Quote from: luna nyan on August 06, 2014, 03:48:02 PM
Anna,
All right, I'm going to bite. 
On what basis of evidence are you so adamant about that?
I am truly curious, as I've seen several of your posts regarding spirituality and you are very absolute in your conviction. To me, it requires faith to believe in god, and also to not believe in god.
I'm gently wading into things here as this is one of those things that can lead to heated debate...
This gets us away from the movie, but I may have an analogy which might shed some light on the difference
Some people are fans of sports teams. They generally grew up as fans of that team, they have an emotional investment in that team, they know the ins and outs of the history. They watch "their" team play, um, religiously. They refer to the team as "we." They have emotional highs and lows from their sports team which are really hard to explain based on the visible impact on their lives. They spend money on gear, they go see games, etc., and they *know* their team will win each game because they have faith that it will happen.
Now, some other people bet on sporting events. They really don't care who wins or loses generally as the bet is usually against a "spread" and they worry more about the final score matching up with what they expected it to be, or with some "proposition" bets for particular events happening in a game. There may be odds on winners of tournaments (Michael Stich bettors got paid at 200:1 for his Wimbledon win in 1990, for example) or whatever. They get excited when they're going to make money, they get unhappy when they realize they're going to lose money, but other than how it impacts their wallet they simply don't care who wins and who loses. They have made a rational assessment of what they expect to happen based on the facts as they understand them, and their bank accounts will reflect how good they are at this assessment, but fandom is not a part of their calculus. They've made their call based on winning streaks, losing streaks, hot players, cold players, injury reports, weather forecasts, and yes, the odd coin flip or gut feeling, but ultimately it's not about who they have *faith* will win, it's about who they *expect* to win based on how well they understand the facts.
There are also fans who bet, and that is hard to make money doing.
Now, is either group necessarily right? That's another question. The guy with his entire house decorated in team colors and the guy who can't pay his rent due to bad bets may each have problems suggesting it's possible for each group to be wrong. And I'm not trying to compare any given religion to, say, Manchester United here, I just want to try to draw a parallel on human capacities for decision making on the same subject coming from completely different directions and having trouble understanding that the other group really doesn't share any of the same metrics for decision making. To continue the analogy, it's worth pointing out that the bettor is not a "fan" of Las Vegas in any way the team fan understands the term, particularly as Vegas doesn't even have a team; he just likes evaluating the odds and placing bets to see if he's right. Sometimes the bettors need to be reminded that the fans aren't in it for the money and that following a team in a rebuilding cycle with better days ahead isn't a statement on intelligence. Again, hopefully not drawing parallels on religions, just on how humans interact with the world and each other.
Does that make any sense without being offensive, or do I need to just accept that I'm tired and go to bed?