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God (II)
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★ God (II)

I don’t think we should upset those people who do.  ibid.  Professor Max Perutz

 

There is no possible way of discerning his existence.  ibid.  Professor Rodolfo Llinas

 

I’ve never been religious.  ibid.  Professor Dan McKenzie

 

There is no non-physical mind or soul.  ibid.  Professor Patricia Churchland

 

Once they invented Newtonian mechanics, arguments for the existence of God shifted their focus.  ibid.  Professor Sean Carroll

 

A personal God – and that I don’t believe.  ibid.  Professor Alexander Vilenkin

 

The question does God exist is nonsense ... Wishful thinking.  ibid.  Professor P Z Myers

 

I decided then as a thinking child that religion was not good for one.  ibid.  Professor Haroon Ahmed

 

Deism morphed into atheism.  ibid.  Professor David Sloan Wilson

 

The Bible is the most ... misunderstood book in the history of civilisation ... If He meant to give us His very words, why didn’t He make sure we received them?  ibid.  Professor Bart Ehrman

 

We’ve gotten a much better grasp at the way the universe is put together.  ibid.  Professor Seth Lloyd

 

Entirely atheist and always have been.  ibid.  Professor Dan Brown

 

People who say that Science has nothing to say about God are just wrong.  ibid.  Professor Victor Stenger

 

Maintaining the culture is maintaining the faith.  ibid.  Professor Simon Schaffer

 

I’m not sure that it nails the case of is there a purpose that’s written in the universe.  ibid.  Professor Saul Perlmutter

 

That’s a lot of what religion’s about – witchdoctors.  ibid.  Professor Lee Silver

 

I’m not a religious or orthodox Jew.  ibid.  Professor Barry Supple

 

A being you don’t understand or know – what will that lead you to?  ibid.  Professor Alan Dershowitz

 

Drugs that produce religious experiences.  ibid.  Professor John Raymond Smythies

 

I can’t identify with any of it myself.  ibid.  Professor Chris Hann

 

Religion has been on the retreat in those areas of overlap.  ibid.  Professor David Gross

 

To have conviction is very different from having faith.  ibid.  Professor Ronald de Sousa

 

When we got to England he was a Christian and I was an atheist.  ibid.  Professor Robert Hinde

 

We as astronomers confront the big questions of wonder every day.  ibid.  Professor Carolyn Porco

 

 

We are getting tantalisingly close to a comprehensive cognitive neuro-science of religious belief.  Andy Thomson, lecture American Atheist Convention 2009, ‘Why We Believe in Gods’

 

We start with Darwin.  Darwin’s remarkable idea not only gives us the only workable explanation we have for the design and variety of all life on Earth, his idea gives us the only workable explanation we have for the design and architecture of the human mind.  ibid.

 

We are risen apes, not fallen angels.  ibid.

 

Religious ideas are a by-product of cognitive mechanisms designed for other purposes, artefact of ability for imagined social worlds, human concepts with alterations.  ibid.

 

We way over-read causality and purpose.  ibid.

 

Children will spontaneously invent the concept of God.  ibid.

 

It’s very hard for us to conceive our own deaths.  ibid.

 

Moral Feelings: recruited to lead plausibility to gods, linked to commitment and solidarity mechanisms; religious morality adds morally competent witness to one’s actions.  ibid.

 

There is indeed a conflict between Science and Religion.  ibid.

 

 

In the summer of 2003 I began filming the series: Atheism – A Rough History of Disbelief.  As part of the process I talked to a number of writers, scientists, historians and philosophers.  Jonathan Miller, The Atheism Tapes, BBC 2004

 

Sometimes Americans say, So you don’t believe in God.  Then they say, Do you believe in anything?  ibid.  Colin McGinn

 

There’s nothing there.  ibid.  McGinn

 

There is no God and it’s a bad idea to believe in God.  ibid.  McGinn

 

Russell: A Godless universe is a a kind of exhilarating universe ... This suffocating presence gazing at your every movement and thought and gauging everything you do.  It’s a bit depressing to think that way.  ibid.  McGinn

 

Russell: There’s no more reason to believe in the Christian God than the Greek gods.  ibid.  McGinn

 

Ontological argument: Definition of God entails that God exists ... The most powerful conceivable being ... The most perfect being? ... He must have the attribute of existence.  Therefore God must exist.  ibid.  McGinn

 

59,108.  But the most perfect conceivable moral being?  What does that mean?  ibid.  McGinn

 

How does God’s life derive meaning?  ibid.  McGinn

 

He can’t make something right just by saying it’s right.  ibid.  McGinn

 

The Problem of Evil ... How come there is suffering and pain in the world? ... Why doesn’t He intervene? ... God is actually quite mad ... The conflict between the All Good cf. the Most Powerful.  ibid.  McGinn

 

It’s hard for people to accept that we’re alone.  ibid.  McGinn

 

Somehow lonely is our essence.  ibid.  McGinn

 

God is a wonderful antidote ... A deep craving I think in the human soul for communion with something.  ibid.  McGinn

 

I really don’t like God.  ibid.  Steven Weinberg

 

Putting God ahead of humanity is a terrible thing.  ibid.  Weinberg

 

Seems to me a terrible character.  He’s a God who’s obsessed with the degree to which people worship him, and anxious to punish with the most awful torments.  ibid.  Weinberg

 

Belief in a belief of God.  ibid.  Daniel Dennett

 

If you believe in God you do all sorts of lunatic things.  ibid.  Dennett

 

It doesn’t work any more.  ibid.  Arthur Miller

 

Everything does hang on the question of whether God exists or not.  ibid.  Denys Turner

 

Theology, modern or otherwise, can be maddeningly obscure.  ibid.  Denys Turner

 

 

This series is about the disappearance of something: religious faith.  It’s the story of what is often referred to as atheism.  The history of the growing conviction that God doesn’t exist. Jonathan Miller: A Rough History of Disbelief I: Shadows of Doubt ***** BBC 2004

 

9/11: It’s inconceivable that it could have been done without religion.  For it’s only in the name of some sort of absolute assurance of a permanent life after death that someone would be willing to undertake such an act.  ibid.

 

The spectacle of September 11th is a forceful reminder of the potentially destructive power of the three great monotheistic religions that have dominated the world in one way or another for nearly two thousand years.  ibid.

 

Atheism itself has acquired almost sectarian connotations.  ibid.

 

Christianity was constantly redesigning its own dogma.  ibid.

 

One can’t be in a state of belief all the time.  ibid.

 

Belief is not a continuously experienced mental state.  ibid.

 

Religious belief became almost inevitably associated with authority and power.  ibid.  

 

Two loony notions: Judaism and Christianity.  ibid.

 

God for many of the Anglicans is nothing more than a sort of awkward geriatric relative.  ibid.

 

It would be a very thin form of life that didn’t have these images.  ibid.

 

 

The Christian imagination was more or less surrounded by an impenetrable cyclorama of sacred imagery.  Jonathan Miller: A Rough History of Disbelief II: Noughts and Crosses

 

Increased worldwide travel ... [and] various forms of Graeco-Roman pagan scepticism and materialism.  A sort of Artesian Well.  ibid.

 

Having closed down the philosophical schools in Athens, the newly converted Christian and Roman Empire made strenuous efforts to Christianise some of the earlier pagan philosophies.  ibid.

 

The advent of new science and technology in the Renaissance would also have a role to play.  ibid.

 

Christianity starts to come apart.  ibid.

 

The deists were a largely upper class group, and as the name suggests they certainly did believe in a deity.  But they were dissatisfied with the state of Christianity.  ibid.

 

[Baron Paul Henri] d’Holbach was the first to write an unarguably atheist book ... The Baron d’Holbach was the first person since classical times at least to insist without any hesitation that there was no God and no supernatural dimension to the universe.  His book The System of Nature became known as the Atheists’ Bible.  ibid.

 

 

[Thomas] Paine’s sceptical and revolutionary ideas were now taking root in England.  Jonathan Miller: A Rough History of Disbelief III: The Final Hour

 

Darwin’s work would call into question God’s role as creator of Nature.  ibid.

 

By the middle of the nineteenth century there were more than forty secular societies in Britain.  ibid.

 

Why should faith survive?  ibid.

 

He [Sigmund Freud] saw religion as an illusion.  ibid.

 

 

 

 

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