Your point above is meaningless except to yourself. I do not question what your belief is for you; just saying There is no way you have proven anything.
I have to agree. And talking about God, gods or religion is pretty vexing. If only we could all put down the bull horns and keep what you just wrote in mind. All anyone can do is state the truth as they see it. It does no good to ask for proofs or evidence unless we’re talking about empirical matters. For those like me who have no conception of a god, I think the better tack to take is to seek to understand why such beliefs have been so important nearly everywhere to so many for so long. For those who hold a traditional set of religious beliefs it would be better to wonder how those who don’t hold those same beliefs might nonetheless be important to God. It is easy to become glib and insulting on both sides. For this kind of conversation to have any value both sides need to turn down their egos. Reminds me of an article a friend just sent me that was published five years ago in Scientific American magazine.
https://blogs.scientificamerican.co...essing-need-for-everyone-to-quiet-their-egos/
In case it is behind a pay wall I’ve copied out a few excerpts:
“We are more divided than ever as a species. Tribalism and identity politics are rampant on all sides of everything.
Watching debates in the media (and especially on YouTube) lately has been making my head explode. There seems to be this growing belief that the goal is always to win. Not have a dialectical, well-intentioned, mutual search for overarching principles and productive ways forward that will improve humanity-- but to just win and destroy.
I think we tend to grossly underestimate the extent to which the drive for self-enhancement actually gets in the way of reaching one's goals ..
Since psychologists use of the term ego is very different ways, let me be clear how I am defining it here. I define the ego as that aspect of the self that has the incessant need to see itself in a positive light. Make no doubt: the self can be our greatest resource, but
it can also be our darkest enemy. On the one hand, the fundamentally human capacities for self-awareness, self-reflection, and self-control are essential for reaching our goals. On the other hand, the self will do anything to disavow itself of responsibility for any negative outcome it may have played a role. As
one researcher put it, the self engenders “a self-zoo of self-defense mechanisms.” I believe we can refer to these defensive strategies to see the self in a positive light as the “ego”. A noisy ego spends so much time defending the self as if it were a real thing, and then doing whatever it takes to assert itself, that it often inhibits the very goals it is most striving for.
Paradoxically, it turns out that quieting the ego is so much more effective in cultivating well-being, growth, health, productivity, and a healthy, productive self-esteem, than focusing so loudly on self-enhancement.
To be clear, a quiet ego is not the same thing as a silent ego. Squashing the ego so much that it loses its identity entirely does not do yourself or the world any favors. Instead, the quiet ego perspective emphasizes balance and integration.”