First I have to take you to task about a classic religious view being unrelated to information. After all How does John's Gospel start?
The English translation 'the word' is a poetic reference to a concept that doesn't have a direct English equivalent - it could just as easily have been translated as 'The Voice'.
Secondly, Somebody had to eventually claim in the face of simulated universes that that is the novel idea and religion is trying to get onto the bandwagon.
Because eventually the truth will out?
Just like what happened with the universe having a beginning, or as Augustine suggested the universe was created with time rather in time.
If you have enough people making up enough stuff far enough in advance, some of them are accidently going to get superficially close to something correct - you know, infinite monkeys and infinite typewriters and all that.
Your thinking here, Outrider, is like saying of course the Bee Gees version of Tragedy is not as good as the Steps original.
As someone who doesn't do religion, that's damnably close to sacrilege, you realise...
Trying to squeeze an opponent, me, into a biblical literalist box is a shockingly desperate strategy that until you came along people have been intelligent enough not to do it. It doesn't cut much ice with me.
I'm not trying to push anyone into any boxes, I'm simply pointing out that as you move further and further away from the 'classic' depiction of god and religion you increasingly get something that has no practical purpose or meaning.
Didn't get the farm for aliens bit, but Jesus does make a lot of references to sheep and flocks
Amongst the many interpretations of the panspermia idea of the origin of life on Earth was one that surmised that we'd been tended like farm animals by aliens for their own purposes - like the simulated universe concept, it replaces god as a 'creator' (in the short term, but not ultimately), but it doesn't make the alien/programmer any sort of corollary for a god, the god concept is something beyond simply an engineer.
religion is about accepting the validity of the claim that there is some external source of absolute morality to whom we owe some sort of obeisance for the very fact of our existence, and that's a morally dubious case in and of itself
What moral authority allows you to claim moral dubiousness?
The same one anyone else has, that ultimately we have no other recourse than to justify to ourselves what we think is right. I try to work on the 'least harm' principle, personally, though I'm in the deontological rather than consequentialist camp.
O.