NorthOfNorth wrote on May 8
th, 2011 at 10:03am:
Yes, I agree, there's something special about life, especially sentient human life. I don't think I've yet disagreed with the intended meaning of your ideas of (what to call it??) the 'god factor'. But I'm not comfortable with the usurpation of religious terms by their redefinition, any more than I'd agree with the notion of redefining, say, hydrolysis to mean 'the process of finding an immanent god'.
Caution with crowds... As (I believe) Martin Luther King once observed, crowds/groups generally act less morally than individuals.
There are a lot more people than you think who call themselves Christians and Jews, and if they are true to themselves, they really believe that God (and Christ) is immanent in the sense that I used.
Dawkins describes quite a few people, some of them religious officials, who did not believe in God the creator, but instead believe in God within us (immanuel). (They also believe that religion is good for you) Have you noticed how the words soul, spirit and God (Christ) are often interchanged in many traditional religions ? (even in the West)
I don't agree with Dawkins, but he makes some good points.