Out of curiousity, how do you know that it is something that they created in they're own minds? From the way you are speaking i get the feeling that you have only looked at the matter from one perspective, and that is the atheist one.
Perhaps my wording confused you, but essentially even if you do have these feelings or this apparent 'contact' with a god, in your mind, I'd still argue what you are left with is a 'creation' because it cannot be certain what is and isn't God.
I imagine very few people would tell me, on honest reflection, that they have certainty about what God wants/when it is God contacting them.
You need to look at it from all POVs before you come to a decision.
Perhaps I have looked at it from different angles (obviously not all, don't be rediculous) and merely see no need to expand on these as they are not where my final conclusions lay.
Also i know that they're are many books which condemn religion saying that it is something that humans have made up and that there is no way religion can be real.
Saying that religion is something that humans have made up isn't necessarily a condemnation of religion. You can still see the good in religion, the virtues of religion, while accepting that it is a human false construct.
Books such as 'The God delusion' by Richard Dawkins. I have read part of this book and can see that it argues from just one point of view ( I also noticed that it took only the parts of the bible that it wanted ).
Of course it only argues from one point of view, if you didn't realise that might be the case upon looking at the title I worry for you. The fact is that while a proper debate needs to argue all sides of the issues, if have come down on one side of the issue there's nothing wrong with you arguing strictly from that perspective.
What people forget these days is that the bible is not the only source which tells us about Jesus, there are many other sources from the time he was from that say he was dead whan they took him down from the cross (they decided to stick a spear into his side to make sure) but several days after it has been recorded that a crowd of roughly 500 people saw him alive and these people who recorded this were NOT followers of Jesus, infact they hated him very much.
When was it recorded that 500 people saw jesus alive after his death? How reliable is this source?
It is a similiar case for many other religions (though they do not have as many radical examples as this religion).
Yes, it is a similar case for other religions. Doesn't that make you wonder, just slightly, that maybe instead of just all those other stories of THEIRS being wrong, perhaps your are too?
Maybe you should try reading CS. Lewis.
I've read much on christian appologetics, if you must know I'm actually rather tired of it. If he makes some remarkable argument hows bout you forward it here and get my response. If I have particular difficulty or am interested, then I might read his work.
When these religions had power and the religion was followed from the book (don't get me started on medieval Catholiscm) there was less crime because they say that half the things we allow in society is wrong. (I believe that if people were patient and waited till they were married to have sex we would have less abortions)
Rape/murder/slavery were the norm. Whoever told you that the times when religion reigned were happier days were revisionists. Now you can choose to not blame it on religion at all but merely the socioeconomic situation at the time (of course my argument would be religion is always in a large way a reflection of that) .
Morality in this present day and age has nothing solid to have as a foundation for its laws and therefore we are all over the place.
It's great that common-day morality isn't "solid" (though there are foundations, such as common history, tradition, evolution [empathy], etc) because if it was it would be failing to recognise reality. Reality is not black and white or simple, whenever you create a system that sets things out in such a black and white way it will fail to meet the needs of reality because it is so grey...
People do have a sense of morality but everyones boudary is different depending on their circumstances and past which causes there to be no one right answer.We are now seeing the result of this.
Peoples sense of morality was always bound differently. You have a different sense of morality etc (most likely) to the guy sitting next to you in the church, or to the preacher up front, perhaps not as much as with other people, but enough to show you that there will never be uniform morality.
You can't compare a religous person with an atheist saying that for a religous person they come to a moral conclusion because their religion says so because how do explain the different views that atheists have to religious people?
I didn't understand the first part, but I'm guessing you're saying that atheists and theists are different morally. Your proof of this is that statistically they probably hold different moral outlooks.
Firstly I agree, they probably are different (though there would be a large middle-ground of similarity between the more apathetic theists and atheists) but this I think can be explained by means other than the religion its self i.e. people who happen to be atheist might be more influenced by utilitarian thinking (just as an example) because atheists are relatively more educated and thus more likely to have had contact with such thinking.
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And believe it or not theists are usually alot happier than aetheists because they have a solid foundation and Aethists don't.
Oh really? What is this solid foundation. To me even if there is an objective moral truth out there (God) the difficulty is in translating it into a form that is applicable to humans.