regularly their was a priest who was an


extremely good speaker and extremely


intelligent. Even though he was a Catholic priest, serving as the pastor


of an extremely large church, he had the


courage and brains to disagree with some of the rigid dogma setup and


enforced by the Vatican. I remember one


sermon he gave that has greatly influenced me since, and I am very happy


I was fortunate enough to hear it. In


this certain sermon he talked about his thoughts on it being good for


teenagers and youth to question the


existence of a God in their world. He talked at length about this


questioning and finished up the speech with the


summation that even though we can question, it all comes back to God.


I continued to believe in this way for a very long time. That there were


many questions concerning the actual and


true existence of God, however due to certain things like the design of


the world, everything had to relate back to


an almighty creator. Just recently I have started to realize the problem


with my previous concept of “questioning”,


as well as this particular priest’s. In the manner that he was referring


to this concept, he was very right in the fact


that “everything has to come back to God”. The reason that this is true


is due to the fact that just questioning is


exactly that: if all we do is say to ourselves, is “Gee I wonder?”, then


we of course will not be able to come up with


any alternative except to continue believing in the existence of a


“god”.


Questioning one^?s faith must not only encompass asking yourself


epistemological and metaphysical questions,


but we must explore, learn, and above all gain knowledge about the


evidence and the arguments from both sides


of the debate. We must have dialogues with others who believe the same


as us, as well as those who share a


completely different, even blatantly contrary view. Only by these means


can we ever come out with a greater


understanding of the issues surrounding the questions about the


existence of a supreme being. If this procedure


is followed and we always continue to learn and accept new, valid


information then we will eventually find our


own sense of the truth, and our own philosophy for our lives.


MY JOURNEY TO FIND THE TRUTH, AND SUBSEQUENT “LEAP OF REASON”


This past year I really started examining my own beliefs and faith in


“God”. As I read Homer^?s Iliad, information


about Mithra (Jesus^? immediate mythological predecessor), and many other


sources that put questions in my mind


about the validity of my faith, I began to seriously doubt whether “God”


was something just made up by humans


since the beginning of time to explain their world, or was really the


truth.


I am sure now in my mind that the images and symbols used to represent


“God” and initially “gods”, were


contrived simply to explain phenomena of the planet, mysteries of life,


and to satisfy that extremely strong need of


human beings to feel important. This past point I feel is the most


pivotal in understanding the human race^?s


majority view of the existence of a supernatural power. There are so


many people today that of course we can^?t all


have jobs that most would consider “important” and help lead the holder


of that job to


“SELF-ACTUALIZATION”, so a “god” makes up for that. It is written and


spoken by Christians and the Bible


that all human beings are equal and that they are all loved the same by


“God”, therefore everyone is extremely


important because the “maker of us all” values them on par with everyone


else. A respected businessman who


has worked for his fortune is the same as a neurotic drug addict begging


for money; often times the former is seen


even as more evil.


THE FALLACIOUS ARGUMENTS FOR THE EXISTENCE OF A GOD


In my quest to find the truth about the existence of a “God”, which will


always be going on and never end, I have


also made it a point to study those arguments which are many


philosophers^? and theists^? base for their belief in an


almighty creator. I will begin by explaining the thought that goes into


each argument, and how the people whom


are proponents of these such arguments validate their claims. I will


then therefore proceed to point out the


mistakes that I believe each of them makes, some more than others. These


three main arguments are as follows:


Teleological Argument for the Existence of God


The teleological argument for the existence of God is one that uses the


actual existents we know in reality, in this


case the entire planet and universe, and uses these in a somewhat well


developed theory for the existence of a


“god”.


The simplest way to define this argument is to use the simple analogy of


a clock maker to a clock; or intelligent


designer to an intelligent design. This is the conscious basis for a


theory that states that due to the fact that we


live and exist in a wholly technical and advanced-level world where


things such as the existence of life and


humans are very “intelligent”, then there must be an intelligent creator


that first shaped us all and everything


around us. This theory has been changed and developed even more over the


years into modern versions.


The main ideas that I find inherently wrong with this argument come from


the fact that first: theists believe that


God just exists and always has, however he too would be an intelligent


being, and according to the teleological


argument itself, would “He” then not necessitate an intelligent


designer? And so on and so forth^? Therefore


theists who believe in the “existence exists” idea in terms of a “God”,


and also tend to endorse the teleological


argument, are contradicting themselves because of a conflict in which


the premises of their two parallel beliefs are


at odds. Those making this contradiction must check their premises.


Another more abstract theory t

hat can act to somewhat disprove the


validity of this argument is that of the


“OSCIALLATING UNIVERSE THEORY”. This theory in a nutshell states that


the universe is constantly either


expanding or condensing, as long as matter is present in the universe. A


corollary of this theory also says that


there is substantial evidence that the universe has expanded to its


limit and then shrunken down again into one


point of infinite density, temperature, and curvature, only to explode


again (the big bang), a total of 100 times!


With the potential of an entirely new universe being created each time


this has happened, with the potential of


completely different laws of physics and the behavior of matter, then


there is definitely the increased possibility of


our planet simply existing and being able to support life by a chance


creation of the universe we live in, created by


the current expansion and creation that has been happening for an


estimated 10 billion years. The fact is, with that


many worlds being created over time, there is a sure chance that out of


all those planets created, at least one, ours,


could support life.


The Ontological Argument for the Existence of God


The Ontological argument for the existence of a “God” is more complex,


and more utterly unfounded then the one,


previous argument that we have examined. This argument basis its entire


“proof” on floating abstractions made


about the brain of man, his conscious, and the things it is unable to


do. This argument is commonly referred to St.


Anselm, its primary creator. The argument goes like this: We all have


somewhat of an image or idea of what “God”


is in our minds, even atheists who don^?t believe in any “god” still have


somewhat of a conception of what a


“god”, if one existed, would have to be like and capable of. Our


conception of a “God” is fairly limited because to


conceive of a being so great and powerful is hard for us to do in the


first place. Anselm holds that because we can


therefore conceive nothing greater than “God”, one must exist.


Let^?s look at that in simplistic form: due to the fact that I can


neither think nor conceive of anything greater than


this entity, the particular entity which I can not go beyond therefore


must exist. How absurd of an argument is


this? Its only foundation lies on some unconnected idea of a


philosopher, randomly applied to reality. The main


problem that I have with this argument is that it takes a rule and law


of reality and reason, and applies to


something that we simply can have no conclusion ever made on while


living on earth. If I say that there is nothing


worse and more scary that I can conceive of beyond death, so therefore


death must exist, I am right because death


does exist. In this case the ontological argument for the existence of


death works. How do I know it


works?–because I can see and perceive death in reality and I can know


it beginning with my sense perceptions.


The existence of, and my knowledge of death, is hierarchical. However


the concept of “God” can^?t not be traced


back to basic sense perceptions (where all concepts must be originally


derived from), and is therefore unable to be


grounded in reality and truth. In order to gain higher knowledge of


something as complex as a “God”, we fist must


perceive basic facts of reality. There are no basic facts of reality to


perceive when it comes to the concept of


“God”.


Think of any concrete that almost all men believe in and their can be no


real intellectual debate about without one


of the parties being totally irrational in even disputing the fact^?that


concrete concept can be traced back to the


traced down on through the line directly to man^?s ability to perceive.


“God”^?this concept can not be broken


down into anything close to reality and perception. It is because of


this fact that even if you do believe in “God”,


in order to retain any sense of being able to think, you must remain


agnostic. If we refuse to recognize the fact that


the existence of “God” is impossible to perceive, then human knowledge


will perish into an abyss of unconnected


and unsupported beliefs in irrational and ungrounded faiths, which we


will fool ourselves into believing is reality.


The Cosmological Argument for the Existence of God


The Cosmological argument hinges on a property which is a corollary of


the axiom of existence. This law is the law


of causality^?which states that all things that occur do so because they


are caused. The proponents of this


argument then take this law, which we apply to every day reality on


Earth, to the beginning of the universe. They


say that the universe just couldn^?t have existed for all time, but that


it would have to had been created just like


everything else. They then take these beliefs even farther when they


assert that the process of creation and


existence can not be infinite in either moving forward, or looking


backward.


For instance, these people believe that “God” created the


universe^?therefore the universe has a cause. However


they do begin to get into contradictory waters as soon as they are


confronted with the fact that they believe of


their God^?s existence^?was God created too? No^?they say that there has to


be some beginning that just was and


always will be^?there can be no infinity in either going forward, and no


infinite progression backwards through


ages of cause after cause. This first contradiction is plain and obvious


to the educated interpreter of the argument,


the others are more deeply involved with other problems.


If these people believe in the phrase “existence exists” when it comes


to their God, then why can^?t this just be


applied to something such as the universe? Why do we need a fanciful


“God” to explain the beginning of the


universe when the cosmological argument already asserts that things can


not simply progress or regress


infinitely? The reason is due to the concepts we discussed earlier of


the need of human “self-actualization” and


the reassurance of an afterlife where we can finally fully enjoy our


humanity and existence.


This argument is right in one respect: the very entity that initially


created the universe itself was not caused or


created. In this correctness however they fail by failing to correctly


identify that thing which did create the


universe^?it was not “God”, but something which contained the entire


universe and still is a part of that universe.


(FOR A CLARIFICATION OF WHAT I AM REFERRING TO HERE, READ THIS.)


FINAL CONCLUSIONS


My final conclusions so far in my quest to understand the basis for


beliefs and proof for the existence and


non-existence of “God” are short, small, and completely unfinished. They


are my final conclusions for this paper,


at this point in my life. One^?s true final conclusions on these matters


will only be able to made some day if there is


some place, perhaps not necessarily a heaven, where we will have time to


think and reflect on what we have


learned during our lives, and perhaps even after them.


For now I know that no matter what paths we follow as human beings on


journey to cognitive understanding


about “God”, we must always remain agnostic for the complete duration of


our mortal lives, primarily because of


the lack of a hierarchy of knowledge which we can see and deduct for the


concept of “God”. Finally, we must all


learn as much as we possibly can and can volitionally motivate ourselves


to in order to understand this debate


and conflict in human belief.


Question everything^?learn from the answers.


______________________________________________________


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