fbpx
40.8 F
Spokane
Thursday, April 18, 2024
HomeCommentaryAskAsk An Atheist: Are you sure there's no God?

Ask An Atheist: Are you sure there’s no God?

Date:

Related stories

Blinded by Binaries: Why We Don’t See the Infinite Dignity of Two-Spirit People

There is much to learn from and praise in “Dignitas Infinita” (infinite dignity), the April 8 Vatican declaration. But its understanding of human dignity is wedded to binary opposites. This view puts the Vatican in an unholy alliance with Idaho’s legislature, which in order to wipe out the rights of transgender people has declared that there only two sexes, male and female.

What Is the LDS General Conference?

Twice each year, members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints tune into what is known as general conference. Most are seeking guidance from leaders and listen to their messages with reverence and deep interest.

Avoiding Extremism: Lessons from Authoritarian Overreach and the Value of Democracy

As our election looms, we must understand our own biases. Understanding our biases will help us vote wisely, choosing those we wish to govern us.

Teaching Religious Literacy in the Face of Intolerance

The aim of the Religion Reporting Project is to talk with students about religion in the media, introduce them to experts in the field and — the best part — take them on visits to houses of worship throughout the region.

The Ease of AI Making Decisions for Us Risks Losing the Skills to Do that Ourselves

In a world where what and how people think is already under siege thanks to the algorithms of social media, we risk putting ourselves in an even more perilous position if we allow AI to reach a level of sophistication where it can make all kinds of decisions on our behalf.

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img

What do you want to Ask an Atheist? Submit your questions online or fill out the form below.

By Jim Downard

Are you absolutely sure there is no God?

SPO_House-ad_Ask-an-atheist_0425133Ah, those absolutes.

Am I absolutely sure Cleopatra existed?  Am I absolutely sure there is actually an Andromeda galaxy?  Am I absolutely sure atoms exist?  Am I absolutely sure horoscopes don’t work?  Am I absolutely sure there are no leprecauns?  Am I absolutely sure that no one spoke Klingon 1000 years ago?  Am I absolutely sure no Neandethal ever said the Rosary?

Am I absolutely sure that if you pray diligently to your god to miraculously restore a limb lost by some landmine in war or terrorism, that nothing whatsoever will happen to make the limb reappear?  Am I absolutely sure that if an experiment is performed where 100,000 people deliberately and publicly blaspheme against gods currently or previously believed to be real (working methodically through an extensive list, to see varied examples), that nothing will happen to them as a group?  Though there are the remote odds that individuals might accidentally get struck by lightning or have a heart attack, them’s the odds after all.

Yeh to all of those.

That absolute belief is, as always, open to new evidence.  But I’m not holding my breath that such evidence will appear, so my provisional absolute remains such.

And once again, there is that implicit parochial assumption in the question that there is just that one “God” I am to be certain of or not.  If people used a fresh word for the idea, say “spurgle,” asking are you absolutely sure there is no spurgle, people would immediately want to know what you mean by spurgle (and whether it means much of anything without a lot of deck-stacking).

Please, the next time such questions get asked, perhaps an addition of which god I am supposed to be deciding on, and while you’re at it, a brief explanation as to why that god get’s preference in the conversation over all the others that are believed in by all the people who don’t believe in the one you do.  Are you as absolutely certain of the nonexistence of their gods as they are absolutely certain of the nonexistence of your own?  And must I give one of your certainties preference over all the others?

I’m absolutely sure not enough people think enough about that one.

Jim Downard
Jim Downard
Jim Downard is a Spokane native (with a sojourn in Southern California back in the early 1960s) who was raised in a secular family, so says had no personal faith to lose. He's always been a history and science buff (getting a bachelor's in the former area at what was then Eastern Washington University in the early 1970s).

Our Sponsors

spot_img
spot_img

1 COMMENT

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
1 Comment
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Eric Blauer
7 years ago

I’m absolutely sure…that picture is awesome!

1
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x