Col. Homestar wrote:Yes I do have my own interpretation of the Bible, and I base my beliefs on that interpretation. That doesn't make me wrong, in your eyes it might, but your not the law around here, and neither is popular opinion. I get to chose how to interpret things for myself, and I get to base my beliefs on said interpretations.
I'm not disputing any of the above. All of it is valid. What I am disputing are your claims that the Bible is "scientifically sound", "100% accurately prophetic", and "without contradictions". These are unrelated to, and in fact contradicted by, the above. They have all been demonstrated to be false within this thread.
One more, probably futile attempt to get you to realize this: Suppose Deuteronomy 22:22, instead of saying "If a man is found sleeping with another man’s wife, both the man who slept with her and the woman must die. You must purge the evil from Israel," said "Sleeping with someone is bad if you or they are married to someone else, and you don't have permission. It makes the one(s) being "cheated on" unhappy. Don't do it." Pick a better wording if you prefer. This would have exactly the same value in guiding us today, without inspiring fundamentalists to unjustly kill people. Better, even, since it's not restricted to a man and a married woman. I've just provided something that's a strict improvement over the Bible. Thus, the Bible cannot be perfect.
Souls
THEWULFMAN wrote:Ah, do humans have a soul. That's a very good question. I'm leaning toward yes, I'm completely convinced we can prove we have one scientifically someday. There are so many things we don't understand yet that it would be irresponsible to decide so early when there isn't proof that we don't have souls. I think Duncan MacDougall had the right idea but his methods were horrible and his results were damn inconsistent I don't trust his finding despite the fact that it would support my claim. So basically my answer is I don't know if we have souls or not.
Careful - "we have no proof we don't have souls" does imply "we should not rule out that we have souls", but not "we should believe we have souls".
[m'kay] wrote:I believe in reincarnation, so the "existence" of a soul is an open and shut case for me. No, I can't prove it, and I have no intention of trying. The only "evidence" I have is purely anecdotal and so divorced from anything that can be fundamentally proved that it barely bears mentioning, but there have been times where i've felt much, much older than I have any right to. I'm not talking about "oh man i'm so much more ~adult~ than my peers" or anything, but just a crushing sense of age.
As you say, I can't really consider a subjective experience as strong evidence. However - since reincarnation requires a soul, shouldn't you need to believe in a soul first, not the other way around?
Here's what I think about the matter. For most definitions of "soul" as something spiritual, apart from, or distinguishable from the body, I don't believe they exist. Everything I've seen about human behavior seems to be explained by the brain or the body. Thoughts and memories are electronic and chemical processes. Evidence for this is the correlation of damage in the brain and changes in the thoughts/personality. Also, the ability of hormones and drugs to function properly and alter behavior. In a computer metaphor, our conscious mind is basically one program running on the hardwired OS of the body. I would certainly like to have a "true form" less destructible than a body, but I don't see evidence for it. This implies a couple of things for my philosophy:
-If somebody dies ("death" here defined as degradation of the brain to non-function, not a stopped heart or anything similarly reversible), they are gone. They've stopped existing. No ghosts, no afterlife, no messages from beyond, nothing. Doing this to someone without their consent is the worst possible thing you can do to them.
-This life is all we have. Everything we do should be aimed at maximizing our own and others' happiness within it. That implies, as long as we're happier to exist than not to exist, that we should prolong our lives as much as possible.
-We are fundamentally changeable. If our brains are computers, we can reprogram them. If our bodies are hardware, we can upgrade them. We can, given the technology, become whatever we want. We can stop aging. We can ignore pain. We can become spaceships. Our ability to change ourselves and the universe is limited only by physical laws and our understanding.
So, I suppose the questions I should be asking are:
-First, and most importantly, do you see any holes or inconsistencies in my beliefs as stated above?
-What do you think the soul actually does? In other words, how do you define "soul"?
-Given that definition, what causes you to think that we have souls? How do you think we can detect them or their influence?
Sin
By "sin" I didn't mean "things that are bad". Everyone and every culture has things they believe are bad. I meant the concept of "sin" in religion, but honestly I can't think of a good wording to define it and most of them rely on "soul" somewhere anyway. Maybe it's similar to "karma" which I understand as "a record of good or bad things you have done, which will later be repaid in kind"? Both of you seem to agree that "what things are bad" is subjective. Do you think there's actually any concrete, defined "thing" that is sin? Or is it just a word used to describe "things that are bad"?
Wulf, I agree with most of the things you state are bad. My criteria for choosing are different, however - for one, I don't use "God hates" as a criterion anywhere. I've basically spelled out my criteria above and in previous posts. As a result, we probably don't agree precisely on the "degree" of bad. For example, I consider marriage as just a contract rather than a "sacred" thing, so I view adultery as a special case of lying.
Laws absolutely should be connected to "things that are bad." Laws should codify things which a society thinks are bad enough to require extra disincentive. Punishment is attached for deterrence, but I don't know what form of punishment is ideal - perhaps exile from the society for a variable period of time? I don't think all bad things need laws against them, though. For example, "white lies" - while slightly harmful, not enough so to require action. Some cases of lying - for example, lying which results in physical harm to someone - certainly should be banned, though.