Intelligence and religion...

Yes, exactly. Einstein believed that everything was God and that God was everything. He was in short, a pantheist. For the life of me I have been unable to determine the difference between pantheism and atheism, but I’ll let it stand that there is a difference. My qualm is with religious people who like to put Einstein on their side; he most certainly did not believe in the God that 99% of Christian theists claim to believe in.

Also, there is no comprehensive way to measure or understand intelligence except to compare an individual to preconceived ideals such as a certain type of linguistic or quantitative achievement.

But what you seem to be saying is that theist beliefs contradict your atheistic beliefs and since from your perspective atheism (probably humanism) is the ideal of intellectual development, those who believe otherwise are “less intelligent.” So your question is meaningless. You are asking why some people are smarter than others but assuming that to be an atheist necessarily equals being intelligent.

My, my. Aren’t we a bit arrogant? I’m going to assume that you mean something other than what you seem to mean in this post, which is that atheists are ignorant fools who blindly ignore evidence against their position which is readily accessible. Please clarify your statement. If this is what you really meant, I’d appreciate an explanation of what “dedication observation” you would suggest to prove the existence of God.

That is a very unfair and assuming comment. In fact the first of its nature in this thread so far; thus my reply. 99% of all people are initialy brouht into a world of religion. As children the story is put in front of us and in most cases we are to take as we wish. This says that through any indivduals struggle as a child and young adult to become an athiest shows they, at one point found thier religious teachings to be wrong or rediculous. This rarely, if ever happens the other way around. No one is told as a child there is no God only to later “see the light” as they age. Athiests most likely have been on both sides of the fence, as a believer was always that way. Thus making your “Sun around the earth” comment true only for the believers…

I wouldn’t say the chances are as slim as all that. I believe one of Ms. O’Hare’s children actually became a priest.

jmullaney, telling atheists that if they give up all their possessions for all time that they will encounter proof of God is rather akin to telling us that if we give us all our possessions you will give us a perpetual motion machine. You are requiring a big risk on something that seems remarkably unlikely to be true. I may think it is (remotely) possible that someone is correct when they claim the Secret to Happiness is in the depths of the Amazon in a small ceramic teapot, but I ain’t going to actually go there to check, and I don’t think I’m unscientific or close-minded to refuse to make a great personal sacrifice for a apparently remarkably unlikely result. I’d advise you not to sneer so much if some are unwilling to check out your “simple scientific hypothesis”…it seems no more simple or scientific or reasonable than the Secret to Happiness being inside a teapot in the Amazon.

Readily accessible is a rather broad expression. I would say much of scientific testing doesn’t fall under the realm of data being “readily” accessible. I don’t have any tools at my disposal that could tell me the speed of light. I doubt I could just look up at the night sky and understand the implications of the perihelion of Mercury. I don’t think I could dig up the nearest vacant lot and “readily” prove that man evolved from lower lifeforms. I can’t even measure the accerleation of gravity without a stopwatch, a yardstick, and something to drop.

Well, I’m still trying to work out any potential kinks in the experiment, and would appreciate any willing volunteers. Valid subjects would need to have an open mind and be “basically good” people, for lack of a better term at this time.

Step 1: Go sell all that you have
Step 2: Give away all of your money to the poor
Step 3: Leave you friends and family
Step 4: Without negating Steps one and two in the process (beyond reason), wander off doing whatever you feel moved to do.
Step 5: Allow six (or more) weeks for observation as to whether or not there is a God or not.

According to my theory, you will have ample evidence that the Christian God exists at the end of this process.

I don’t know of any good scientist who requires that other people give up all they have to prove his personal hypotheses. I think it is imperative that in this case the scientist perform the experiment on his own and get back to us with some of the physical evidence of divinity you claimed was produced. Or at the very least, find someone else who has performed the experiment on their own who can conjure pepperoni-rolls for us as you once say you did. As of now, I’m afraid your hypothesis appears to have about as much likely validity as the teapot-in-the-Amazon one. However, should you decide to give all your money to the poor, I’m getting a bit low on cash these days…

I was in fact, raised as an atheist. I ran my experiment myself fully expecting proof that God did not exist and that the promises of Jesus were false.

They are more than willing to accept my results. But in the unlikely event you have an electron microscope, a data link to Hubble, and a proto-humaniod skeleton in your basement, I won’t insinuate that you have ever accepted the scientific research of others at face value. :stuck_out_tongue:

So you haven’t spent billions launching your own space telescope? But you do blindly accept what NASA tells you lies in deep space? Without the personal sacrifice involved to independantly verify their results. And you call yourself a scientist. Shame, shame.

:frowning: I’m not sneering! If I had found the Secret to Happiness in the Amazon (apparently not that hard! ;)), and it came up in a thread, I’d gladly share my results though.

Huh?

Submit a peer-reviewed paper detailing the experiment and your proof of God and I’ll listen. C’mon, just conjure a few pepperoni rolls out of thin air under laboratory conditions under the eye of scienitists and stage magicians…what’s so hard about that?

I trust the scientific method. I trust thousands of scientists trying to pick holes in the latest theory. I have run several scientific experiements, and confirmed that the results had merit. You are an unknown person on a message board who asks people to give up all they have based on his say-so. I would not put any more weight in your bare statements of “give up all your possessions to see proof of God” than I would put in “give up all your possessions to see proof of neutrinos” or “give up all your possessions to see proof of ghosts” or “give up all your possessions to see proof of atheism.” You have no scientifically verfied evidence for your claims. We have a limited amount of time and resources to discover things about this world, and I see no shame in not wasting our efforts on hypothesis that have no scientific support and are amazingly inconvienent for the experimenter. If you would not chop off your pinkies solely because I claim you will receive disproof of God if you do so, do not make sly “shame, shame” comments about those who do not give up all their possessions on your say-so.

Yup, and I’d probably be just as skeptical if you told me you found the Secret to Happiness in a teapot in the Amazon.

This idea that I must proove every scientific theory myself and that I must see it with my own eyes is silly. Ive never seen Paris, but I believe whole heartedly it does exist. Believing the moon is X amount of miles away even though Ive yet to personally measure the distance is no comparison to my lack of belief in religion. Telescopes and carbon dating just seem to hold more water than a Book man wrote ages ago based on his insecurities and his fear of the unknown…

And this idea that one must give up all his worldly posessions in order for “God” to rear his ugly head is a joke right???

For me, the final kicker is the unethical actions of believers. In my personal experience, the atheists I have known have upheld more rigid ethical systems than the Christians I have known. The Ten Commandments just don’t cut it as a complete ethical system. There are a lot of situations they don’t cover. On top of that, I see Christians fail to follow their own laws. Granted, it may be easier in some ways to follow rules you make yourself than rules imposed by an outside force, but I think that if I genuinely believed in God and in Heaven and Hell, I’d be REAL careful about following the rules.

I don’t believe, and therefore have to make my own rules. I have made some pretty loose rules. But, I take personal responsibility for all my actions. I don’t see many Christians doing that.

I do know, personally, some intelligent Christians and some intelligent Jews. I haven’t talked religion much with the Jews. They haven’t brought the subject up because they don’t have a burning need to convert me. The intelligent Christians I have spoken to have had profound experiences that they consider to be examples of God speaking directly to them or filling them with the Holy Spirit or whatever. I think that they had an epiphany, or the physical effects of epiphany, and they mistook it for Divine Intervention. But, having had strong epiphanies myself, I understand that the feeling is very powerful. Once, while reading, I suddenly understood a Psychiatric Theory and felt that I would become a Psychiatrist. About a year later I reread the book and realized that my understanding was wrong. I had somehow overlooked the word “not” in the sentence. Still, to this day, I can remember how clear the sentence had been and how Right it had felt. I was wrong. I looked for references all over the place to try to see if others saw it my way. No, it was pretty much established fact. I can’t even remember what the actual theory was anymore, but I can remember how Right it felt. I can completely understand that someone could have a sudden epiphany about God and never be able to give up on that belief.

Have you ever tried LSD? It’s my opinion that LSD causes the brain to release chemicals very similar to the chemicals released when you have an epiphany. (It does other stuff too, which clouds this theory a bit.) So, any thought you have could suddenly seem earth shattering and perfectly RIGHT. This is a lot of fun mostly, but it can lead to belief in some odd things.

Trying to convince someone they are wrong about God is a waste of time. I would prefer to try to convince them that they need to expand their ethical system beyond the Ten Commandments and to try harder to follow the rules they already have. Generally they are ready to listen to this sort of persuasion. I don’t care what they believe as long as they act responsibly.

Speaking of getting crucified, I’m sure I’ll get flamed something awful for posting this, but what the hell. I picked this up around 6 years ago, when BBSes were still king:

Right on and well put. The LSD comments especially. Fortunatly with that drug the “other” effects you mention tend to allow you to forget the discoveries you made while under the influence, as not to let the false rightiousness continue. It covers its own tracks in a way. Leaves all the “profund” ideas behind you like it were a dream…

You are also absolutly right about the declined sense of morality the devout have. Which is funny, because this is one of the main reasons the less spiritual parents give religion to thier children; to make them “better people”. The firmly religious find themselves in a win/win way of life. When you have an unseen ruler who is higher than even the greatest powers on Earth (police, govt, etc…) who alway loves you, always forgives you and will always reward you with the greatest pleasures ever concieved with a simple appology before death; its hard to find a need to hold yourself responsible to the less powerful entities that surround you in life…

“God is man’s most glorified scape-goat” CG

Eh, I wouldn’t go nattering on about the “declined sense of morality the devout have” unless you want them assuring you that atheists are all immoral. Just becuase some people use the “get out of jail free” card of forgiveness as an excuse to be complete bastards doesn’t mean all, or even most or many do. Claiming that the devout are overall more immoral than atheists without any evidence cited is not terribly convincing.

Regarding

and

and maybe a few other remarks in this thread. As London_Calling already pointed out, there is good evidence that religious belief has waned in importance, if you take into consideration the fact that the U.S. is evidently idiosyncratic as industrialized nations go with regards to religious belief. See, for example, What Americans Really Believe, and Why Faith Isn’t as Universal as They Think by George Bishop from Free Inquiry. (Which is, of course, an avowedly secular humanist magazine.) As Bishop says in the opening of his article:

I’m certainly not denying the existence of very smart theists, including on this message board, but I wonder which is really more “representative” of American believers, the smart theists we see around here, or the nonsensical beliefs of religious zealots. According to Gallup polls, “47% of Americans believe that God created human beings at one time within the last 10,000 years pretty much in their present form” . I’ve seen various depressingly high percentages for belief in astrology (though generally substantially less than half). I don’t think we can just write off this kind of wackiness as being part of an unimportant fringe, no matter how smart and articulate the religious people who hang around here are.

I’d also point out that there are some people out there who are not apparently stupid, but who hold religious ideas which I find logically or factually ludicrous or ethically abhorrent. With many religious extremists–at least among the leaders–it seems less a question of “stupidity” and more of a kind of insanity. (Understand that at this point I’m no longer talking about mere belief in God, but stuff like geocentrism or Christian Reconstructionism. Unlike creationism or astrology, these are genuinely fringe beliefs; I guess I’m just saying that I don’t think “stupidity” or lack of intelligence per se is the right way to get at what’s wrong with the mental processes which lead to religion.)

What did those studies mean by religious? I got a IQ of 1570 on one of my PSATS(havent taken the sat yet) and i am religious but you wouldent know it from my every day activities. I follow what is said in the bible, I don’t go to church regurally(and have gone braindead on how to spell that word) I don’t feel like I know im right simply that the evidence points to god. However my belief is pretty unshakable. And every evidence ive seen against it doesen’t even touch the bible, just common misconceptions and traditions, except for ones covering the bible which very few do.

IMHO the majority of stupid atheists are stupid because they believe that science does not require faith. And with that assumption they have the ability to think that their group is smarter than any other. Science is not the beginning and end of human existance and might be discarded at some time in the future.

Faith is a requirement to believe what your eyes see before you or what any other sense sees.

Hmmm…

No scientific evidence to back this but…

Some of the most devastating intellects I’ve run into are either atheists or agnostics.

Of the religious (mainly Christian) folk I know (I’m speaking of general tendencies here, this is by no means universally true) it seems that the more ritual, and the stronger the emphasis on tradition, the more intelligent the followers.

Thus Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, High Church Anglicans, et al tend to be more intelligent, and frequently more highly educated.

At the bottom of the scale are the hardcore fundamentalist protestants who dismiss “empty” ritual and sneer at “manmade traditions”.

Of course, the more ritualistic and tradition-bound denoms also tend to have more complex theologies, which I imagine makes them more attractive to people who have brains that need something to do. Also, there’s the “use it or lose it” school of thought- if you have a good catechist or religion teacher who doesn’t tell you to go sit in the back of the room when you ask the difficult questions, you get more information, more concepts for the mind to mull over, thus the synapses get more of a workout.

The hardcore fundies basically just accept Jesus as their Savior and don’t do anything their pastor says is a sin don’t really think about their religion because there’s not really much to think about.

Also figure that the faiths that have more ritual and traditions and more complex theologies make more allowances for the huanity of their followers- they don’t necessarily define everything that’s fun as a sin, and if you do something really bad wrong, at least with the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, you have recourse to the confessional.

Fundies demand that you refrain from even moderate drinking, dancing, listening to music that actually has a beat, going to movies… And no way to receive absolution if you break the rules, so you’re in a constant state of feeling guilty and apologizing to God.

Less intelligent people are more inclined to blindly follow rules, so are less likely to get themselves into trouble with their fundamentalist beliefs.

Of course, there are some truly wacko Catholics (anybody got a link to the Feenyite site?) but that’s another thread.

An IQ of 1570!!??!! You ought to be able to bend Uri Geller with the power of your mind!

There are many intelligent atheists in the world. However, atheism itself does not require intelligence. The common assumption that atheism derives only from deep analysis of evidentiary merit of controlled observations on reality is as much a myth as Gaudere’s teapot.

Some people in the world are very intelligent. Most are of more modest intellect, and much more likely to make their theological decisions on the basis of personal experience. The fact is that many atheists are as much “antitheists” as atheists. The use of logic to support deeply emotional rejection of religion is not based on intelligence, any more than is the deeply emotional faith based on an epiphany.

A very large number, billions in fact, of the people in the world are of less than average intelligence, and reach most of the philosophical beliefs they have by accepting the beliefs of others they find either admirable, or authoritative. That is not a function of intelligence, it is a pragmatic outcome of the nature of human experience. The topology of a social model where each member is a leader would be . . . complicated. Humans don’t follow that sort of pattern for long.

But then, I must admit the intelligence of Atheists, Christians, Muslims, or Teapotians is of almost no importance to me. Intelligence is a useful thing, in some areas of life. It certainly has very little correlation with decency, kindness, courage, honesty, or any of a thousand other human character elements I find much more important.

Christ did not seek to save the bright, the strong, the clever, or the educated. He came for each and all. I am but His joyful servant, and my clumsy stupidity does not make me less, in His eyes. If that comforts me, perhaps it means that I chose faith because of a failing of intelligence. I am untroubled by that assessment.

Tris

Really? I was under the impression that is how science worked.

Unfortunately, this is not a physics experiment. I realize you might be troubled by the parameters under which such an experiment would have to take place. It is more akin to a biology experiment. I can’t prove to you that if you rub your eyes real hard you’ll see colored lights, right?

Do historical figures count?

Right. And don’t rub your eyes either, I’m obviously making that part up too. :rolleyes:

If you are hitting me up for a loan, my APR is very reasonable.

Should have said: they are more than free to accept my results. Free will, free wheeling, switch glitch.

I continue to search for peers willing to repeat my experiment. Didn’t we meet once in a past life?

“Let me get this straight, Og. You banged two flint rocks together over some kindling and created fire. Uh huh. Well, everyone knows it would anger the gods to steal fire from them, so no one is going to verify your results, but submit a peer-reviewed clay tablet and I’ll listen to this wacky ‘fire’ idea of yours.”

Hey, yeah, that was you!

(A flawed analogy to a physics experiment again, mind you.)

Only trying to fight ignorance here. “Don’t have a cow, man,” to quote the Bart.

Nor any which counterdicts my hypothesis! If I discovered the secret to cold fusion and the next day my lab burnt down and I didn’t have the time and resources to repeat my experiment, but the scientists I went to with my results and experimental parameters responded thusly:

That would be a shame on them. Their unwillingness to invest the resources to repeat my experiment would be understandable, but what a loss for humanity.

What could possibly be the investment involved? Let’s say a person’s net worth is $220,000 dollars and they earn $125 an hour. With a six week experiment, that would be a net cost of a quarter of a million dollars. To paraphrase Jesus, exactly what price do you put on a soul?

Perfect correllation if you ask me.

Who said anything about a book? I’m providing you with an experiment you yourself can perform right now which would verify that God exists based on my own results.

Nope. But I can understand why less intelligent and unscientific people would blindly ignore any opportunity to gather evidence of God’s existance. Sad, really. :wink: