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I am a deist?

xkatz

Well-Known Member
I think I am deist because I don't really believe in the my religions' scriptures nor it's institutionalization (if that makes sense) and I believe god can be proven through reason. So I am a deist?
 

Copernicus

Industrial Strength Linguist
I think I am deist because I don't really believe in the my religions' scriptures nor it's institutionalization (if that makes sense) and I believe god can be proven through reason. So I am a deist?

Possibly. Deists also tend to believe that God never (or seldom) intervenes in human affairs. Before Darwin, religious skeptics tended to be deists rather than atheists. Nowadays, I think that skeptics tend to see less need to posit a creator God to explain the way things are.
 

xkatz

Well-Known Member
Possibly. Deists also tend to believe that God never (or seldom) intervenes in human affairs. Before Darwin, religious skeptics tended to be deists rather than atheists. Nowadays, I think that skeptics tend to see less need to posit a creator God to explain the way things are.

I believe that as well.
 

Willamena

Just me
Premium Member
I think I am deist because I don't really believe in the my religions' scriptures nor it's institutionalization (if that makes sense) and I believe god can be proven through reason. So I am a deist?
What are your religion's scriptures?
 

xkatz

Well-Known Member
I'm thinking you're not Deist until you're sure what religious scriptures you're rejecting. ;)

Speaking as an atheist, the Torah has a lot to offer.

Well I do know it's the torah for a fact and I reject all other religious scripture as well.
 

JeLy

Member
God can be proven in what way? That he once existed or is still existing and intervening? Not that I agree that any deity can be proven - but if you take the first stance and not the second, then that is more of a deist outlook.
 

Willamena

Just me
Premium Member
That they are man made and most of the rules these scriptures create are illogical and/or arbitrary.
Have you tried, like, studying them? It'd be a shame to throw away Judaism just because you haven't tried on the coat of many colours.

But I would say that to be a Deist you would have to have Deist beliefs, not just reject other beliefs.
 

xkatz

Well-Known Member
Have you tried, like, studying them? It'd be a shame to throw away Judaism just because you haven't tried on the coat of many colours.

But I would say that to be a Deist you would have to have Deist beliefs, not just reject other beliefs.

Well seeing that I have grown up Jewish, read Torah, had a Bar Mitzvah and did Hebrew School for ten years I would say I have pretty good knowledge.

And I have read a fair amount on Deism, and I believe in most, if not all of the beliefs in Deism.
 

Willamena

Just me
Premium Member
Well seeing that I have grown up Jewish, read Torah, had a Bar Mitzvah and did Hebrew School for ten years I would say I have pretty good knowledge.

And I have read a fair amount on Deism, and I believe in most, if not all of the beliefs in Deism.
Then why do you question that you are diest?
 

tumbleweed41

Resident Liberal Hippie
I think I am deist because I don't really believe in the my religions' scriptures nor it's institutionalization (if that makes sense) and I believe god can be proven through reason. So I am a deist?

Deists do not generally believe in any reveled revelation. Nor do we believe in a 'personal' or 'interventionist' god. Usualy, god to a Deist is the 'First Cause', we feel no need to anthropomorphize god into something resembling humans in appearance or emotion.
It is also important to understand that while a belief in a Deistic god is perfectly reasonable, you cannot 'prove' god through reason.
 

xkatz

Well-Known Member
Deists do not generally believe in any reveled revelation. Nor do we believe in a 'personal' or 'interventionist' god. Usualy, god to a Deist is the 'First Cause', we feel no need to anthropomorphize god into something resembling humans in appearance or emotion.
It is also important to understand that while a belief in a Deistic god is perfectly reasonable, you cannot 'prove' god through reason.



Well I pretty much believe all of that anyways.
However I meant to say belief is in reason, so that's my bad I guess.
 

ThereIsNoSpoon

Active Member
I think I am deist because I don't really believe in the my religions' scriptures nor it's institutionalization (if that makes sense) and I believe god can be proven through reason. So I am a deist?
Deists are people that normally think God to be some kind of supernatural alien who has set all in motion and now only watches as things unfold, or even just left alltogether.
No interference by him, nor is there any moral stuff with hell and paradise and other nifty things.
 

St Giordano Bruno

Well-Known Member
I am not a deist but I am an atheist* with an emphasis on that asterisk because the simple question "do you believe in God?" I don't believe can be answered with a simple yes or no answer.I am certainly an atheist when it comes down to a Biblical or Yahweh definition of God and so I guess many deists would too. I do subscribe to many of those deist principles like I do not believe in an anthropomorphic god in any way shape of form nor do I believe in divine intervention such as with miracle cures for cancer. But where I beg to differ I do not believe there was some intelligent designer or architect that created, designed or built the universe in the beginning. Essentially I subscribed to Hawking's view that the universe created itself through spontaneous creation such as a quantum fluctuation in the unstable equilibrium of nothingness.

But if one defines "god" as the laws and principles that created the universe and theoretical physicists the likes of Hawking are right with their self made universe, then I think if that is the criteria for God then the universe itself is God. It may be a totally blind and dumb kind of God but a God by that definition anyway. Which is why I describe myself as a scientific pantheist looks on nature and God as one in the same thing.
 
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