A Sincere Question For Those Who Identify as ‘Religious’

Editor’s note: Our friend Khannea Suntzu asks sincere questions that need honest answers. Please read until the end for a background.
If you identify as “religious” and have read my previous articles or book chapters dealing with religious issues, you almost certainly count me as an enemy, not a friend, an atheist bigot lacking empathy – or even worse.
And I understand why you feel like that.
After all, I still refer to Religion as a serious delusional state and use largely dismissive language when speaking about this phenomenon.
That alone would brand me as a antitheist in your eyes.
But what if there is something wrong with today’s understanding of religion and spirituality? What if our current approach is not the best approach? What if clinical psychology has a better answer?
Over the last 350 years, as I’ve interacted frequently online or face to face with “religious” men and women, some have been gentle, fragile souls, having suffered much over the years and are obviously very sensitive about such deep-seated, painful, and personal issues.
Others have been angry and hostile, to the point of posting violent threats and ugly wishes, reminiscent of the extremist islamists who threaten half the world for disagreeing with them (I had a similar, but less extreme, experience a few years back when a religious individual challenged me in a hateful style that completely belied his religious values).
But even in the case of those who are angry and hostile, I recognize that there is often pain behind the anger, and in their eyes, people like me have played a big role in their suffering.
Someone very close to my family whom I have known all my life came out as “having found faith” a few years back, and I reached out to him, telling him I wanted to hear his story in detail, without responding or arguing.
But after sharing a little with me via email, explaining decades of secret fears and shame and tears, he cut me off, wanting nothing to do with me anymore.
Others have reached out to me as a fairly detached and scientific person, asking about what the deeprooted reasons and explanations in psychopathology for believing in a person in the sky nobody can see, and many of these people frequently have considerable cognitive dissonance leading a fairly rational and materialistic life, and then suddenly feeling this uncanny urge to believe in things nobody can see. And yet the longer we interact, the more pain and uncertainty I hear, almost as if they must continue to prove to themselves (and others) that the things they believe in are actually real. (Again, you can chalk this up to systemic “atheism” or you can ask yourself if there are other factors at work.)
My question, though, is very simple, and I ask it not to be antagonistic but rather to foster discussion: What is the definitive test that demonstrates what you believe is true?
I’m not talking about being schizophrenic, or other identifiable neurological abnormality.
I’m talking about someone who is a generally rational but believes in some kind of deity in the sky?
What is the definitive test that confirms the physical reality of this peculiar belief?
It is true, of course, that I am not a medical or psychological professional, but I have consulted specialists in the field who have worked with religious-identified individuals for decades, and I have read studies confirming what I believe as well as challenging what I believe.
I have seen the academic studies saying that there are brain differences between religious individuals and sane individuals. I have read other studies that they say there are no such differences. And then I have read still other studies that claim that any differences in brain structure are due to the plasticity of the brain (in other words, they are the result of existential fears rather than the cause of it).
I’m quite aware of the pitched debate that took place within the American Psychiatric Association over the classification of religion (formally hallucinatory disorder), and it’s clear that politics were involved as much as science.
And I’ve talked with individuals of faith who are sure that, if tested, they would have a unique and personal connection with something that created the universe from scratch, yet those I interacted with have found faith without undergoing any kind of test or self-reflection.
I’m also aware that there have been no comprehensive brain studies of children who identify as religious, charting their development over a period of years. (And let’s not forget that studies indicate that many, if not most, children who identify as religious, no longer do so after puberty and many of them subsequently identify themselves as agnostic.)
Recently, a religious individual referred me to a science book by Richard Dawkins, thinking it would present me with useful information. (Actually, what I read there confirmed what I already understood.)
The very first question was: “Help! I think invisible gods in the sky exist. How do I know for certain?”
The answer said, in part, “You very well might somehow have this magickal friend. At this time there is no test that will give you a definite ‘Yes’ or ‘No.’”
And that is exactly the point I am making.
For the vast majority of religious people, they are sure they are of faith not because of a verifiable, external test, but, ultimately, because their perception is their reality.
Where this can lead (and has led) is obvious, with people switching back and forth between belief systems by the day or hour, with others living as “closeted believers” with others claiming diffuse faiths in many contradictory things at the same time (horoscopes, bearded men in the sky, acupuncture), with others choosing not to identify as any belief, and still others not identifying as fully human – all because of deep-seated perceptions.
Is it really so hateful, then, to suggest that we invest more time and psychiatric resources and brain scans to understand why some people, even beginning as little children, believe they were created by a fictional being?
Is it really so atheist to say that the very best solution is to help people find wholeness from the inside out?
Whenever I address these subjects in a scientific setting, I urge those attending to welcome everyone who visits with patience and sympathy, be it a bearded Wahabi muslim chanting in gibberish, to all outward appearances, a Catholic priest wearing a dress.
And I call them to study the pathology of delusion, and respond with wisdom, power, and grace to have answers for those who struggle, being sure that there is a better way than celebrating some kind of esoteric religious experiences, putting children in bible camp, then subjecting them to the radical act of baptism, only to have to visit churches every week the rest of their lives.
There must be a better way than this, and true love does not celebrate a person such as Pope Francis. Instead, respect for sanity and reason calls him Jorge Mario Bergoglio to find some semblance of sanity.
You can call me hateful and antireligious if you like, and you can ridicule me as uneducated and bigoted, but if we all agree that growing up and living with the perception that you’re trapped believing in an invisible sky god is painful and difficult, then let’s join together and find psychiatry’s best way to make you rational again.
Today, we look back at old religious and shamanic practices with shock, amazed at what was considered “normal” and “rational” back then.
Perhaps in the not too distant future, we will look back at today’s “acceptance” of functionally delusional people, sending them to bible classes or Madrasahs in an altar boys dress, inundating them in religious scripture and then going through repetitive, weekly and extremely monotonous rituals of religious affirmation for life—as utterly primitive and outmoded.
Perhaps we will find a better way.
Is it really “atheist” to hope and work towards this goal?

In case you don’t get it, this is a sarcastic article in response to this little gem.
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        • Giulio Prisco Mod 15 days ago
          Interesting post K. You know my answers to most of that.
          First, the being in the sky has nothing whatsoever to do with the attitude that you denounce:
          "My God is not interested in the petty details of our daily life, as long as we act with love and compassion. My God has no interest in what you do with our genitals, or with whom, as long as you act with compassion and love. My God has no interest in what and when I eat, or drink, or smoke, or inhale, as long as I act with love and compassion. My God has no preference for one or another nation, religion, ethnic group, gender, or sport team. My God is very, very, very far above these things."
          http://turingchurch.com/2014/0...
          Second, the being in the sky is someone we will meet out there among the stars. If we don't meet him, we will build him, or become him. That being (or beings) is/are emerging from the community of advanced forms of life and civilizations in the universe, and able to influence space-time events anywhere, anytime, including here and now. I also believe he/we/they elevate love and compassion to the status of fundamental forces, key drivers for the evolution of the universe.
          I share your conviction that those who like to oppress others for "victimless crimes" that don't harm anyone else need mental help. But that has nothing to do with that being in the sky, just like the - perhaps stupid - zoning laws in your little town have nothing to do with cosmology.
          EDITED TO ADD: Also, my religion isn't a belief, it's a project plan. All these things are true because we will make them true. If we don't, then others in the universe will, or did.
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            • James Redford 4 days ago
              Hi, Khannea Suntzu. If God does not exist, then nothing matters. Yet if God does exist, then everything matters.
              According to the known laws of physics, God does exist. But before getting to that matter, let me point out the logical implications of a position which maintains that God does not exist.
              If God does not exist, then immortality is logically impossible, as any form of immortality necessarily entails the existence of the capital-G God, in the sense of an omniscient, omnipotent and personal being with infinite computational resources. This is mathematically unavoidable, for the reason that any finite state will eventually undergo the Eternal Return per the Quantum Recurrence Theorem. This is very easy to see by considering the simple example of two bits, which have only four possible states (i.e., 2^2): hence, once these four states have been exhausted, states will have to recur. What that means is that any finite state can only have a finite number of experiences (i.e., different states), because any finite state will eventually start to repeat.
              Thus, immortality is logically inseparable from the existence of the capital-G God, since mathematically, immortality requires the existence of either an infinite computational state or a finite state which diverges to an infinite computational state (i.e., diverging to literal Godhead in all its fullness), thus allowing for states to never repeat and hence an infinite number of experiences.
              Yet the only thing that could give existence and life meaning is immortality, since less than full immortality would mean than living beings' consciousnesses eventually come to an end.
              As well, with the growth of mental resources, it would make the death all the more tragic. Just as the death of a human is far more tragic than the death of an amoeba, the death of a superhuman intelligence would be all the worse. For then what is dying is greater in amount: more memories, more feelings, more intellect.
              Hence, if literal immortality does not exist, then it would be better that we die in the womb, and if not then than the sooner the better: for every day that we go on, new experiences and memories are added which will all come to naught--which will all be snuffed out. Better that a living thing die as bacteria than it die as a sapient intelligence were it not to be immortal: all the more given that the more primitive an intelligence, the less ability it would have to contemplate its fate.
              So also, it wouldn't then matter if one were a serial-killer or a mass-murderer as opposed to a paragon of kindness, as in the end it would all equate to the same thing: eternal death. All life and anything anyone had worked for would all come to naught.
              Thus, the only thing that could give existence and life meaning is if God exists, since then an infinite computational state would exist, allowing for finite states to never repeat as they diverge toward greater complexity, and hence allowing an infinite number of experiences. Only then could life and consciousness, instead of coming to naught, be able to grow and progress endlessly.
              Physicist and mathematician Prof. Frank J. Tipler's Omega Point cosmology, which has been published and extensively peer-reviewed in leading physics journals, is a proof (i.e., mathematical theorem) demonstrating that sapient life (in the form of, e.g., immortal superintelligent human-mind computer-uploads and artificial intelligences) is required by the known laws of physics (viz., the Second Law of Thermodynamics, General Relativity, and Quantum Mechanics) to take control over all matter in the universe, for said life to eventually force the collapse of the universe, and for the computational resources of the universe (in terms of both processor speed and memory space) to diverge to infinity as the universe collapses into a final singularity, termed the Omega Point. Said Omega Point cosmology is also an intrinsic component of the Feynman-DeWitt-Weinberg quantum gravity/Standard Model Theory of Everything (TOE) correctly describing and unifying all the forces in physics, of which TOE is itself mathematically forced by the aforesaid known physical laws.
              The Omega Point final singularity has all the unique properties (quiddities) claimed for God in the traditional religions. For much more on Prof. Tipler's Omega Point cosmology and the details on how it uniquely conforms to, and precisely matches, the cosmology described in the New Testament, see my following article, which also addresses the societal implications of the Omega Point cosmology:
              * James Redford, "The Physics of God and the Quantum Gravity Theory of Everything", Social Science Research Network (SSRN), Sept. 10, 2012 (orig. pub. Dec. 19, 2011), 186 pp., doi:10.2139/ssrn.1974708, https://archive.org/download/T... , http://sites.google.com/site/p... .
              Additionally, in the below resource are different sections which contain some helpful notes and commentary by me pertaining to multimedia wherein Prof. Tipler explains the Omega Point cosmology and the Feynman-DeWitt-Weinberg quantum gravity/Standard Model TOE.
              * James Redford, "Video of Profs. Frank Tipler and Lawrence Krauss's Debate at Caltech: Can Physics Prove God and Christianity?", alt.sci.astro, Message-ID: jghev8tcbv02b6vn3uiq8jmelp7jijluqk[at sign]4ax[period]com , July 30, 2013, https://groups.google.com/foru... , http://archive.is/a04w9 .
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                • Giulio Prisco Mod > James Redford 4 days ago
                  Thanks for sharing James. My opinion of Frank Tipler's work after "The Physics of Immortality" is a bit less enthusiastic than yours. See for example:
                  http://turingchurch.com/2014/0...
                  http://giulioprisco.blogspot.c...
                  I remain an enthusiastic admirer of Frank's first book "The Physics of Immortality" and scientific papers. See:
                  http://turingchurch.com/2012/0...
                  I wouldn't go as far as calling Frank's Omega Point Cosmology "a proof" that "sapient life (in the form of, e.g., immortal superintelligent
                  human-mind computer-uploads and artificial intelligences) is required by
                  the known laws of physics," not in the mathematical sense of proof. But it certainly offers suggestive evidence thereof.
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                    • James Redford > Giulio Prisco 3 days ago
                      Hi, Giulio Prisco. I am aware of all your publicly-available writings on physicist and mathematician Prof. Frank J. Tipler, just as I am aware of pretty much everyone's publicly-available writings on him. At least those writings which use Latin characters for his name (i.e., writings which do not transliterate his name into non-Latin characters).
                      Your closing paragraph above is unfortunate. I am sorry that you would not go so far.
                      The only reason I go so far in reference to Prof. Tipler's Omega Point cosmology is because it is mathematically unavoidable per the Second Law of Thermodynamics, General Relativity, and Quantum Mechanics. These three known laws of physics have been confirmed by every experiment conducted to date.
                      Regarding the "Christian mythology" and "provincial geography" of it which you wrote about: you are *so* not understanding reality.
                      Look, let me put it to you this way. Existence itself is a living, sapient being. Which is to say, we exist within that Person's body. Quite literally. That is not a metaphor or some poetic license.
                      We exist within the Ultimate Person's body. Really. That's neither allegory nor simile.
                      This Ultimate Person incarnates to us in many ways in order to ensure He/She/It can exist in the first place. Because existence wants to exist. Which is to say He/She/It wants to exist. And He/She/It always gets His/Her/Its way in the end (within the bounds of logic, which is why any pain whatsoever exists in the first place).
                      And so He/She/It is intrinsically Good, and cannot help but being so, because all that He/She/It wants is Its own ultimate pleasure, which means that He/She/It wishes to minimize pain/displeasure. Because everything is just It, and so any pain must be experienced by It. Which is why It is intrinsically Good, and cannot avoid being so. So It wishes to minimize pain and maximize pleasure, for Its own good.
                      Any pain in existence is simply something that could not logically be avoided, when considered from the totality of existence, sub specie aeternitatis.
                      Prof. Tipler's Omega Point cosmology (which, again, is mathematically forced by the known laws of physics, of which have been confirmed by every experiment) has shown that the Cosmological Singularity intrinsically consists of a triune structure: the Big Bang singularity, the Multiversal singularity, and the Omega Point singularity--which are actually three distinct aspects of the same Singularity.
                      Tipler has also shown how it is possible for the Singularity to Incarnate as a Person in order to save the world (i.e., in order to save Itself).
                      Tipler has not claimed to have *proven* that a Person did indeed Incarnate, but rather that it is perfectly allowed according to the aforesaid known laws of physics. Tipler has proposed tests on particular relics which, if the relics are genuine, could verify whether a Person did indeed Incarnate. What the blood of these relics so far shows is that a genetically intersexed Person of parthenogenetic birth once strode across this wretched Earth of ours and was slaughtered. As well, Tipler also provides the explanation for the high-energy event which happened to this Person's death-rags, which to this high-technology date no one has been able to reproduce.
                      This "mytholog[ical]" Christic event is not mythological, per the evidence available at this time. Nor is it "provincial", since I reckon this Christological event would happen on every sapient species' planet in the universe, each in their own cultural way but with the transcendent Personage of Christ drawing them against their own cultures and toward the true transcendent culture of eternal truth. Because really it's just the Ultimate Body contorting Itself in a manner which allows It to exist in the first place.
                      In other words, the Ultimate Future determines the Ultimate Past.
                      For the details on all of this, see my following articles:
                      * James Redford, "The Physics of God and the Quantum Gravity Theory of Everything", Social Science Research Network (SSRN), Sept. 10, 2012 (orig. pub. Dec. 19, 2011), 186 pp., doi:10.2139/ssrn.1974708, https://archive.org/download/T... , http://sites.google.com/site/p... .
                      * James Redford, "Video of Profs. Frank Tipler and Lawrence Krauss's Debate at Caltech: Can Physics Prove God and Christianity?", alt.sci.astro, Message-ID: jghev8tcbv02b6vn3uiq8jmelp7jijluqk[at sign]4ax[period]com , July 30, 2013, https://groups.google.com/foru... , http://archive.is/a04w9 .
                      * * * * *
                      By the way, Mr. Prisco, I do very much thank you for your work in regards to transhumanism. Also, I thank you for your interview of Prof. Tipler. I hope I don't come off as too sharp in the above; it's just that I don't wish to waste time and space but rather get straight to the point. Please don't think that I hold any ill-regard toward you.
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                        • Giulio Prisco Mod > James Redford 2 days ago
                          Hi James, same here. I find your ideas, and the latest explicitly Christian formulation of Frank Tipler's ideas, a very intriguing superset of mine.
                          However, at this moment I am more interested in developing a subset - a minimalist and open-ended "Turing Church kernel" that can stand alone but also be taken as a starting point for "geographical" extensions.
                          http://turingchurch.com/org/
                          I have used terms like "provincial" and "petty" for what I call "geography," which is unfortunate because it sounds like a put down. But it isn't meant as a put down, it's just meant to emphasize that geography isn't what I focus on. I will try to avoid using terms that sound like a put down.
                          I fully realize that most people are more interested in geography than cosmology, and that geography is more directly related to the emotional appeal of religion. So, let 1000 places bloom!
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                            • James Redford > Giulio Prisco 5 minutes ago
                              Thanks, Giulio Prisco.
                              What matters is the actual reality of people's actions and inner-life, not what terms people call themselves. However, it is better for people to know than to not know, that way they can make informed choices--choices which potentially affect them after their technological resurrection.
                              I understand that Christ is culture-bound in the sense that incarnating as a human meant that some specific human culture in particular had to be selected. But Christ calls us to transcend our human cultures.
                              Your work has the merit of helping to educate people on the coming radically-transformative technologies.
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                        • Matthew C. Barrett 9 days ago
                          I was outraged, until I saw the link at the end and realized what you were doing. Bravo!
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                            • Nupur Munshi 10 days ago
                              Thanks Khannea. I express myself best through Tagore and would like to quote him yet again in this context.He said "I am able to love my God because He gives me freedom to deny Him"(Fireflies).Dr.Prisco's God in Turing Church gives us a similar kind of freedom,freedom to be what we are .In fact,this freedom is well understood by all of us,God need have to say that I am giving it to you.Hence we are free to be "religious" and worship Him, be "atheist"and deny Him ,be creators and even build him.Because of this we are able to love our God and naturally everyone.The reason,perhaps, we are at war with one another is because we are experiencing lack of freedom to express ourselves.
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                                • Giulio Prisco Mod > Nupur Munshi 9 days ago
                                  Nupur has always nice and thoughtful words! It's certainly true that those who spend their time expressing themselves creatively have no time or inclination to oppress others - they have much better things to do.
                                  We will meet Gods, build Gods, and become Gods, and the Gods are present in the universe here and now in some sense that future physics will understand better and better, and (to go back to K's point) I am sure they don't have the slightest interest in what genitals we have and what we like to do with them. The will be - are - much above that, and we should begin to understand it.
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                                  • Lincoln Cannon 14 days ago
                                    Also, at a practical level, I very much agree with Giulio: we should discover and join God to the extent they already exist, and we should create and become God to the extent they don't yet.
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                                      • Lincoln Cannon 14 days ago
                                        Khannea, at a rational level, it's simple: our probable future correlates with God's probable present; faith in God is trust in our superintelligent potential, and skepticism about God is distrust in our potential. http://new-god-argument.com
                                        There are also cultural and esthetic and historical and social reasons why I use "God" to describe this, but I think you were mainly interested in the rational side of the matter.
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                                        • KhanneaSuntzu 15 days ago
                                          You know I am an atheist. You know I have lost most interest in religion. You know I agree with you in most you say.
                                          This article was intended ONLY to showcase the extreme cognitive dissonance exhibited in the original article. The man doesn't have a clue. My only interest in this case is to drag that inconsistency kicking and screaming in front of the crowd.
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                                            • Giulio Prisco Mod > KhanneaSuntzu 14 days ago
                                              I understand, but you shouldn't blame metaphysics for oppression and intolerance. Blame intolerant assholes instead. Books don't harm people, people do.
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                                                • spud100 > KhanneaSuntzu 12 days ago
                                                  I am not big on religion, since religion can be anything as you wish to describe it. On the other hand, Ideology has been called a faith movement. For the Christians, I supposed, it would be Mark 1:26 in which Jesus is said to "descend from the clouds." Should there be a time limit on when J comes back to earth? Many of the Uma, (Islam) say that they see Allah's work, become manifest in signs about us. Very view have any doubt, seemingly. Hindus and Buddhists seem not to see the world as win-lose or pass-fail, so no test.
                                                  Now let me ask YOU. What kind of test would you see as proving atheism wrong?? If we encountered an alien who claimed to be God, would you disbelieve? Why? "Because I just don't believe in a god!" Aha! A faith movement.!!
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                                                    • Giulio Prisco Mod > spud100 12 days ago
                                                      Note that New Atheist commander in chief Richard Dawkins said “It’s highly plausible that in the universe there are God-like creatures."
                                                      In his book, “The God Delusion,” he wrote: “Whether we ever get to know them or not, there are very probably alien civilizations that are superhuman, to the point of being god-like in ways that exceed anything a theologian could possibly imagine. Their technical achievements would seem as supernatural to us as ours would seem to a Dark Age peasant transported to the twenty-first century."
                                                      What should we call these super-advance God-like entities? Smug atheists would refuse to call them "Gods" and call them something else instead, but it's really the same thing.
                                                      In practical engineering, the operational definition of "infinite" is "very large." Similarly, the practical definition of "Gods" is "very advanced entities."
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                                                        • spud100 > Giulio Prisco 11 days ago
                                                          Si, doctor Prisco,
                                                          I have totally agreed with Dawkins conclusions regarding this. In fact, Skeptic magazine editor, Michael Shermer once joked, "Any sufficiently advanced alien. Is indistinguishable from God." He called it Shermer's Last Law as a copy of A.C. Clarke's 3rd Law about technology and magic. Also, what if this super intelligence actually was the fellow who got things rolling for intelligence to arise on this planet? It wouldn't be Exodus precisely, but if He did the work he deserves the credit!
                                                          He, She, or It, would be a fascinating person to interview, if he exists, and would be great to get some advice on living and surviving. To the atheists I would add, there's no need to be rude to it. If you think you can do better than this big Mind, then go right ahead.
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                                                            • Giulio Prisco Mod > spud100 9 days ago
                                                              Well said spud but I am afraid we can't rely on Him for low-level, micro- advice on living and surviving. I don't think such a Being could be interested in the petty details of our routine. He has only high-level advice to offer: love each other, love yourself, try to be happy, learn, build, come out here among the stars, meet / build / become Me.
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                                                                • spud100 > Giulio Prisco 8 days ago
                                                                  This view was held by America's political founders, specifically, Jefferson, Washington, Adams, Franklin, and so on. This was called Deism, and it fits your previous descriptions of such a Being, exactly. Lincoln, 80 years later, was more of a Old Testament guy, who believed that the US, during its awful civil war, "must atone in blood for slavery."
                                                                  More insanely, I toy with the idea of doing a deliberate search for ETI, with the question in mind of finding Richard Dawkin's god-like intelligences and asking if one of them was our Creator, or if they happen to know the Fellow? "What's HE like?" When I think of this foolishness I also ponder if one of these guys or Guy, was a Boltzmann Brain?
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                                                                    • Giulio Prisco Mod > spud100 8 days ago
                                                                      Yes, I think the Founders had the right approach to religion, and to many other things as well. It's too bad that we stopped listening to them. Give me more Jefferson, more Franklin, and less Obama&Trump.
                                                                      Frank Tipler's first book has a chapter dedicated to the Founders' Deism. Deism may seem too impersonal, but the Cosmist concept of naturally evolved Gods derives Theism from Deism.
                                                                      Yes, we should talk to them. I guess spacetime is filled by their chatter, which we are still unable to detect.
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                                                                        • spud100 > Giulio Prisco 6 days ago
                                                                          Yes, Guilio, the US founders seemed to not see an interventionist God, and Tipler points this out. Between, Trump and Obama, I see Trump as far less ideological than, Obama. Trump loves striking back, despite his own obnoxiousness, at the US establishment-this is refreshing!
                                                                          Your Cosmist views are endorsed by Steinhart. Note, his papers on rational polytheism, and the theological implications of being in a simulation. Steinhart was a computer science worker, before he went back to school to be a philosopher., and it shows!
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                                                                            • Giulio Prisco Mod > spud100 6 days ago
                                                                              I have strong reservations about Obama, but I still prefer him to Trump. Actually, Trump is one of the few persons who could persuade me to vote for a Democrat in 2016.
                                                                              I strongly criticize the excesses of contemporary "liberalism," which in my opinion has became a sad, pathetic (and dangerous, too) caricature of its former self, but I believe in basic concepts of human kindness and solidarity.
                                                                              Back to the Founders' religion, Tipler observes that their Deism faded out, probably because it's too cold, distant and impersonal for most people. Deriving "Theism from Deism" - reconciling Deism with the possibility of a personal God who cares, is exactly what I'm trying to do here.
                                                                              Re Eric - super cool, but still I'm not going to spend 100 bucks for a book. I have a family to support.
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                                                                                • spud100 > Giulio Prisco 5 days ago
                                                                                  Trump handled the newsies, last night, quite well. He did a news conference in Wisconsin last night (I think in wisconsin) and gave blunt, direct, answers. Both Trump and Obama are vindictive, but of the two, Trump is non ideological. Trump understands the art of negotiation. But he understands which team he is on, and how human behavior really is, and not idealized slogans. Moreover, should Putin roll his tanks west, count on Obama to do the least amount possible, to repel Russian troops, while Trump, knows how to deal with tough guys-which is why he hits back and is so obnoxious. As Patton said of Rommel (paraphrasing) "Trump, you magnificent bastard!"
                                                                                  On Steinhart, Yes, after months of consideration, last year, I did buy his very expensive book last year, though one can download his papers for free, should they wish to. I concede that I personally am, by way of personal character flaws, desparate enough to be willing to purchase the book, and completely understand why most others are not. Its one reason I was trying to prod Dr. Goertzel, into elaborating on his March 9 article on consciousness and the universe. He may have nothing more to say on the topic, but I tried, at least.
                                                                                  Getting back to the original topic, I am guessing that should some conceptual progress be made in Cosmism (I can't attend the October meet up) it might bring an increased calmness to the world. I am not saying peace, but calm, which is maybe the best humanity can hope for in our epoch?
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                                                                                    • Giulio Prisco Mod > spud100 5 days ago
                                                                                      Spud, I guess we will have to agree to disagree on Trump.
                                                                                      I think the conceptual progress to be made in Cosmism is to make it emotionally appealing for the masses (see my previous comment).
                                                                                      I am afraid that we, introverted nerds out of touch with the real collective imagination, just don't have what it takes to make Cosmism emotionally appealing to real people. Perhaps somebody reading this wants to help?
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                                                                                        • spud100 > Giulio Prisco 5 days ago
                                                                                          Trump, as it now stands threatens his own class rule of the super rich who now own the world. As the man said, "It's all ruled by donations, this is why Hilary Clinton was at my wedding 10 years ago (true!)" His presidential run is an offense against the elites and the smug loyalist newsies. It's pleasant, but yes Madame Clinton will likely be president in 2016, so never fear.
                                                                                          The Cosmism thing needs to be emotionally compelling, and because of this, it needs to be true, or logically possible. My view has never been hostile to the religious folk (although fanatics do enrage me!) so, this is why someone with a real brain needs to be working on this. Maybe your colleague, Dr. Goertzel, may come up with a schematic of how Cosmism could work well-so well, that even the traditionally, religious, select this philosophy? As for me, I am, as Shakespeare wrote of life-
                                                                                          "A tale told by an idiot, but not well." ;-)
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                                                                                            • Giulio Prisco Mod > spud100 4 days ago
                                                                                              Let's leave Trump alone, shall we. I haven't yet read much about the Republican candidates. Of course Rand won't win the primaries because he is too Libertarian for right-wing Republicans, but I hear that Kasich isn't that bad. However, let's not discuss partisan politics here.
                                                                                              See my conversation with Ben The Turing Church and Open Source Religion: Ben Goertzel Interviews Giulio Prisco:
                                                                                              http://turingchurch.com/2015/0...
                                                                                              We discuss exactly "how Cosmism could work well-so well, that even the traditionally, religious, select this philosophy?"
                                                                                              We use an analogy: the Linux kernel is the real thing, but Linux only started to become popular (slowly) after Ubuntu introduced a well-done user interface with a lot of fluff. What I am trying to do here is the kernel - I am only interested in that, and I have very little patience for fluff (sometimes I call that "geography and zoning norms).
                                                                                              However, I realize that fluff and zoning norms is what most people want, and welcome efforts to add those (without losing compatibility with the kernel of course). Perhaps some or some other effort will be successful.
                                                                                              (My) conclusion of the exchange with Ben: "Anyway, if we are John the Baptist waiting for Jesus, I don’t think Jesus will be a card-carrying transhumanist. He, or she or whatever, is more likely to come from a different path, and be much younger than us."
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                                                                                                • spud100 > Giulio Prisco 4 days ago
                                                                                                  Goertzel wonders if Cosmism can ever be successfully promoted by small orgs, like TC, but he does think that it's the coming thing in the 21st century-from your link. The draw, from an emotional appeal will be (my guess) that we humans some how matter, even though we know we don't matter.
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                                                                                                    • Giulio Prisco Mod > spud100 4 days ago
                                                                                                      But we don't know that. First, we most certainly matter to each other. Second, our descendants become Gods able to re-engineer space time and the fabric of reality, we matter on a cosmic scale. The problem is how to tell that story in an emotionally appealing way.
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                                                                                                        • spud100 > Giulio Prisco 3 days ago
                                                                                                          Depending on the audience, since we are speaking about what stirs the blood, we can use Carl Sagan's Cosmos, from 35 years ago (sometimes) sort of led the way in being compelling,
                                                                                                          From a Christian point of view, for example, one could sell the idea from the new testament, that our descendents would be the path for Jesus to do this. "Suffer the children to come unto.. "And a child shall lead them, etc.."
                                                                                                          My view, certainly annoying to yourself, is that I have said, we have to believe this first ourselves, that WE have to be convinced. This might be well-above what our capabilities, but I am trying to be logical in this view.
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                                                                                                            • Giulio Prisco Mod > spud100 2 days ago
                                                                                                              So we are unable to persuade others because we ourselves don't really believe in our ideas?
                                                                                                              That's a very interesting point, and I think you are mostly right.
                                                                                                              I, Ben and other contemporary Cosmists _don't even say_ that we believe in our ideas. We say, instead, that we find our ideas "plausible" or something like that. This isn't likely to convert anyone.
                                                                                                              Effete intellectuals don't start revolutions. Passionate activists do.
                                                                                                              How can we believe more passionately in our ideas? Of course, hard evidence of super-advanced intelligences out there among the stars, or of the feasibility of Quantum Archaeology, would help - but we have no hard evidence yet, so we must find softer ways of self-persuasion.
                                                                                                              Carl Sagan's Cosmos is still awesome and inspiring, but not in a religious sense. I find Cosmos inspiring in a religious sense, and I think you also do, but we are just a handful of nerds, not enough and not passionate enough to start a revolution.
                                                                                                              We need to do some translation work - formulate our ideas in ways that passionate prophets can understand and embrace. Then, they will take over.
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                                                                                                                • spud100 > Giulio Prisco 5 hours ago
                                                                                                                  Ha! I hardly qualify as an "effete intellectual," not with my poor math skills. However, if you are familiar with the American TV show, Mad Men, you will know that the show was about life in an advertising agency (plus a soap opera) during the 1950's to the early 1970's. The purpose for the business of advertising is salesmanship, promotion, propaganda.
                                                                                                                  Nerds are passionate, which is the definition of nerds, the passion behind the hobby, be it Star Wars dress ups, or, in the US, painting your upper body in Team Colors for football games (U.S.). I would say that we have the passion, but we fail in the message. You, as a native Italian, coming from, your heritage politically, will find this as anathema, but I wonder if we could get the Papacy to endorse Cosmism-Digital Philosophy, as a basis for Christianity? If we are good enough in this endeavor, Cosmism-Constitutionalism has one thing to offer the Church, the Means to the Goal of Heaven, Guilio, The Word made Flesh. Who's word? The New Testament, of course, and yours, and Goertzel's.
                                                                                                                  We need to sell the reason, the causality, to sell the passion.
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