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The paradox of God-based religions

 Fundamentally, all people are believers in some way, in the sense that faith is the belief in the certainty of the existence of things not...


 Fundamentally, all people are believers in some way, in the sense that faith is the belief in the certainty of the existence of things not seen (faith is the belief in truth without the necessity of verification by reality). 

Imagined worlds of things and laws of customs can be built on beliefs that we call religions. Certainly, humans are the only creatures on Earth capable of forming religions, and we can exercise this ability to a high degree, with the most advanced version of religions being those based on belief in an existing God. 

The fundamental characteristic of faith, based on its definition, therefore, that it does not require the feedback of reality and the examination of the origin of causes, just as, for example, religions based on faith in God accept the existence of an intention without the need to examine the motivations of that intention, it gives up the requirement to identify the causes of events. Thus, the functioning of religions based on faith in God is not based on the search for the actual reality of God, but on the presupposition of God's laws. 

The paradox of religions based on belief in God is that while they presuppose the existence of an intelligence, they reject another existing intelligence, the intelligence of human thinking. 

Religions are the dictatorship of thoughts. Therefore, it is not the faith-based religions that can find the reality of God. God's reality can only be found through rational thinking based on reality, only according to science. Science striving for objectivity can recognize and give us the existing God, the one that we can only feel inside of us. That's an even bigger paradox of God-based beliefs.

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