Spiritual demographics of PowerSwitch

Forum for general discussion of Peak Oil / Oil depletion; also covering related subjects

Moderator: Peak Moderation

Which option best describes your spiritual beliefs?

Practising Christian
3
5%
Non-practising Christian
5
9%
Hindu/Buddhist/Taoist
5
9%
Muslim
0
No votes
Jewish
0
No votes
Agnostic
8
15%
Atheist
22
40%
Pagan/nature religion
5
9%
Other (please specify)
7
13%
 
Total votes: 55

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Ludwig
Posts: 3849
Joined: 08 Jul 2008, 00:31
Location: Cambridgeshire

Post by Ludwig »

caspian wrote:
Ludwig wrote:If minds like Niels Bohr and Richard Feynman can state - as they have - that nobody really understands quantum mechanics, that's enough to satisfy me that many who dismiss the possibility of a reality the beyond the material have not grasped the real depth of the mystery.
The statements made by physicists are saying that quantum mechanics is hard to understand because it runs counter to how we normally experience the world, which doesn't behave in a quantum way on the macroscopic scale.
Feynman didn't say qm was hard to understand, he said, "I think it is safe to say that no one understands quantum mechanics." That is an unequivocal statement.
There's nothing mystical about the subject, but it can be quite difficult conceptualising these concepts outside of a purely mathematical framework.
I don't actually think it is difficult to conceptualise them, if one is prepared to jettison the reductionist paradigm.

Your argument might be taken to mean that there is no reality beyond mathematics.

But this is not to say that anything goes. To be scientific, any theory you come up with has to be consistent with what we already know,
That is a much vaguer statement than you may realise. How do you define "what we already know"? Do you mean "data we have available" or "our current theories about how the world works"? If the former, then as I've mentioned in another thread, there is plenty of experimental data supporting psi phenomena; if the latter, then we would still be believing the sun goes round the earth.

Any paradigm shift is impeded by people taking the attitude, "I just KNOW this can't be true", hiding their prejudices by denouncing the methods of the experiments that contradict them. This has happened since the dawn of modern science.
and have the ability to make predictions about the world, that can, in principle, be verified.
Let me say that I don't have a theory of psychic phenomena, I am basing my views on evidence, some of it anecdotal, some of it scientific, some of it personal.

Science can be data-led or theory-led. At different times, different approaches have dominated. Some people argue that if there isn't a theory to explain data, the data can and should be ignored. I find that absurd, and the opposite of scientific.
Now, you might put your mystical hat on and say "ah, but just because something isn't scientific by that definition doesn't mean it's not real". But if something is "real" it needs to have evidence to support it surely? Otherwise literally anything you can imagine could be said to be real, thereby making the word meaningless.
As I've said, there is plenty of evidence to support the existence of psychic phenomena - enough evidence to change Carl Sagan's mind about the subject, for example.
So if there is a "reality the beyond the material", how do you propose that we investigate it?
There are several ways of answering this question:
1. Who says we have to investigate it?
2. We investigate it by the ways it affects the material world. For example the interference patterns in experiments on subatomic particles show that there is something going on other than tiny objects following continuous trajectories. Or we conduct experiments investigating whether people seem to be able to influence others' thoughts by telepathy.
And how do you define such a "reality" in the first place?
That is a difficult question. I would say you define it through imagination, but I don't know how much sense that would make to you. Or you can practice meditation or self-hypnosis and define it through subjective experience. Some people can get themselves into a mental state where they can "feel" the unity of things, or "feel" that they are seeing beneath the surface of things. I don't claim this to be proof of anything, but it is an intriguing enough experience to cause one to reflect on the nature of reality.

Have you considered that what you see around you is in no absolute sense "real"? We (presumably) perceive the world more richly than an earthworm: does this make the earthworm's experience of reality less valid, or does it imply that human beings have reached the apogee of perceptive ability? No, it doesn't.

Above all, I think scientists should be wary of arrogantly proclaiming the impossibility of transpersonal consciousness when, according to the same criteria, personal consciousness is impossible too.
"We're just waiting, looking skyward as the days go down / Someone promised there'd be answers if we stayed around."
goslow
Posts: 705
Joined: 26 Nov 2007, 12:16

Post by goslow »

Tess wrote:Go figure. I'm doing the 'alpha' course now.
Will be interested to hear how you get on, Tess!

The poll so far shows no believers in Judaism or Islam which is a little surprising, considering the general % in the population.
RevdTess
Posts: 3054
Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
Location: Glasgow

Post by RevdTess »

goslow wrote:
Tess wrote:Go figure. I'm doing the 'alpha' course now.
Will be interested to hear how you get on, Tess!
So far it's been a hugely enjoyable experience with a great mix of people. Also, free food!

The lecture part is not as interesting by far as the fascinating discussions afterwards - fascinating as much for the dynamic between the people as the subject itself (which is treated all too briefly).

I put myself in the 'I really want to believe in this but I just can't' camp. Although since faith for most people seems to be a matter of choice rather than evidence, maybe it's more 'won't' than 'can't'.

What I do know for sure is that [liberal] church people are much more 'my kind of people' than they used to be. In some ways it's like coming home after a decade working in the money-obsessed City. I love it when people tell me about their relationships with God, even though I don't believe. Just stay away from the scary rabid evangelicals (though some of the wiser ones are lovely).
Blue Peter
Posts: 1939
Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
Location: Milton Keynes

Post by Blue Peter »

Tess wrote:Just stay away from the scary rabid evangelicals (though some of the wiser ones are lovely).
Can you have a wise, scary, rabid, evangelical?


Peter.
Does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the seconds to hours?
RevdTess
Posts: 3054
Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
Location: Glasgow

Post by RevdTess »

Blue Peter wrote:
Tess wrote:Just stay away from the scary rabid evangelicals (though some of the wiser ones are lovely).
Can you have a wise, scary, rabid, evangelical?
No the wise and scary/rabid adjectives tend to be mutually exclusive ;)
I know it kinda reads like I think all evangelicals are scary and rabid but that's not my experience personally. I do know some who are more mellow.
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dudley
Posts: 328
Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09

Post by dudley »

I would vote atheist if my browser let me but it's more accurate to say religion isn't my thing. I like philosophy better. I was involved with Buddhism a long time ago and thought I got something worthwhile from that, mostly a sort of acceptance of the world and understanding that craving leads to unhappiness.
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RenewableCandy
Posts: 12777
Joined: 12 Sep 2007, 12:13
Location: York

Post by RenewableCandy »

Tess wrote:
goslow wrote:
Tess wrote:Go figure. I'm doing the 'alpha' course now.
Will be interested to hear how you get on, Tess!
So far it's been a hugely enjoyable experience with a great mix of people. Also, free food!

The lecture part is not as interesting by far as the fascinating discussions afterwards - fascinating as much for the dynamic between the people as the subject itself (which is treated all too briefly).

I put myself in the 'I really want to believe in this but I just can't' camp. Although since faith for most people seems to be a matter of choice rather than evidence, maybe it's more 'won't' than 'can't'.

What I do know for sure is that [liberal] church people are much more 'my kind of people' than they used to be. In some ways it's like coming home after a decade working in the money-obsessed City. I love it when people tell me about their relationships with God, even though I don't believe. Just stay away from the scary rabid evangelicals (though some of the wiser ones are lovely).
Though still not religious (other than in the cultural sense of having grown up in this CofE country) I feel less hostile to the CofE at least, now there are women vicars.
Soyez réaliste. Demandez l'impossible.
Stories
The Price of Time
RevdTess
Posts: 3054
Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
Location: Glasgow

Post by RevdTess »

RenewableCandy wrote:Though still not religious (other than in the cultural sense of having grown up in this CofE country) I feel less hostile to the CofE at least, now there are women vicars.
Point of interest, I'm yet to meet a woman vicar, despite the large proportion of clergy they now represent. I agree with you though.
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RenewableCandy
Posts: 12777
Joined: 12 Sep 2007, 12:13
Location: York

Post by RenewableCandy »

They can be found. There are two within walking distance of Chateau Renewable (and one of them voted for me when I stood in the local council elections :) ).
Soyez réaliste. Demandez l'impossible.
Stories
The Price of Time
goslow
Posts: 705
Joined: 26 Nov 2007, 12:16

Post by goslow »

we've got a woman curate, so they're on their way! I've had a bit of a journey through starting in middle of road CofE, then going into the pentecostal/charismatic churches for a few years, didn't feel quite at home there after a while, now back in a gently evangelical CofE church!

I've never experienced Alpha as a proper punter, having become a Christian way before they started, but I always enjoyed the free food!
RevdTess
Posts: 3054
Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
Location: Glasgow

Post by RevdTess »

goslow wrote:we've got a woman curate, so they're on their way! I've had a bit of a journey through starting in middle of road CofE, then going into the pentecostal/charismatic churches for a few years, didn't feel quite at home there after a while, now back in a gently evangelical CofE church!

I've never experienced Alpha as a proper punter, having become a Christian way before they started, but I always enjoyed the free food!
Similar to my route. CofE until went atheist at 17, then got caught up in the evangelical fold from age 20-25, then went pagan for a bit, then buddhist, then atheist again. Now suddenly the CofE seems to have become much more what I wanted it to be when I rejected it aged 17.

I guess Gen X are finally taking control of the reins.
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Adam1
Posts: 2707
Joined: 01 Sep 2006, 13:49

Post by Adam1 »

dudley wrote:I would vote atheist if my browser let me...
:shock:

What browser are you using then? !! "Fire[and-brimstone]fox"
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Ludwig
Posts: 3849
Joined: 08 Jul 2008, 00:31
Location: Cambridgeshire

Post by Ludwig »

Tess wrote: Similar to my route. CofE until went atheist at 17, then got caught up in the evangelical fold from age 20-25, then went pagan for a bit, then buddhist, then atheist again. Now suddenly the CofE seems to have become much more what I wanted it to be when I rejected it aged 17.
That's interesting.

I tried Unitarianism a couple of years ago. I was looking for a branch of Xianity that was thoughtful, non-literalist and tolerant, but honestly, the Unitarians made the CofE look like rabid zealots! They were nice people but it was all so intellectualised that there seemed little left in it that was truly spiritual. (Mind you, this was Cambridge!)
"We're just waiting, looking skyward as the days go down / Someone promised there'd be answers if we stayed around."
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dudley
Posts: 328
Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09

Post by dudley »

Adam1 wrote:
dudley wrote:I would vote atheist if my browser let me...
:shock:

What browser are you using then? !! "Fire[and-brimstone]fox"
I'm at the internet cafe now and just voted. The one at work just displays the options without any way of choosing between them or submitting a vote.
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Shira
Posts: 46
Joined: 02 Mar 2007, 20:25
Location: Kildare, Ireland

Post by Shira »

goslow wrote:
The poll so far shows no believers in Judaism or Islam which is a little surprising, considering the general % in the population.
I'm Jewish but I voted pagan; I identify very, very strongly as Jewish in a cultural sense but don't have much truck with the religious side of it, and lean much more towards paganism in my belief system. Such as it is.
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