But I'm still not denying religion exists or that for many people it does work, my point is that they can't all be correct ...
OK, now set these side-by-side: religion works for many people/they can't all be correct.
Which of these matters?
If you think it's the latter, please name a circumstance in which we
can all be correct?
In fact most people would probably accept that only one could be correct.
Perhaps, but that would be silly. Reality is far greater in scope, breadth, and depth than we are. So there's always going to be many "correct" human perspectives on it and experiences of it at any given time.
Money otoh can exist quite happily with other forms and is in no way mutually exclusive as religion is.
Sure it is. Try buying a big mac with some glass beads. I live 30 miles from Canada, and most businesses in my town will not accept Canadian money.
Are we really sensing a higher power or do we just think we are?
How are these different? Aren't they one and the same experience? Can we "just think" something is beautiful? But it's not really beautiful? Can we "just think" something is meaningful, or right, but it's not "really" meaningful or right? My point is; aren't there some experiential phenomena that's simply self-evident? Does that somehow make it less valid?
I suggest if you were a woman you wouldn't find women's bodies have quite the same effect on you unless you were gay perhaps. Clearly evolution has influenced our minds here so why not make us think we sense a higher power if it tends to subtly make us act in a certain way? If we functioned simply on instinct there would be no need for any such clever trickery.
How does evolution's part in my appreciation for the curves of a woman's body "invalidate" my appreciation for the curves of a woman's body? This is the part I'm not understanding: that if we can explain the mechanisms of the experience, that it somehow becomes an "invalid" experience. Do you like sex any less because there is a biological mechanism that causes you to like it? Does our appreciation of sex become 'unreal' in some way because it is the result of a biological mechanism?
So why does our experience and appreciation of "God" become invalid in your mind if you can find some biological/evolutionary mechanism causing us to experience it? There is a biological/evolutionary mechanism for everything we experience.
But if a higher power is actually unknowable then all we have are many differing religious beliefs all claiming to know the unknowable whatever the real truth is. We should perhaps accept when we don't know, not make up another false religion anyway?
I think it is "knowable", but to each in his own way. That's just a peculiarity of this particular phenomena. It's not that dissimilar to our perceptions of beauty. Some we share (like the curves of a woman) and some are unique to us. Sometimes we experience it together and sometimes we experience individually. But this doesn't make beauty unreal, or invalid, or non-existent, or insignificant. So why dismiss it as if it were?
I don't deny Christmas either.
I know. I was just making a point.
I'm not saying anything other than the likelihood of all bar one religion being false is as close to absolutely certain as makes no difference, and imo even with that one included there probably isn't much change to that.
My point is that a religion's 'right-ness' is relative to it's (positive)
effectiveness, not to it's relation to material factuality. And I truly do not understand why atheists can't (or won't) understand this.
But then I truly don't understand why there are so many theists that don't understand this, either.
But then again some people see value in religion for its own sake not because there is a truth at the end of it, I have no problem with that. So you tell me, what exactly do you think I'm rejecting? I'm not saying that having a divinity based religion is wrong I'm saying that the doctrine it teaches is ultimately wrong.
I'm, just pointing out that the 'doctrines' are to religion what Santa Claus is to Christmas: a kind of mythical iconography people use to try and make positive sense of their spiritual experiences. Unfortunately, it's very common among we humans that we confuse our icons with the deeper mysteries that they are meant to represent and help us understand. And so we get confused and end up making them into false idols. Most religions become false idols for at least some of the people who engage in them. And they are often encouraged to do so, by others, for all sorts of nefarious reasons.
But this unfortunate tendency toward idolization really is a separate human phenomena that effects us in other endeavors besides religion, and so should not be considered intrinsic to religion, or used to dismiss it
en masse.
I can't agree, should I have to accept something as valid which relies on empty assertions and is just one of many similar others until I can invalidate it? The onus isn't mine.
Forget the silly dogmatic assertions, as you would (and do) about Santa Claus. And look to the whole phenomena. Religion is much more than those silly dogmatic assertions. And "God" is a very real experience for a great many human beings. You might be one of them if you could set aside the various religious dogmas and open your heart and mind to that aspect of your own human experience.
Or maybe not. Maybe you're one of the few among us that simply doesn't experience "God" by any conceptualization.
Yes I think most atheists presume like me that all gods are invalid until it is shown to be otherwise, I at least have no intension of ever trying to invalidate all possible gods.
You're still confusing the reality of God as a human experience with people's religious dogmas. I don't understand that.
So should I try to deceive myself that a specific god of some kind exists or do you recommend plumping for one at random?
I think you might consider letting go of other people's ideas and dogmas about "God", and just feel it for yourself. Then go from there.