Why can't we let well enough alone? Human nature seems to be such that we can't. We always want to know more, to organize what we know into something coherent and then tell others what we have found out. You might say that such traits are a product of evolution or culture or personality disorders, I would agree, but add that we favor such traits because the underlying unity of existence pushes evolution towards greater understanding.Why can't there just be "no thing", why can't "no thing" be empty? Why do we have to project our hopes/fears/fantasies onto the emptiness of existence? Can't we just leave "no thing" alone.
The answer of course is that religion/spirituality has been evolutionarily useful, building morale & bringing people together.
Spirituality & religion have never been about honoring all perspectives or truth. It's about feeling better & being unified as a community.
Even the newagey "God is everything, God is 'no thing', Jesus, Buddha, Allah are all my homies & point to the one true truth" type of people feel the need to claim their beliefs as truth.
Don't change. You are doing it right.You are right in that we don't have enough information to say definitely there's no God but in absence of evidence I'll carry out my life as if only my decisions for myself matter & treat the universe as uncaring & only responding to me when I do smart things. I feel like in our modern world this is adaptive & religion no longer is (show me the most religious countries & I'll show you the most backwards & self-destructive ones... mostly Islamic countries).
I agree completely. All we do know it that the universe/existence does behave in some way. It may well include fact checking and evidence based study. But, it might also include the experiential and irrational. What if you had to master both to grasp the fullness of existence?You've got it backwards - Those who demand that we accept the existence of God merely begin their thinking with a different (and unreasonable) set of assumptions, which cannot be proven.
It is not possible to prove a negative, except for in very specialized cases. That's why our entire way of thinking here on Earth revolves around the fact that we put the onus of proof on the person making a positive statement - not on the person making a negative one.