• Zacryon@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    The Abrahamic religions do not have a monopoly on the concept of God.

    Yes. I just made few examples on popular concepts. And I can make similar examples for a lot of other concepts. However, to discuss this further, we need some clear definitions.

    Do the ridiculous things now ascribed to electricity […] prove that electricity doesn’t exist?

    This is a form or erroneous attribution. It reminds me of the luminiferous aether of which physicists thought for a long time that it exists until it was disproven. This is a testable hypothesis. Your pixies might even be testable to a certain degree. But beyond a certain point they aren’t. Therefore being in the realm of pseudoscience again.

    If we observe electricity, of course elctricity exists. But if we don’t know its cause, it’s important to investigate it. We have to investigate cause and effect instead of just assuming that a higher power plays a role. That’s our only way to gain knowledge and separate fantasy from reality.

    And currently, religions with their concepts of deities reside in the realm of fantasy.

    • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Good, you’ve got the gist: a ridiculous claim centered in an observable phenomenon does not invalidate that phenomenon.

      Now replace electricity with consciousness, subjective experience itself. We observe consciousness, we are consciousness, of course it exists. It is important to investigate the cause, determine the nature of the phenomenon and consider seriously the possible explanations.

      By a due investigation, and serious and rational consideration, what possible explanations do you find for consciousness?