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Previous comments... You are currently on page 6.
Certainly you can be religious and adhere to many principles of Objectivism. But you would almost certainly have to ignore part of its metaphysics (I say "almost" because it depends on your concept of what God is), part of its epistemology, and you get into real trouble with some of its ethics.
You could, however, be religious and adhere to other parts of it, including its politics and aesthetics; and for that matter, significant parts of the rest.
However that makes you a partial Objectivism-sympathiser, not an Objectivist. Mind you, I have nothing against Objectivism-sympathisers as long as they really do hew to reason (albeit, of necessity, having made a rather large error) and full respect for the rights of others.
when I was 15 and immediately became atheist. . my mom
nearly had me committed. . I did not care.
I stayed atheist until I worked through the possibility
of a philosophical bridge, in my 30s. . when I became
confident that the bridge was legitimate, I married
a Christian woman and tried to make a family. . no kids,
the the marriage is solid. . so is the bridge. -- j
p.s. my bridge is roundly rejected in the gulch, but
a whole lot of people responded positively when I asked
if a Christian might be welcome in the gulch. . we had
over 700 comments on that post.
.
.
to the sun in confidence, not with faith. -- j
.
As for proven "facts", I've been taught that the Sun is 93 million miles from Earth, but I've never proven it for myself...I just take it on faith, at this point. That's why I stated that "we can't truly know everything".
In your own statement, you indicate that our Universe and everything in it MUST have had a "cause." Religionists/Deists have faith that cause was God.
You cannot create something from nothing, and the Big Bang suggests everything came from nothing spontaneously. Based on your own statement God must exist then
We both resented it.
We are both ex-Catholics but not solely for that altar boy reason. Even our individual reasons differed.
I have four younger brothers.
#2 became an atheist who now believes there is a God but I think that's about as far as that goes. By the way, he's a libtard.
#3 became a nondenominational Protestant, who introduced me to Ayn Rand with the AS1 DVD for a Christmas present. He followed up with AS2 and AS3 as Christmas presents but I had already rented them via Netflix. A lot of Christian respect Ayn Rand's philosophy and writings despite her being an atheist.
#4 and his family are members of the United Methodist Church. He's the only one not retired.
#5 became agnostic for at least a decade but now calls himself a "reconvert" for a Catholic. He is the only one who knelt at the appropriate times during Dad's funeral mass and took communion.
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