Then you haven't found "the truth".
Sorry, but no, that's just not true, there is no such evidence worth taking seriously, there are much simpler and more prosaic explanations for what those tests recorded, starting with human error based on wishful thinking.Yes they have taken pictures with special cameras of souls and life energy leaving the body at death.
There is some scientific proof of this phenomenon. .
Where do I source my truth? A book on how to ride bicycles? What makes you think it is sugar coated? Why do we fail? Because there are too many followers and not enough leaders to teach you how to really ride a bicycle.
JEW physics? WTF is that?No no no. Not the bull**** jew physics version...
Sorry, but no, that's just not true, there is no such evidence worth taking seriously, there are much simpler and more prosaic explanations for what those tests recorded, starting with human error based on wishful thinking.
The truth is relative to the beholder. It can only be comprehended by the level of understanding of the individual. A person can read a thousand books, but they mean nothing unless one actually experiences the truth (at their level of comprehension) and yes, by present day religious and scientific knowledge, the truth is almost impossible to reach because of the dogmatic nature to both. Their are many ways to take oneself outside the dogma of every day reality, which is necessary if one wants to get there. The truth cannot and never will be found inside the matrix (the socially conditioned mind). Losing that mind is the only way to find out who you really are and what is real.I'm not really worried about it that much,
it doesn't matter in the end.
Really? Then why try to make the argument at all unless you enjoy spitting into the wind? You claimed there's solid evidence for the human soul and solid evidence of souls leaving a body at death. Those are claims crucial to the dominant contemporary religions. If those claims don't matter, then neither do those dominant religions in any fundamental sense, a claim I'd agree with to some degree, but for different reasons, except that they do affect the world we have to live in, whether they're true or not, By the same argument, neither do your thoughts about life on the larger scale of the cosmos matter. You have no more evidence for that than there is to support the idea of souls, it's all just idle speculation and wishful thinking, with no roots in reality. I really don't see any point in believing something for which there is no evidence at all. I'd rather say I don't know, and neither do you, and leave it at that.I'm not really worried about it that much,
it doesn't matter in the end.
Ah, but I'm not the one making the claim, you are. I don't have to prove anything. You do, if you want your claims to be taken seriously.There is a chance its total crap. I can't prove it
You can't prove it. Waste of both of our time.
Really? Then why try to make the argument at all unless you enjoy spitting into the wind? You claimed there's solid evidence for the human soul and solid evidence of souls leaving a body at death. Those are claims crucial to the dominant contemporary religions. If those claims don't matter, then neither do those dominant religions in any fundamental sense, a claim I'd agree with to some degree, but for different reasons, except that they do affect the world we have to live in, whether they're true or not, By the same argument, neither do your thoughts about life on the larger scale of the cosmos matter. You have no more evidence for that than there is to support the idea of souls, it's all just idle speculation and wishful thinking, with no roots in reality. I really don't see any point in believing something for which there is no evidence at all. I'd rather say I don't know, and neither do you, and leave it at that.
Ah, but I'm not the one making the claim, you are. I don't have to prove anything. You do, if you want your claims to be taken seriously.
I'm not worried about it, I'm just endlessly curious about how other people think and why they think that way., especially people who disagree with me about fundamental things. I have my own carefully worked out ideas about what's most likely to be true and what's not and how to tell the difference, and I have a large, well-adjusted and well-defended ego, so some part of me has a hard time believing that anyone could reasonably disagree with me. Yet many people do. I'm sure most of us are like that, we all think we're right. But obviously many of us aren't, or we'd all agree on everything. Not even any two people will agree on everything, never mind a whole nation of them. Most disagreements seem to me fairly trivial in the larger scheme of things, but there are some really deep and fundamental disagreements--Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are only the most obvious contemporary examples--that can do us all both much harm or much good, depending on how the differences are dealt with. Obviously any sane person would favour the "much good" option, but the next question is as blindingly obvious as the answer is unknown, and possibly unknowable: how can we know, how can we tell, which is the "much good" option?...Don't worrie about it.
I can have your's?That's why I said I usually don't bother talking about my belief.
Its just a waste of time. Don't worrie about it. Soul's
don't exist. Who cares
Nope. We just need to invade a friendly country like France before anyone gives a **** and it clicks in who we really are.Could it be that wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Lybia, etc are admonition from God toward the Muslim peoples for being so dogmatic and unaccepting of their brother's and sister's right to follow their own path back to God? Could Muslim intolerance toward other religions be the cause of all the suffering in the Middle East?
Could it be that wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Lybia, etc are admonition from God toward the Muslim peoples for being so dogmatic and unaccepting of their brother's and sister's right to follow their own path back to God? Could Muslim intolerance toward other religions be the cause of all the suffering in the Middle East?
The truth is relative to the beholder.
I'm not really worried about it that much,
it doesn't matter in the end.
I don't know the answer, I don't think anyone does,
In principle yes, that should be knowable, and the available evidence so far indicates that he doesn't. There is no evidence or argument that can be advanced in support of the claim that he does, that doesn't apply equally well to any of the thousands of other deities humanity has invented (all but one of which I'm sure you don't believe in) and/or admit of more prosaic explanations than that extraordinary hypothesis. Has it not struck you that the more we learn about a subject, the less role there is for supernatural forces in it and the less willing we are to apply such explanations? God's been relegated to being an explanation for things we don't currently understand, and the more we learn the less there is for him to do. Any logical person wouldn't hesitate to extrapolate that record to the conclusion that the postulated deity probably doesn't exist.If you believe truth is knowable about any range of subjects, would this not also include whether or not God exists?
Everything is relative. Morals are artificial rules for human behaviour created by humans, just like humans invented their gods. God exists for those who believe in it, just like the devil exists for those who believe in it. Satan is alive and doing well in Christianity and Islam.Is this relative?
Even if there is no God, doesn't this notion cheapen life? If it "doesn't matter" you are completely free from any moral implications of the choices you make in life - and that's dangerous thinking.
If you believe truth is knowable about any range of subjects, would this not also include whether or not God exists?