COMMENTS: 698
Why Do Atheists Have to Talk About Atheism?
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Whenever the subject of atheism comes up, anywhere that isn't an atheist discussion group or something, one sentiment almost inevitably comes up:
"I wish atheists wouldn't talk so much about atheism."
The sentiment gets worded in many different ways. "The new atheists are so evangelical." "This atheist criticism of religion is just intolerant." "You atheists are just as close-minded as the hard-line religious believers you're criticizing."
But the essence of it is the same: The fact that many atheists are talking publicly about our atheism, and are trying to persuade people that we're right about it, shows that we're ... well, evangelical, intolerant and close-minded. So today, I want to explain why so many atheists think it's important to talk about atheism ... and why many of us try to persuade other people that atheism is correct.
The first answer is the most obvious: Anti-atheist bigotry. Atheists talk about atheism because there's a lot of misunderstanding and hostility toward us. It's nowhere near as severe as racism or sexism; but it does exist, and it has real-world consequences.
Parents are denied custody of their children for being atheists; people are harassed and and their homes vandalized by their neighbors for being atheists; teachers are suspended for being atheists; teenagers are harassed and suspended from school for being atheists; politicians whip up anti-atheist fear to try to get elected. (And that's just in the U.S. I'm not even talking about parts of the world where atheism is a crime punishable by imprisonment or death.)
Making ourselves visible, coming out about who we are and what we do and don't believe, is the best way we have to counter that.
That's only a small part of the story, though. Another part -- and probably more important -- is that many atheists see religion not just as a mistaken idea but as a harmful one. We see it as a serious social problem, a type of belief that on the whole does significantly more harm than good ... and one that, because of its ultimately unfalsifiable nature, has little or none of the reality checks that other belief systems eventually have to measure up to.
We see people bombing buildings, abusing children, committing flagrant fraud, shooting political dissenters, etc., etc., etc., all behind the armor of religion ... and we feel a need to speak out.
Even that, though, is missing the crux of the issue. The crux of the issue, the most important answer to the question, "Why do atheists have to talk about atheism?" is this: Why shouldn't we?
Thinking you're right, and trying to persuade other people you're right, is not intolerant or close-minded -- it's a cornerstone of democracy. That's how it works: people explain their ideas, debate them, make arguments to support them, revise or refine or drop them in the face of valid criticism, make snarky jokes in the face of stupid criticism.
The marketplace of ideas won't flourish if people don't bring their ideas to the market. Being close-minded doesn't mean thinking you're right; it means refusing to reconsider your position, even when the evidence suggests that you're wrong. And being intolerant doesn't mean thinking other people are wrong; it means refusing to listen to them, and dismissing them entirely as stupid or wicked, simply because you disagree with them.
Think of it this way. Is it intolerant or close-minded to say that single-payer is the best plan for the American health care system? That public funding for solar power will reduce our dependence on foreign oil? That global warming is real? That the theory of evolution is right? Is it intolerant or close-minded to try to persuade people to come around to any of these points of view? And if not ... then why is it intolerant or close-minded for atheists to explain why we don't believe in God and to try to persuade people that, of all the ideas people have about religion, atheism is the most plausible?
See, here's the thing, atheists see religion as a lot of things. But for many of us, religion is, above all else, a hypothesis about how the world works and why it is the way it is.
Obviously, we think it's a mistaken hypothesis: inconsistent with itself, inconsistent with reality, unsupported by any good evidence. We can't prove our case with 100 percent certainty -- that's pretty much impossible, especially when you're trying to prove a negative -- but we think we can make a pretty good case.
But more to the point: We see no reason to treat religion any differently from any other hypothesis about the world. We think it's valid to ask it to support its case just like any other hypothesis ... and just like any other hypothesis, we think it's valid to poke holes in it in public.
And we think one of the main reasons religion has survived for so long is that it's so impressively armored against criticism and indeed against the very idea that criticism of it is an acceptable thing to do.
So we therefore think criticizing religion is not only valid, but important. It doesn't just chip away at religious beliefs themselves. It chips away at the idea that religious beliefs should be immune to criticism. It chips away at the armor that religion has used so effectively for so many centuries to shield itself from any and all questions and critiques.
Now, playing devil's advocate for a moment: Some may argue that I'm being hypocritical; that I'll decry the evangelism of evangelical believers, but am willing to defend it in atheists.
But I don't, in fact, have a problem with evangelical believers trying to persuade others that they're right. Don't get me wrong: I think many of their specific beliefs are mistaken. I think many of their specific beliefs are bigoted, hateful and harmful. I have serious problems with many of the methods they use to persuade, with their reliance on fear and false promises and, in some cases, outright lies.
And I think far too many of their rhetorical devices simply deflect legitimate criticism instead of answering it. But I don't think it's wrong of them to express their beliefs and to try to persuade others that they're right. Again -- that's the marketplace of ideas. And I'm in favor of that. I can disagree passionately with someone's ideas without thinking they're jerks simply for wanting to share them.
I think a little historical context may be in order. This "I'm so tired of hearing about (X), proponents of (X) who advance their views in the public eye are intolerant" trope has been used against every major social-change movement I can think of.
Queer activists were "in your face"; civil rights activists were "hostile"; feminists were "strident." And now atheists who make our case are "intolerant" and "evangelical." When people speak out, not against atheism, but against the very idea of atheists persuasively expressing their views, I always want to ask if that's really the side of history they want to end up on.
Besides, it's not like we're standing outside anyone's window with a bullhorn at 3 a.m. We're not holding a gun to anyone's head and making them read Pharyngula. We're not even knocking on people's doors at 8 o'clock on Saturday morning to share the good word about Darwin. (Well, except for that one guy...)
If people don't want to hear what atheists have to say, there is a wide, wide world of blogs, newspaper articles, magazine articles, YouTube videos, movies, TV shows and oodles of other media available with just a flip of the page or a click of the remote or the mouse. If someone is seriously angered because they occasionally see the word "atheist" in a headline, or have to change the channel if Richard Dawkins is on, then I have to wonder if what's upsetting them is not the evangelical intolerance of atheist activists, but the very idea of atheism itself.
Now, if someone disagrees with us, then by all means, I want them to say so. If someone thinks that there's solid, reliable evidence supporting religious belief, or that the good done in the name of religion outweighs the harm, then I strongly encourage them to bring their ideas to the conversation and to make their case.
But there's a world of difference between, "Here's why I don't agree with you," and, "You are a bad person for even opening your mouth." The former is an attempt to engage in the conversation. The latter is simply an attempt to shut us up.
If someone comes to the marketplace of ideas and the only thing they have to offer is, "How dare those atheists set up a stand here! They're trying to convince us that we're mistaken and that their ideas are better! That's so intolerant!"... then I don't see any reason why I should take that seriously.
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Comments are closed-
Posted by: cordas on Jun 26, 2009 12:42 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As an atheist it bugs the life out of me that I get attacked for stating my views. The fact that merely mentioning in a discussion revolving around religion my beliefs can cause an almighty storm.
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» RE: Check out the Inquisition happening in the military. Scary!
Posted by: edgar_michel
» RE: Check out the Inquisition happening in the military. Scary!
Posted by: John Sawyer
» RE: Check out the Inquisition happening in the military. Scary!
Posted by: John Sawyer
» RE: Thank you.
Posted by: kevcol
» That's funny...it appears that atheists are on the offense
Posted by: Philip Newton
» RE: That's funny...it appears that atheists are on the offense
Posted by: Xynyx
» RE: That's funny...it appears that atheists are on the offense
Posted by: LMNOP
» You're still no different than a Christian fundamentalist
Posted by: Smackback
» RE: You're still no different than a Christian fundamentalist
Posted by: Xynyx
» RE: You're still no different than a Christian fundamentalist
Posted by: Timba
» RE: You're still no different than a Christian fundamentalist
Posted by: peteralter
» Sure you have the RIGHT to pimp your views ad nauseam, just like the Christian evangelicals
Posted by: Smackback
» RE: Sure you have the RIGHT to pimp your views ad nauseam, just like the Christian evangelicals
Posted by: lyta
» The real "democratic" solution is to live, and let others live, too
Posted by: Smackback
» RE: Christian Fundamentalists are as Dangerous as Their Islamic Counterparts
Posted by: edgar_michel
» RE: The real "democratic" solution is to live, and let others live, too
Posted by: Seranvali
» Nice... I get the same mixture of abuse and scorn from the Christian Fundies
Posted by: Smackback
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Sojourner on Jun 26, 2009 1:07 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am accustomed to being rebuked by outspoken atheists for pointing out that their views include a belief system. When the parallels between evangelical atheism and evangelical organized religion are mentioned, the response is usually a loud, “Atheism is not a kind of religion.”
I am annoyed by both brands of evangelism. In both cases, it is salesmanship, marketing, peddling that seems to me to always be motivated by insecurity. As if somehow signing up more members, getting more people to be just like me, will make the world a better place.
If I do not inquire about your beliefs, please keep them to yourself. As with opinions, everyone has one, as usually that is compared to another aspect of the human anatomy. So thank you for the admission that atheists can be True Believers, as with fundamentalist religious reactionaries.
And read Eric Hoffer’s wonderful study by the title “The True Believer.” He has a whole book to explain why I am annoyed.
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» Not every belief system is a religion
Posted by: mjglow
» RE: Not every belief system is a religion
Posted by: Tweck9
» RE: Not every belief system is a religion
Posted by: kevcol
» No. I don't believe in your god. Or Thor. Or Apollo. Or Moloch. Or Vishnu.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: No. I don't believe in your god. Or Thor. Or Apollo. Or Moloch. Or Vishnu.
Posted by: Seranvali
» RE: Not every belief system is a religion
Posted by: Seranvali
» RE: Not every belief system is a religion - right.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Not every belief system is a religion - right.
Posted by: Seranvali
» RE: Not every belief system is a religion - right.
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: Religion, by definition, is dogmatic and not flexible in its beliefs
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: eligion, by definition, is dogmatic and not flexible in its beliefs
Posted by: Harris20
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: wmholt
» "Proselytizing" a better word than "evangelizing"
Posted by: Gabba_Gabba_Hey
» RE: "Proselytizing" a better word than "evangelizing"
Posted by: wmholt
» RE: "Proselytizing" a better word than "evangelizing"
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: "Proselytizing" a better word than "evangelizing"
Posted by: Tweck9
» I can't "accept another's ideas"
Posted by: aislinnluv
» RE: I can't "accept another's ideas"
Posted by: Tweck9
» it would be easier
Posted by: aislinnluv
» RE: it would be easier
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: it would be easier
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: it would be easier
Posted by: Harris20
» When Christians, Muslims and other "true believers" respect MY rights
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: I can't "accept another's ideas"
Posted by: Harris20
» RE: "Proselytizing" a better word than "evangelizing"
Posted by: peteralter
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: lively56
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: nitroxscubafreak
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: logic11
» RE: Actually you are describing the agnostic position, the idea that you just don't know.
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Actually you are describing the agnostic position, the idea that you just don't know.
Posted by: logic11
» RE: Actually you are describing the agnostic position, the idea that you just don't know.
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Actually you are describing the agnostic position, the idea that you just don't know.
Posted by: factbased
» RE: Actually you are describing the agnostic position, the idea that you just don't know.
Posted by: logic11
» RE: Actually you are describing the agnostic position, the idea that you just don't know.
Posted by: lyta
» RE: Actually you are describing the agnostic position, the idea that you just don't know.
Posted by: lyta
» RE: Actually you are describing the agnostic position, the idea that you just don't know.
Posted by: lysdexia
» Atheism is not a religion or believe system
Posted by: maxfrisson
» RE: You will find there is literally no thing I am absolutely against.
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» Atheism is a WORLDVIEW, just like Christianity or conservatism or anything else
Posted by: Smackback
» RE: Atheism is a WORLDVIEW, just like Christianity or conservatism or anything else
Posted by: logic11
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: Tweck9
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: mjglow
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: mjglow
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: lyta
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: lolisforidiots
» Nonesense!
Posted by: LeeAnnG
» RE: from my in computer, the basic vocabulary needed for discussing the variety of belief in god
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: from my in computer, the basic vocabulary needed for discussing the variety of belief in god
Posted by: logic11
» RE: from my in computer, the basic vocabulary needed for discussing the variety of belief in god
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: from my in computer, the basic vocabulary needed for discussing the variety of belief in god
Posted by: John Sawyer
» RE: from my in computer, the basic vocabulary needed for discussing the variety of belief in god
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: Aquinas
» Pointless definition
Posted by: factbased
» Tell that to the late prof of philosophy, Donald Davidson, who writes...
Posted by: Sojourner
» RE: Tell that to the late prof of philosophy, Donald Davidson, who writes...
Posted by: factbased
» RE: Tell that to the late prof of philosophy, Donald Davidson, who writes...
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: Gentle Axeman
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: When you've met one True Believer, you've met them all.
Posted by: UeberHengst
Comments are closed-
Posted by: cplot on Jun 26, 2009 1:23 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The discrimination issues aside, I am more deeply troubled by the response of the religious to atheism. They suggest we atheists will burn in hell for eternity: that's often their only argument. OK. Well here’s the troubling part. Why the disdain instead of deep concern. If I believed someone faced any danger, I would try to explain that danger in the best way I could. That might mean working to understanding where the other person is coming from. What are their beliefs.
So for a Christian, for example, that means I think they should try to understand the atheist. Try to share with them how they came to understand hell and Jesus and God with such certainty that they know their beliefs are so safe an that the atheist and everyone else’s beliefs and practices are doomed. Instead there’s almost a glee. A sense that they are on the side of an all powerful being and that all others be damned. Where’s the loyalty to other humans? It reminds me of the Simpson’s episode where the newscaster Kent Brockman mistakenly believes giant ants have invaded the space shuttle and quickly declares that “I'd like to be the first to welcome our ant overlords.”
I like to say that I'm an atheist who believes in god(s). In part I say that to underscore what this article says: that theisms / religions have supported some of the most heinous activities around. But also because I think knowledge and belief are cultural phenomena. We cannot prove a positive anymore than we can prove a negative. Knowledge is produced by human activity. Our understanding of everything is limited by our abilities. We produce knowledge and belief through logic, through our senses, through reference to authorities and so on. Each of us takes these knowledge inputs and produces a new unique, though interrelated, understanding of our Universe. So to know or believe a God or gods exists – perhaps with omniscience, omnipotence, and omnipresence, or some combination of these – relies on the same paths to knowledge and belief: logic, senses, and authority.
So let us take the Christians at their word. To we atheists, the logic is severely lacking. To this they answer well the Lord works in mysterious ways. As for our senses, nothing we sense really reveals the presence of a god or gods: not in the manner that we can sense the trees, the soil, our beds or our friends. However, if an omnipotent being want to hide form our senses, there’s nothing to stop it. This leaves authority (and perhaps other paths to knowledge I've neglected to mention). However authorities clash: one authority says one thing and another says something else.
Given these paths to knowledge and belief, how does a Christian respond to the atheist? The important thing in this situation is to be sure that the authoritative source the Christian relies upon really promises eternity in hell for those who do not accept Jesus Christ as their savior. On the other hand, how do we know that the jealous God of the old testament didn’t actually send Jesus as a test? That way following Jesus is turning our backs on Jehovah. To this they might answer that these epithets are the same God. OK then why would anyone need to convert from Judaism to Christianity? Or from Islam to Christianity. Why would a Muslim need to accept Jesus Christ as her personal Lord and Saviour?
(continued)
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» RE: Good points, but I think there's something missing (continued)
Posted by: cplot
» RE: Good points, but I think there's something missing (continued)
Posted by: wmholt
» RE: Good points, but I think there's something missing (continued)
Posted by: lysdexia
» Most Christians are anti-Christian
Posted by: Tweck9
» RE: Most Christians are anti-Christian
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: Good points, but I think there's something missing (continued)
Posted by: John Sawyer
» RE: Good points, but I think there's something missing
Posted by: isafakir
» RE: Good points, but I think there's something missing
Posted by: cplot
» RE: Good points, but I think there's something missing
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Tim Behrend on Jun 26, 2009 1:52 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Cavaliers fan?"
"Is that a kind of car?"
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» RE: n/a
Posted by: logic11
» questions of consciousness
Posted by: kogwonton
» RE: questions of consciousness
Posted by: PopRox80
» RE: questions of consciousness
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: uncertain on Jun 26, 2009 2:03 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's like listening to two eight year olds arguing.
Keep your beliefs (or lack of beliefs) to yourself, unless someone asks you about them.
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» RE: The door swings both ways. Exactly!
Posted by: harryf200
» And yet, here you both are
Posted by: Curio
» RE: And yet, here you both are because ...
Posted by: harryf200
» RE: I'd stay out of it ..Harry
Posted by: donl51
» RE: And yet, here you both are
Posted by: uncertain
» RE: And yet, here you both are
Posted by: Timba
» RE: The door swings both ways. Exactly!
Posted by: kevcol
» RE: The door swings both ways. Exactly!
Posted by: harryf200
» REthere is no god ...Harry
Posted by: donl51
» Problem is, much of our law is religion based and unbelievers are a persecuted minority
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Problem is, much of our law is religion based and unbelievers are a persecuted minority
Posted by: slowbob4
» RE: Problem is, much of our law is religion based and unbelievers are a persecuted minority
Posted by: harryf200
» Religion is the subject at hand - or the lack, thereof.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: eligion is the subject at hand - or the lack, thereof.
Posted by: cplot
» RE: Problem is, you're unfortunately correct!
Posted by: donl51
» FANTASTIC COMMENT
Posted by: zola77
» RE: FANTASTIC COMMENT
Posted by: logic11
» RE: FANTASTIC COMMENT
Posted by: Tweck9
» RE: FANTASTIC COMMENT
Posted by: logic11
» RE: FANTASTIC COMMENT
Posted by: kevcol
» RE: FANTASTIC COMMENT
Posted by: lysdexia
» Heresy has been punished by DEATH for thousands of years
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: FANTASTIC COMMENT
Posted by: donl51
» EXACTLY!
Posted by: Tweck9
» RE: The door swings both ways.
Posted by: Timba
» RE: The door swings both ways.
Posted by: lyta
» "refusing to reconsider your opinion"
Posted by: Beck
» RE: "refusing to reconsider your opinion"
Posted by: progressiveview
» RE: "testable, repeatable, scientific evidence for the existence of god"
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: "testable, repeatable, scientific evidence for the existence of god"
Posted by: factbased
» RE: "refusing to reconsider your opinion"
Posted by: harryf200
» RE: "refusing to reconsider your opinion"
Posted by: pelican beak
» Thanks for the considered reply, Pelican Brief.
Posted by: harryf200
» RE: "refusing to reconsider your opinion"
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: "refusing to reconsider your opinion"
Posted by: progressiveview
» RE: "refusing to reconsider your opinion"
Posted by: harryf200
» RE: "refusing to reconsider your opinion"
Posted by: pelican beak
» Check this, harry
Posted by: pelican beak
» RE: "refusing to reconsider your opinion"
Posted by: John Sawyer
» RE: "refusing to reconsider your opinion"
Posted by: Timba
» RE: "refusing to reconsider your opinion"
Posted by: hms2004
» The vast majority of unbelievers "reconsidered their opinions" when they BECAME unbelievers.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: "refusing to reconsider your opinion"
Posted by: cplot
» RE: "refusing to reconsider your opinion"
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: The door swings both ways. Right!
Posted by: VZEQICVA
» RE: The door swings both ways.
Posted by: radicalchic
Comments are closed-
Posted by: isafakir on Jun 26, 2009 2:13 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's as if I asserted that atheism is not a belief. Such an assertion may make me feel superior, but even if it is true, it doesn't matter much sub specie aeternitatis. It's not an argument, but just argumentative. In other words, that god doesn't exist doesn't matter.
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» So what?
Posted by: harryf200
» RE: logic vs belief
Posted by: logic11
» RE: logic vs belief
Posted by: offplanet
» Unicorns
Posted by: Karlh
» RE: logic vs belief
Posted by: logic11
» Wrong - atheism is the ABSENCE of belief that gods DO exist
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» Sorry. Neither you nor your pastor get to define atheism.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Sorry. Neither you nor your pastor get to define atheism.
Posted by: Timba
» RE: logic vs belief
Posted by: Seranvali
» RE: logic vs belief
Posted by: Curio
» RE: logic vs belief
Posted by: surferboy2001
» RE: logic vs belief
Posted by: slowbob4
» RE: logic vs belief
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Nebris on Jun 26, 2009 2:14 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
All of us are biological specks living upon a dust mote at the far end of one arm of an entirely average galaxy. Yet each of the above camps claims to Know Absolute Truth about The Nature of All.
Yeah, right...
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» The Truth
Posted by: Borgar
» RE: "Because We're Right."
Posted by: Timba
» RE: there are no athiest organizations insisting that others agree with them
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Atheists are consistently in favor of freedom, peace and against torture.
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Atheists are consistently in favor of freedom, peace and against torture.
Posted by: slowbob4
» RE: there are no athiest organizations insisting that others agree with them
Posted by: factbased
» "...there are no athiest organizations insisting that others agree with them..." What about ...
Posted by: harryf200
» RE: "...there are no athiest organizations insisting that others agree with them..." What about ...
Posted by: Timba
» And further
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» A sure way (examine history) to know you're on the wrong path? Be 100% certain of anything, then
Posted by: Beck
» RE: A sure way (examine history) to know you're on the wrong path? Be 100% certain of anything, th
Posted by: progressiveview
» RE: Why the indigenous people of America were slaughtered
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Why the indigenous people of America were slaughtered
Posted by: logic11
» RE: Why the indigenous people of America were slaughtered
Posted by: progressiveview
» RE: Why the indigenous people of America were slaughtered
Posted by: slowbob4
» No, wrong. Atheists make no claim of "Absolute Truth"
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: No, wrong. Atheists make no claim of "Absolute Truth"
Posted by: slowbob4
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Nightowl on Jun 26, 2009 2:39 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My atheist friend doesn't believe in God because he doesn't believe in the Christian God. He doesn't believe there is an old man living somewhere in a place called Heaven. To him, it is ridiculous to think God, being omnipotent, would need a human body, or need a place to live.
Did God make man in his own image, or did man make God in his own image?
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» Every single person on this planet doesn't believe in a god
Posted by: mjglow
» RE: very single person on this planet doesn't believe in a god
Posted by: Tweck9
» RE: very single person on this planet doesn't believe in a god
Posted by: mjglow
» RE: Would you please go and read more about the NON middle eastern one-god religions
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Would you please go and read more about the NON middle eastern one-god religions
Posted by: logic11
» RE: Would you please go and read more about the NON middle eastern one-god religions
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Would you please go and read more about the NON middle eastern one-god religions
Posted by: lyta
» RE: What is the meaning of God?
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: What is the meaning of God?
Posted by: lyta
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Moonray on Jun 26, 2009 2:58 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We atheists didn't start this fight. It's brought to us in a million different ways every day. Religion, especially the Christian religion, is not content to live and let live but insists on imposing its rules and silly beliefs on everyone else. Many stupid and cruel laws are founded on religious rules. Religion prevents our children from being taught the truth in many school districts and often results in them being taught total nonsense such as Creationism. Religion infringes on our liberties in countless other ways and is even glorified in sayings on public buildings -- paid for with atheists' tax money -- and is even printed on our money!
Adding insult to injury, this unfair system is subsidized by our government, which grants generous tax breaks to promoters of superstition while penalizing in many ways those who try to resist this stupidity.
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» This is the type of argument that bothers me
Posted by: zola77
» RE: This is the type of argument that bothers me
Posted by: hms2004
» RE: This is the type of argument that bothers me
Posted by: logic11
» RE: This is the type of argument that bothers me
Posted by: mjglow
» Well said! nm
Posted by: Timba
» "Engage and win" intellectual equivalent of KKK? No thanks
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: This is the type of argument that bothers me
Posted by: lyta
» Taked a chill pill ;o)
Posted by: harryf200
» RE: Taked a chill pill ;o)
Posted by: logic11
» Bigotry against atheists real and accepted
Posted by: maxfrisson
» RE: Bigotry against atheists real and accepted
Posted by: Aquinas
» RE: Take a chill pill ;o)
Posted by: harryf200
» If all these things are not an issue "over there" how about
Posted by: Timba
» RE: If all these things are not an issue "over there" how about
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: Would you criticize blacks for speaking out against racism?
Posted by: Tweck9
» RE: Would you criticize blacks for speaking out against racism?
Posted by: Aquinas
» Feel free to protest discrimination. Don't mix in conversion.
Posted by: Beck
» RE: Feel free to protest discrimination. Don't mix in conversion.
Posted by: logic11
» RE: Feel free to protest discrimination. Don't mix in conversion.
Posted by: Aquinas
Comments are closed-
Posted by: drricklippin on Jun 26, 2009 3:25 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
OUCH!
But thinking and espousing that you have the only and ultimate "truth" is indeed poisonous and destructive.
Fervent atheists ARE as close minded as fundamentalist zealots in any organized religion in my observation.
Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa
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» RE: The Title and Sub-Title Intriguing
Posted by: harryf200
» Absolutely right!
Posted by: Tweck9
» RE: Absolutely right!
Posted by: harryf200
» Nope.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: The Title and Sub-Title Intriguing
Posted by: logic11
» RE: The Title and Sub-Title Intriguing
Posted by: jontv
» I had a pink unicorn, ridden by the king of the elves and a fairy princess in my garden last week.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: I had a pink unicorn, ridden by the king of the elves and a fairy princess in my garden last wee
Posted by: lastmanstanding
» RE: I had a pink unicorn, ridden by the king of the elves and a fairy princess in my garden last wee
Posted by: Aquinas
» RE: I had a pink unicorn, ridden by the king of the elves and a fairy princess in my garden last wee
Posted by: Aquinas
» RE: I had a pink unicorn, ridden by the king of the elves and a fairy princess in my garden last wee
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: The Title and Sub-Title Intriguing
Posted by: Aquinas
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Purple Girl on Jun 26, 2009 3:46 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Reason I always laugh when ever I hear a Holey (flawed Logic) Roller claim my conversion to their doctrine will guarantee eternal salvation and avoid eternal damnation. They are confessing that the only reason they may act in any way 'moral' is to assure they get the 'Big Cookie' in the End. That's not faith, that's hedging your bet, and more often just a salespitch.Nothing different than a commerical claiming that if you buy their product you will have an advantage over others - better body, whiter cltohes, better sex...And isn't getting more people to 'buy' your religion the same as getting more 'customers'- working off commission, are they?
This is why Atheist have the upper hand in the discussion over 'morals', they have no promise to offer of Pearly Gates and Harps or 72 virgins (or raisins) or even a Karmic step forward in your next life.
Atheist do what they do, act in a moral and ethical manner for it's own sake, just because it's the right thing to do. Ok maybe because doing a good deed just makes them feel good- so a small cookie. Or they get some adulation for the Deed-Ego stroke?- Yes. Butyou have to actually DO something, not merely claim you adhere to an idea or doctrine to get those strokes.
As for defining 'God'- I can't, I consider it to be everything we have yet to explain or understand. So my 'Atheistic' tendency is more related to Religion. I consider the Scientists search for knowledge as much a quest to understand 'God' as any scholar who buries his nose in some ancient text and certainly more than anyone preaching to me on my front porch (the Fuller Brushmen of Philosophical thought).
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» your arguments are (as usual) on point
Posted by: aislinnluv
» Another beautiful comment from you and
Posted by: outsideagitator
» RE: Morality motivated by Rewards or Punishment, Is Not Morality
Posted by: kogwonton
» RE: Morality motivated by Rewards or Punishment, Is Not Morality
Posted by: Aquinas
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Suzon on Jun 26, 2009 4:19 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As the author herself points out, you can't prove a negative. It follows then that atheism is no more "right" than any other belief system.
Atheism is a theory. Even Darwin never ruled out the possibility of a creator.
Our beliefs about who we are, how we got here and where we might end up are personal and subject to doubt and even conversion.
The biggest problem in America is not the economy. People who lived through the Great Depression found meaning in sharing with one another.
The biggest problem in America today is hatred.
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» Respectfully suggest the biggest problem in America today is not hatred but bigotry.
Posted by: harryf200
» RE: the author's strong argument is the one about discrimination
Posted by: logic11
» RE: Atheism is a very lazy belief system (whatever it is, I'm against it)
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Atheism is a very lazy belief system (whatever it is, I'm against it)
Posted by: logic11
» RE: Wow, I guess you are the bull shit master
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Wow, I guess you are the bull shit master
Posted by: surferboy2001
» RE: Wow, I guess you are the bull shit master
Posted by: factbased
» yeah and I could sit in the insane asylum
Posted by: jcalhoun
» RE: the author's strong argument is the one about discrimination
Posted by: melloe2
» RE: the author's strong argument is the one about discrimination
Posted by: Aquinas
Comments are closed-
Posted by: PJAW on Jun 26, 2009 4:20 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't know whether there is or is not a "god", and I can't imagine how anyone can, other than through direct contact. I believe that it's certainly posible that there is a god, and I just as strongly believe that it's possible that there is not.
It's equally possible that what many people believe is god, is simply another being, or population of beings, who is/are intellectually and technologically (in the sense of interacting with the universe) more developed than we are. It's also possible that "god" is a manifestation of collective conciousness, and that evil is simply the other side of that same collective.
I suggest a good place to start is, examine some of the photography taken by the Hubble telescope, and consider it's implications when listening to the arguments of one of your fellow creatures on this particular bit of space dust that we happen to live on. Of course the ancients didn't have that particular bit of technology when they developed their theories on cosmology, so they made a lot of shit up.
In my opinion, we've come a long way, and we have much further to go. The journey is, in fact, endless. Or, maybe you just die. I'm hoping for more of something myself.
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» RE: Wrong, most religions 'start' with multiple gods
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» Can we show you Wrong?
Posted by: zipper696
» RE: Wrong, most religions 'start' with multiple gods
Posted by: lyta
» RE: Wrong, most religions 'start' with multiple gods
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: richard0a37 on Jun 26, 2009 4:26 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Religion is a human phenomenon borne out of ignorance and superstition and people’s desperate attempts to rationalise their fear of the unknown. Parents, State and schools reinforce their collective need to further indoctrinate and brainwash their children from day one, and it is perhaps more to good fortune than anything else that a minority of people have managed to rise above the slime of mass delusion and view the world in a completely different light.
All religious institutions have a definite agenda that is ultimately driven by the requirements of the State to send its citizens to War, and religious belief makes it easier for the Authorities to persuade the masses that going to war is justified.
With God on our Side, we can do any damn thing we please. ‘Allah is great’ can mesmerise and direct in ways that few other slogans can achieve.
Michael Crichton’s film ‘The Andromeda Strain’ is a good example of how one should view the phenomenon of belief in God. In the film, an especially virulent and lethal virus is set to pretty much wipe out the Human Race when a satellite containing strains of the virus is accidentally knocked off course and crashes in a remote part of Utah.
Is it alien, is it from another time, directed to our present via a wormhole in space? Did the designers wish to send a powerful message that only the best and brightest of our scientists would be capable of interpreting, with the antidote embedded in its atomic structure?
Well they discover what will kill it off – 326978 Bacillus Infernus, and so they spray the infected landscape and the human race is saved.
All except for 1 tiny little capsule – which is finally deposited in locker number 326978 in a space station that is orbiting the planet.
So, the truth is out – it was designed and developed by Man. But we can ask ourselves some questions – was the film really a depiction of reality? Are there in fact space stations up there containing vials of lethal virus? Should we believe it to be true?
But it’s only a film, made in a studio. Riveting stuff.
Should we continue to believe in God? We can do, but it is so much more interesting to dismiss the entire affair as a clever con trick which therefore it makes it easier to tell when you are being deceived and distracted.
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» RE: Separating reality from fiction
Posted by: lastmanstanding
» RE: Separating reality from fiction
Posted by: richard0a37
» RE: Separating reality from fiction
Posted by: kogwonton
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Pilgrim on Jun 26, 2009 4:32 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: yankee1620
Posted by: zipper696
» RE: yankee1620 (Ummm: Wrong, zipper696)
Posted by: Jayzer
Comments are closed-
Posted by: reval on Jun 26, 2009 4:32 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Gods, gardian angels, demons, devils, garden gnomes and benevolent fairies do not and never have existed. The natural, measurable world is all there is and ever was. Treat those who claim differently with great skepticism.
The nagging problems afflicting our species are nearly all our making and in most cases can be directly attributable to the acceptane of unreason.
Only when humankind begins to fully grasp this simple reality will the evolution of our species resume in earnest.
~Rev. El Mundo
Pastor, WVCSR
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Posted by: harryf200 on Jun 26, 2009 4:33 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Here's a nice summary of the God v No God debate
Posted by: reval
» RE: Here's a nice summary of the God v No God debate
Posted by: logic11
» Actually: "Nice summary" - Not!
Posted by: pete ess
» RE: Actually: "Nice summary" - Not!
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: tedrowe on Jun 26, 2009 5:04 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a former Christian fundamentalist, I can say from experience that atheism is incomprehensible to believers, and I don't think any amount of argument, no matter how well-reasoned, makes much difference. Belief in god is a paradigm, just as atheism is a paradigm, and paradigms are incommensurable. What atheists need is to abandon the word atheist altogether, and develop a new language that better reflects what it is to hold the hypothesis that, as a humorist once said, "We are here. It is now. This is it."
In lieu of a better term, I am a "mootist." For me, the question of whether god exists is moot. It cannot be answered, but then, it doesn't have to be. I have found that I can live just as well without truth and certainty in my life.
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» RE: The word you want is agnostic
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: The word you want is agnostic
Posted by: logic11
» RE: The word you want is agnostic
Posted by: GEM-592
» RE: The word you want is agnostic
Posted by: lysdexia
» No, the better word is "realist" and here's why
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: No, the better word is "realist" and here's why
Posted by: GEM-592
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Douglas_Wilson on Jun 26, 2009 5:09 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: That is almost as good as my church
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» THC ?
Posted by: zipper696
» RE: THC ?
Posted by: lyta
» RE: From an Idontknowist
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: jmmartin on Jun 26, 2009 5:14 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Finally, a heavy weight had been taken off my shoulders and my clouded over eyes were opened and made clear. I no longer had to follow any anachronistic laws dreamed up by men and attributed to a supernatural being, which I now realized was no more "real" than the Tooth Fairy, the Easter Bunny, or Santa Claus. Finally, when I was a "good" person, I was good because of me, not because I feared ending up in some imaginary place called hell.
Of course we are evangelical. In fact, we are proselytic. Some bimbo wrote an op-ed in the L. A. Times about how we were "whiners." Seems to me it is the believers who whine the most. We don't have to whine. We have certainty, not speculation. But we do want everyone to convert to disbelief. It will make the world a whole lot better place for all.
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» Such views are neither right nor wrong, only dogmatic.
Posted by: Sojourner
» So do fairies dance at the bottom of your garden?
Posted by: sausage
» Are you skeptical of your own skepticism?
Posted by: Sojourner
» Maybe you're just afraid of death.
Posted by: Karlh
» I believe in the intangibles of art, science, and religion.
Posted by: Sojourner
» RE: I believe in the intangibles of art, science, and religion.
Posted by: Karlh
» RE: I believe in the intangibles of art, science, and religion.
Posted by: logic11
» Seriously, is that the kind of "Christians" you really /want/ to have around?
Posted by: Aureantes
» RE: Are you skeptical of your own skepticism?
Posted by: progressiveview
» Blaming Tiller's murder on religion is like blaming Hiroshima and Nagasaki on science.
Posted by: Sojourner
» You blamed science for Dr. Mengele.
Posted by: Karlh
» OK. You win. Science is responsible for Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and Mengele.
Posted by: Sojourner
» RE: Blaming Tiller's murder on religion is like blaming Hiroshima and Nagasaki on science.
Posted by: logic11
» Please tell me what is *scientific* about guilt by association?
Posted by: Sojourner
» I think you're mixing truth and morality
Posted by: factbased
» "None of our hands are clean."
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» "Born #/##/#### Died #/##/####?
Posted by: sausage
» The purpose of life is the living.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Such views are neither right nor wrong, only dogmatic.
Posted by: lyta
» RE: Such views are neither right nor wrong, only dogmatic.
Posted by: kogwonton
» RE:Evangelical Godlessness
Posted by: zipper696
» This may be my favorite comment on the thread.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» "In an abundance of water, the fool is thirsty" --Robert Nesta Marley
Posted by: Sojourner
Comments are closed-
Posted by: teel on Jun 26, 2009 5:21 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Joe goes into the closet, closes the door and starts praying to Jesus. It fills him with a sense of meaning and value. When Joe comes out of the closet he's a good person. He doesn't lie. He goes out of his way to help strangers around him. He's open minded and not afraid to discuss with others their take on what matters in life. He works hard and pays his taxes and he isn't deathly afraid 24/7 about all the terrible things that are out to get him and his little herd.
Here's Achmed. He too goes into the closet and prays to Allah. Much like Joe he feels fulfilled and gratified. He too comes out of the closet a wonderful person because of it.
Jimbo doesn't believe in Jesus or Allah. He believes in Thor, Oden and all the rest of the pagan nordic gods. He goes in to the closet and starts praying for Thor's hammer to grant him strength and such. But alas, when Jimbo comes out of the closet he too handles himself life Joe and Achmed.
Finally we have Eric. Eric doesn't believe in any good. He's happy to accept the grandeur of life without a deity. When he goes into the closet he has no god to pray to so instead he calls his friends and family for moral guidance and support. He entertains himself with education and knowledge so as to better understand and appreciate the world around him. When Eric comes out of the closet he's a wonderful, tolerant person like the three gentlemen before him.
Nobody else knows what happens in the closet, and nobody needs to care about it either. This is the way religion or lack thereof should work. Just like sex you can have it in any way shape and form that works for you, I promise I won't get in your face about it. I just want you to respect me when I say that I don't want to know about you activities. I don't care about your reasons for letting your three girlfriends tape you to the wall and smear you with peanut butter every sunday, and I don't care about your reasons for praying to a mystery entity on sunday either. I don't care.
But if you come out of the closet a bigoted, angry fundamentalist unable and unwilling to treat people with respect? Yelling like a five year old? Ttrying to force your believes on the rest of us? Trying to legislate to give yourself special perks? Trying to crack down on dissenters? Trying to stifle free speech? Trying to change what MY future children learn in school? Trying with every breath in your body to sell to the world why YOUR thoughts matter most, and why YOUR lifestyle is the only valid one and why YOU should enjoy special treatment then you know what?
STAY THE FUCK IN THE CLOSET.
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» That's a lovely take on religion, teel
Posted by: pete ess
» RE: That's a lovely take on religion, teel
Posted by: lyta
» Methinks you've read the Gospel of Matthew.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
Comments are closed-
Posted by: lib3288 on Jun 26, 2009 5:26 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Childish
Posted by: logic11
Comments are closed-
Posted by: noalternative on Jun 26, 2009 5:27 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» It's a matter of public record that Catholic priests...
Posted by: sausage
» RE: It's a matter of public record that SOME Catholic priests...
Posted by: harryf200
» RE: Ever go to a catholic school ..Harry
Posted by: donl51
» RE: Dawkins has accused believers of child abuse
Posted by: logic11
» I believe that it IS child abuse. I was a cradle Catholic.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» NO, sir. What's REALLY wicked is . . .
Posted by: pete ess
Comments are closed-
Posted by: teritenn on Jun 26, 2009 5:33 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I list myself as “agnostic” instead of “atheist”. It is a softer word and does not cause Christian fundamentalist a huge knee jerk.
And by and by in their conversion conversation I ask them “if you grew up in India with devout Hindu parents and grand parents and great grand parents and brothers and sisters, etc. what religion would you be? You would honor your parents and share their religion, wouldn’t you?” They think hard about this usually don’t have much to say. Then I ask, “if you grew up Hindu, honoring your family and their religion, will you still go to hell because you did not say the magic Christian words…I believe that JC is my lord and savior? They think some more. It is a soft way of challenging them and making them THINK for THEMSELVES FOR ONCE IN THEIR FRICKIN LIVES!
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» RE: Agnostic instead of Atheist
Posted by: vetus schola
» RE: Agnostic instead of Atheist
Posted by: progressiveview
» No, Agnostics understand
Posted by: Alenna
Comments are closed-
Posted by: mkewi53207 on Jun 26, 2009 6:03 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: QUESTION
Posted by: logic11
» RE: QUESTION
Posted by: jmooney
» I think we should have war ..
Posted by: donl51
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Bruce-Man-Do on Jun 26, 2009 6:05 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: I heard there's something new called ''new'' athiests...
Posted by: donl51
Comments are closed-
Posted by: gazooks on Jun 26, 2009 6:06 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why are so many of us so unwilling just to say the truth? Perhaps fear of the unknowable.
Believe what you will, but nevertheless, WE DO NOT KNOW.
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» RE: Agnosticism isn't a way, it just is.
Posted by: Ocean tides
» Wrong, we DO know that God doesn't exist
Posted by: moyshekapoyre
» RE: Wrong, we DO know that God doesn't exist
Posted by: PopRox80
» RE: Wrong, we DO know that God doesn't exist
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Bigioni on Jun 26, 2009 6:28 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: They draw a superficial, uninformed caricature of religious belief and then they bang holes in
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: They draw a superficial, uninformed caricature of religious belief and then they bang holes in
Posted by: logic11
» RE: "For as many times as I have seen the atheist position promoted on AlterNet..."
Posted by: Aureantes
» RE: Paul Bigioni
Posted by: zipper696
» The trouble is, Paul Bigioni . .
Posted by: pete ess
» RE: The trouble is, Paul Bigioni . .
Posted by: Bigioni
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Beck on Jun 26, 2009 6:34 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: No, sometimes it's just close-minded and intolerant
Posted by: logic11
» RE: logic11 is the author's 'best friend'
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: logic11 is the author's 'best friend'
Posted by: progressiveview
» RE: logic11 is the author's 'best friend'
Posted by: logic11
» My apologies, logic11
Posted by: photon's feather
» Sister_Lauren knows all!
Posted by: kevcol
» RE: logic11 is the author's 'best friend'
Posted by: lyta
» More absurd paranoid whining from a believer
Posted by: UnEasyOne
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Freticat on Jun 26, 2009 6:54 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The reason that I am not atheist is that I do feel that there is a spiritual component to my life that atheism excludes. I have experienced a few things that are beyond my ability to explain. But unlike the fundamentalist religionist, I simply pigeonhole these things into the slot labeled "supernatural" until a more rational explanation comes along. Furthermore, unlike the fundamentalist atheist, I acknowledge that pigeonhole instead of trying to convince myself that it doesn't exist.
By the way: shouldn't it be "closed-minded" instead of "close-minded"? (I think of "close-minded" as meaning keeping one's thoughts to one's self, not having a closed mind).
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» RE: I Am A Polytheistic NeoPagan
Posted by: factbased
» The Fundie Atheists
Posted by: Freticat
» RE: The Fundie Atheists
Posted by: factbased
» RE: I Am thinking of worshipping our sun
Posted by: donl51
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Atheistno1 on Jun 26, 2009 7:00 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: distancebiker23 on Jun 26, 2009 7:05 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article could have been retitled "Christians: Why we're right" and it would've sounded the same.
Just so you know what my background is, I have no religion.
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» Is there no place for reverence in your life? I find absence of the sacred disturbing.
Posted by: Sojourner
» RE: absence of the sacred - inevitable in our fucked up society
Posted by: stellabloo
» You've heard, "When the going gets tough..."
Posted by: Sojourner
» RE: "When the going gets tough..."
Posted by: stellabloo
» Where ignorance is bliss, 'tis foolish to be wise?
Posted by: Sojourner
» I revere nature. Matter of fact, I wrote a short poem about it.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: I revere nature. Matter of fact, I wrote a short poem about it.
Posted by: PopRox80
» Glad you appreciate it - and not at all
Posted by: UnEasyOne
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Bushmaster on Jun 26, 2009 7:05 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm a recovered fundamentalist so I feel able to look at this with a little whimsy. I listened to an audio book recently by Richard Dawkins and felt him to be very 'religious' about the theory of evolution. Fundamentally so! That did turn me off even though I was in tune with what he was saying otherwise.
These distinctions are what the 'believer' possesses as a result of the very first programing of the individual by parents. That is what makes these beliefs so intrinsically a part of the individuals make-up. By challenging this core belief of an individual you threaten his whole understanding of reality which on a personal level is a portent of chaos. We, as individuals, have come to expect that our worldview works perfectly in explaining things, and when it is threatened our little world trembles.
A few years of silence in a Zen monastery would be helpful if this occurs.
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Posted by: humanvalues on Jun 26, 2009 7:13 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Stop whining.
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» RE: This article is pointless - so just out of curiosity...
Posted by: UnEasyOne
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Posted by: archives@uwyo.edu on Jun 26, 2009 7:19 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Speaking as a Quaker...
Posted by: Philip Newton
» RE: Speaking as a Quaker...Not a believer, but...
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Speaking as a Quaker...
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: archives@uwyo.edu on Jun 26, 2009 7:25 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: Tweck9 on Jun 26, 2009 7:29 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There's nothing wrong with thinking that the likely scenario is a certain thing, but being all "I'm right, and you're wrong" never did anything good for anyone, and is NOT a cornerstone of democracy.
That's called closed-mindedness, actually. Being open-minded to possibilities is a much more realistic way to view the world, in my opinion. When you close yourself off to the possibility that you could be wrong, you do yourself a major disservice.
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» RE: There IS something wrong with thinking you're right...
Posted by: logic11
» RE: There IS something wrong with thinking you're right...
Posted by: lib3288
» RE: There IS something wrong with thinking you're right...
Posted by: logic11
» But logic and reason are assaultive, don't you see?
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» Nothing wrong with that position
Posted by: Tweck9
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Fempatriot on Jun 26, 2009 7:43 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: I refuse to say 'under god' too
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» Again, with the Tooth Fairy!
Posted by: zipper696
» Not really into "flag worship" and allegiance pledges either, personally.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Not really into "flag worship" and allegiance pledges either, personally.
Posted by: Fempatriot
Comments are closed-
Posted by: daniel347x on Jun 26, 2009 7:43 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is wrong. It's not what the word means. Atheism is "disbelief in or denial of the existence of God or gods" or simply "Godlessness". There is no definition of atheism that means "being without a religion" or "opposition to religion".
For this reason, the article doesn't stand under scrutiny, and becomes a series of rhetorical flourishes on various ideas that don't pertain to atheism, such as the damage that religion is responsible for in the world.
It's this kind of "reasoning" that makes me no more consider myself to be an "atheist" than someone who "believes in God". Both involve a sense that there's a single word you can "attach" your ideology to - no different from attaching your ideology to the word "God" - and then making all kinds of rhetorical points based on that word. The points themselves may or may not be ones I agree with, but so often they have nothing to do with the word "God" - or here, the word "atheism". It's for this reason that I consider people who make a "point" to say that they "are" atheists to be no different from people who make a "point" to say they believe in "God".
This article skirts around this central point by getting the definition of atheism completely wrong. By never discussing what atheism actually is - a belief that there is no God - it's easy for the article to conflate "atheism" with resistance against religious intolerance. That's not what atheism is.
Dan Nissenbaum
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» RE: Auther has the definition of Atheism wrong
Posted by: logic11
» RE: Auther has the definition of Atheism wrong
Posted by: sunnywater
» RE: Auther has the definition of Atheism wrong
Posted by: logic11
» RE: Auther has the definition of Atheism wrong
Posted by: GEM-592
» And who made you arbiter of that?
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Auther has the definition of Atheism wrong
Posted by: GEM-592
» RE: Auther has the definition of Atheism wrong
Posted by: sunnywater
Comments are closed-
Posted by: jstepp590 on Jun 26, 2009 7:48 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you belive atheism is correct then good for you. I say you have the same rules as everyone else. As long as you don't push your beliefs on everyone else and out of my life I'll stay out of yours.
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» RE: Humans have had religion for at least 50k years
Posted by: zipper696
» RE: Humans have had religion for at least 50k years
Posted by: Tweck9
Comments are closed-
Posted by: kenhymes on Jun 26, 2009 7:48 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You may well be right about the universe. That does not mean that proving or your rightness about the universe is the most important thing you can do. I would apply this equally to religious people who believe that changing other people's minds is their job (weak theology, and bad tactics). What is much more important than either endeavour is justice and mercy and love. Are we capable of respecting each other long enough to accomplish some of that, as we were in eras past?
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» RE: Thank you, that was very supportive
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Thank you, that was very supportive
Posted by: lyta
Comments are closed-
Posted by: rmirman on Jun 26, 2009 7:54 AM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our Almost Impossible Universe:
Why the laws of nature make the existence of humans extraordinarily unlikely
An exploration of the precise conditions required for the existence of humans in the universe. ... the author does an admirable job delineating the laws of physics without becoming too bogged down in complicated jargon, and he maintains a sense of wonder about the unique and random nature of the universe. He repeatedly celebrates our highly improbable achievements as a species, marveling at our ability to use the language of abstract mathematics to unravel the mysteries of existence. ... the prevailing tone of the narrative is clear and confident, marked by a meticulous attention to detail. A[n] ... often fascinating journey through the history of the universe and mankind. --- Kirkus Discoveries
Existence, of the universe, structure, life, intelligence, is unthinkable, really impossible. Incredibly, intriguingly, we are here. From the universe itself to humans, that we are, what we are, what we have accomplished, we find implausibility upon implausibility making us as reasoning beings (at least almost) unique in the universe, quite fortunate, but quite dangerous. SETI is nonsense. Reasons range from mathematically rigorous --- unavoidable --- to extremely strong to highly likely. These force the question: does the word God exist?
This discussion is aimed at all interested in not only science, but in the world in which we (strangely can and do) live, the laws of nature, in what humanity is and why. It has in addition much material of value to specialists, and because of its breadth and coherence, its attempts to provoke thought, it, besides being a popularization, should be an excellent text for courses in science for non-scientists and as a (perhaps necessary) supplement for science courses.
I. IS OUR UNIVERSE REALLY POSSIBLE?
Existence is the greatest mystery, not only that it is but that it can be. Conditions are too many, too strict, too conflicting. Outlandishly we are, yet that we are impose upon us the responsibilities of loneliness. Horrendously our most basic need is to hate, hurt and kill, to horribly misuse that awesome, and likely unique, gift of intelligence --- destroying, dishonoring, the most magnificent constituent of nature.
XII. DOES THE WORD GOD EXIST?
The vast implausibility, yet actuality, of nature and of humans seem to have implications. Can there be any? To study this we must consider not science, not religion, but language. That is definitive. Inability and refusal to accept reality, to accept what humans are and our place in nature, and our egomania, megalomania, helping to cause these, has led to vast evil. Science is rejected, since it shows that evolution leads to morality, and because people cannot tolerate the truth about reality, about themselves, causing great suffering, much abominations.
XII. DOES THE WORD GOD EXIST?
The vast implausibility, yet actuality, of nature and of humans seem to have implications. Can there be any? To study this we must consider not science, not religion, but language. That is definitive. Inability and refusal to accept reality, to accept what humans are and our place in nature, and our egomania, megalomania, helping to cause these, has led to vast evil. Science is rejected, since it shows that evolution leads to morality, and because people cannot tolerate the truth about reality, about themselves, causing great suffering, much abominations.
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» WTF!!?
Posted by: sausage
» RE: Does the word God exist?
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: sausage on Jun 26, 2009 8:01 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This theist/atheist conundrum is more blowback of the Cold War: The United States set itself up as the theist-free market-republic in opposition to the atheist-Marxist-dictatorships of the Soviet Union and China. Our domestic slide into theocracy began when the great deceiver Billy Graham was warmly received in both Republican and Democratic White Houses.
During the Cold War it was policy for the State Department and the CIA to back religious fundamentalists in emerging nations to thwart nascent nationalist moments. Our government surreptitiously backed the Muslim Brotherhood, the prototype Islamist political opposition group, to undermine Egyptian President Gamel Abdel Nasser and his influence in the Non-Aligned Movement after the relationships between Egypt and the USSR warmed after the Suez Crisis.
And, of course, by now everyone should recall that it was unofficial US policy to supply the fundamentalist movement which became the Taliban in Afghanistan in order to give the old soviet Union its own Vietnam.
I won't even go into the religiously inspired lunacy which keeps the Israel-Palestinian pot boiling.
So religion, especially the three so-called "great" Abrahamic religions of Judaism, Christianity and Islam, in my opinion has fucked up the the latter half of the Twentieth Century and the first decade of the Twenty-first worse than air and water pollution, nuclear weapons and Swine flu. I just wish it would go back to being a minor annoyance. I don't merely want to be tolerant of religion, I want to be indifferent to it. And I would hope that indifference would be reciprocal toward my atheism.
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Posted by: jesme on Jun 26, 2009 8:04 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: xcellent statement of the obvious
Posted by: progressive-life
» RE: xcellent statement of the obvious
Posted by: Ocean tides
» Problem is, religion isn't about "the exchange of ideas." It's about dogma.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» "..do not be like the hypocrites, for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the street
Posted by: Sojourner
» statement of the obvious??
Posted by: zipper696
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Posted by: NamVeT on Jun 26, 2009 8:05 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: I could give a
Posted by: progressive-life
Comments are closed-
Posted by: stellabloo on Jun 26, 2009 8:06 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hardline atheism is as illogical as religious fundamentalism. Agnosticism, where we admit that we don't know and that we may never know, is the only honest approach to all matters metaphysical.
There are all kinds of people in the world and most of them don't go door-to-door to bludgeon you with their beliefs. The zealots of either stripe are the problem. Fanaticism and nihilism are two sides of the same coin.
Yes, public worship of the "approved deity" for personal gain is the sort of hypocrisy that the bible (small b) talks about. Yes, we are all entitled to our own belief. Yes, untold millions have died throughout history for their beliefs. Including - very recently - christians and buddhists in China and Tibet. Because the chinese government is officially atheist and officially, they are always "right".
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» It is illogical to claim the tooth fairy does NOT exist!
Posted by: moyshekapoyre
» RE: the tooth fairy??? - was at our house recently :.?
Posted by: stellabloo
» RE: the tooth fairy??? - was at our house recently :.?
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: joel23 on Jun 26, 2009 8:20 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is not a search for the truth, but its opposite. If I search for the truth, I don't have a belief at all or a need to construct a justification for one.
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» RE: what about the truth
Posted by: progressive-life
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Blackfeetboy on Jun 26, 2009 8:23 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This God/No God arguement is tired and pointless. And as I read through the comments.. I find myself frightened... OF ATHEISTS! The intolerance that seeps through some of these comments is just as scary as anything James Dobson or John Hagee says.
Beware of those who are in sole possession of the truth.
My faith is one based on compassion, doing my best by my fellow human, and seeing the magic and wonder that is our world, and making this world a better place. Lakotas call it The Great Mystery. I would hate to live in the type of world that is devoid of that mystery and spirit. It seems as if that's the world that Ms. Christina would prefer. I could be wrong, please don't beliveve in God, that's fine with me, and many other spiritual people out there. We're fine with the disagreement. But remember that intolerance is intolerance, it's distasteful coming from Fred Phelps...or Richard Dawkins.
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» RE: I'm a LIBERAL! I believe in GOD...
Posted by: TheNamelessCity
» I think you just made his point..
Posted by: progressive-life
» RE: Got it, liberal religion freak?
Posted by: Sister_Lauren
» RE: Got it, liberal religion freak?
Posted by: logic11
» RE: Got it, liberal religion freak?
Posted by: PopRox80
» RE: I'm a LIBERAL! I believe in GOD...
Posted by: Blackfeetboy
» RE: I'm a LIBERAL! I believe in GOD...
Posted by: lyta
» RE: I'm a LIBERAL! I believe in GOD...
Posted by: progressive-life
» With friends like you, atheists need no enemies
Posted by: UnEasyOne
Comments are closed-
Posted by: clvngodess on Jun 26, 2009 8:34 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Fundamentalists do what they perceive as good deeds in order to fulfill God's will and to earn salvation; atheists do them simply because it is the right thing to do. Is this also not our most elementary experience of morality? When I do a good deed, I do so not with an eye toward gaining God's favor; I do it because if I did not, I could not look at myself in the mirror. A moral deed is by definition its own reward. David Hume, a believer, made this point in a very poignant way, when he wrote that the only way to show true respect for God is to act morally while ignoring God's existence....
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» A great yarn.
Posted by: Sojourner
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Posted by: wli on Jun 26, 2009 8:41 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The best "political strategy" to deal with discrimination against atheism is probably to align with minority religious groups and generalized secularists to promote secularism.
Another is that atheists have something to be right about. Again, since atheism is the lack of a particular sort of component to belief systems, there is no assertion to be right about. One could say it's possible to advocate against theistic belief with no particular alternative proposed belief system; however, there's still quite a bit of a shortfall in terms of something compelling to promote.
Perhaps developing atheistic belief systems so that there is something to subscribe to would address that, but perhaps there are structural difficulties devising such things which would attract substantial followings. It's also somewhat difficult to describe what the scope of such belief systems would be, since many of the traditional topics of religion such as cosmogony and theosophy would be irrelevant to it. I suspect they would be more like combinations of philosophy and ideology. Regardless, little or no progress has been made in this area, and it may not even be possible.
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» RE: talk about what? - Theocracy is bad. Respect the constitution.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
Comments are closed-
Posted by: progressive-life on Jun 26, 2009 8:57 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So, if we use this logic, then Christians, or Muslims, are being democratic by trying to convince other faiths or Atheist that they are right!
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» RE: The democratic way - my way or the highway???
Posted by: factbased
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Posted by: kevcol on Jun 26, 2009 9:12 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My "atheism" amounts to this: I have no belief in deities. None of them. Not yours or his or hers.
I also have no belief in unicorns. Does that mean I'm an aunicornist and my religion is aunicornism? Well, only if one dilutes the meaning of the word "religion" to mean whatever fits one's agenda...go ahead be disingenuous and obfuscatory, it's your right and role as a human being to fully misunderstand and misrepresent anything that you oppose.
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» just Atheists!
Posted by: zipper696
» wrong
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: what-it-is on Jun 26, 2009 9:28 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And really, if i go to hell for simply cussing...where do ALL those pedophile preists go?????
And how about those roman catholics....do what ever you want...steel, kill, comit fraud, cheat on your spouse, abuse children..what ever you want, then stroll into confession and share your indiscretions with a protected pedophile...and everything is HUNKY DORY.
by that process...any criminal should just admit that they are guilty...and they will be exonerated and forgiven....
i am an athiest....and i am RIGHT!
michele,canada
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Posted by: vetus schola on Jun 26, 2009 10:09 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'd like to believe in a loving Christ, but the whole blood sacrifice for my sins thing just never was explained sufficiently for me. I don't see how a loving God could act like the one in the Old Testament and punish us for what he knew was going to happen anyways... And yes, I have heard all the explanations and they still do not appeal to my sense of logic.
"Oh we were like children, and God had to punish us to make us stronger and love him." Oh please.....
Just saying I believe in a divine creator is not enough, because without Jesus, I'm going to Hell.
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» You going to hell? No.
Posted by: pete ess
» No, you're not going to Hell
Posted by: Aureantes
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Posted by: nicejake on Jun 26, 2009 10:22 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How peaceful our planet would be if it was occuppied entirely of secular humanists?
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» RE: peace
Posted by: altchap
» Atheists also took part in violence and war
Posted by: Alenna
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Posted by: Quasar on Jun 26, 2009 10:24 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Ain't not
Posted by: logic11
Comments are closed-
Posted by: buffeliscious on Jun 26, 2009 10:26 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Religion is not the cause of world violence and other problems. Human inclination toward zealotry and domination is at the root. Embracing compassion, which has a shared space among the religious and the non-religious, would be a better approach than fighting religion.
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» RE: Freedom of Religion...
Posted by: logic11
» RE: Freedom of Religion...
Posted by: factbased
» Feel free to just make shit up. Oh, wait - that's slander. Other comments were too kind.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
Comments are closed-
Posted by: frankly1 on Jun 26, 2009 10:31 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: Philip Newton on Jun 26, 2009 10:32 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Your statement that you can't prove you are right "100%" is probably your most honest and most telling.
In matters ontological and theological, no one can ultimately prove his or her position. The simple answer is, the question is bigger than any of our answers.
Persons of faith posit a power or consciousness beyond themselves. Atheists deny that power.
We will die not knowing the answer "100%" but I'll wager with Pascal (and what empirical data we have) and side with those who acknowledge (and worship) God.
Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe you are. But there's a whole lot riding on the wager, and in the meantime, the transcendance of ego, greed, pain and hatred offered by faith is a wonderful freedom that anyone is free to accept.
Or reject.
Peace.
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» RE: Better be right
Posted by: harlan8
» RE: Better be right
Posted by: Philip Newton
» RE: Better be right
Posted by: logic11
» Empirical data
Posted by: Philip Newton
» RE: Better be right
Posted by: factbased
» Which is the precise reason that no one's going to "burn" for their choice of belief in itself.
Posted by: Aureantes
» RE: Which is the precise reason that no one's going to "burn" for their choice of belief in itself.
Posted by: Philip Newton
» RE: Which is the precise reason that no one's going to "burn" for their choice of belief in itself.
Posted by: cplot
» RE: Which is the precise reason that no one's going to "burn" for their choice of belief in itself.
Posted by: lysdexia
» Fact-Based:
Posted by: Philip Newton
» You contradict yourself
Posted by: factbased
» RE: You contradict yourself
Posted by: Philip Newton
» RE: You contradict yourself
Posted by: factbased
» RE: Fact-Based:
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: Better be right
Posted by: buckup
» RE: Better be right
Posted by: lysdexia
» Lysedxia
Posted by: Philip Newton
» RE: Lysedxia
Posted by: factbased
» RE: Lysedxia
Posted by: Philip Newton
» RE: Lysedxia
Posted by: factbased
» RE: Lysedxia
Posted by: cplot
» RE: Lysedxia
Posted by: Philip Newton
» RE: Lysedxia
Posted by: factbased
» RE: Lysedxia
Posted by: factbased
» monumental assumptions and theism/atheism
Posted by: cplot
» RE: monumental assumptions and theism/atheism
Posted by: factbased
» RE: monumental assumptions and theism/atheism
Posted by: cplot
» RE: monumental assumptions and theism/atheism
Posted by: cplot
» RE: monumental assumptions and theism/atheism
Posted by: factbased
» RE: monumental assumptions and theism/atheism
Posted by: cplot
» RE: monumental assumptions and theism/atheism
Posted by: factbased
» "Cogito ergo sum."
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Lysedxia
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: Better be right - study your history
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» Second sentence fourth paragraph should read:
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Better be right - study your history
Posted by: Philip Newton
» RE: Better be right - study your history - WTF!?!
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Better be right - study your history
Posted by: lysdexia
» Buckup:
Posted by: Philip Newton
Comments are closed-
Posted by: harlan8 on Jun 26, 2009 10:36 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In a world where the default is white, male, christian, heterosexual, moneyed, any experience outside of that is perceived as being confrontational.
You can't have a discussion about gender or sexuality without male heterosexuals asking why "you" are always talking about gender or sexuality. They do not even realize that every story, conversation, movie, tv show is a discussion about gender and sexuality.
Same with religion. No one says stop "always" talking about religion, when its 2 months of Christmas, or a holiday/sunday/gospel music, etc.
So thanks for a great article.
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» RE: People Seeing Outside There Narrow Experience
Posted by: John Sawyer
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Posted by: hhill on Jun 26, 2009 10:46 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Facts": the data derived from the use of the 'senses' (hearing, seeing, etc.). The experimental method is used to add to the data (called "facts"--not "truth": a philosophical term.
Note that 'philosophy' uses logic to speculatively propose definitions of 'truth'. It has only the use of reason as a relationship with science.)
Science's speculations are about the relationships of the various facts (usually these speculations are called theories).
Scientists recognize that a given theory will be abandoned or modified upon the discovery of new facts. Both facts and theories are understood to be tentative.
The descriptions in Genesis chapters one and two of facts and speculations about their origin is an example of scientific theories.
Those particular theories have been displaced by current theories because those in Genesis are thought to be inadequate.
[I think it would be wise to describe the Genesis theories ["creationism"] in courses on the history of science.
"Intelligent Design" is a modern term representing the "Argument from Design" anciently used to philosophically 'prove' the existence of "God".
It should be taught in a philosophy course. Its only connection to "Creationism" is in its use to demonstrate the authority of the Bible.
Note that 'creationism'is supported by those who are concerned only to protect a 'theological' (a subdivision of philosophy)[theology is not a synonym for 'religion'] theory about the accuracy and authority of the Bible.
'agnosticism': whether there is a 'supernatural' or not is 'unknowable' [not a synonym for 'ignorant']
'theism': the supernatural IS anthropomorphic.
'atheism': the supernatural is NOT anthropomorphic
NOTE: both terms are philosophical: not to be confused with scientific fact and not synonyms for 'religion'.
'religion': used of the systems of behavior,
organization [formal or informal] and belief which claim to have ultimate (supernatural)authority.
[Note: much of that to be found in many religious practices is 'magic' [a primitive form of science] (e.g.: petitionary prayer such as "Oh God, cure my cancer")
'atheism' is not a synonym for 'anti- or 'non- religious'
'non-believer' should be avoided unless accompanied by a description or label for that which is not believed.
A personal note: I define "God" as "that entity without which there would be nothing"
"Mores" (from clasical Latin "mos" ["custom"] and "Ethos" from classical Greek' are synonyms. Ethics and Morals describe what a particular culture of subculture calls acceptable behavior (and, of course) what is not acceptable. They are not necessarily related to any religion.
Personal note: I would strongly urge you to become acqainted with the work of Bishop John Shelby Spong
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» RE: Definitions
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: Definitions
Posted by: PopRox80
» RE: Definitions
Posted by: PopRox80
» RE: Definitions
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: tony_opmoc on Jun 26, 2009 10:53 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But you can't convince people that God does not exist - because most People - throughout human history have Personal Experience of God / Spirituality / Altered States of Mind / Pure Goodness / The Most Amazing Joy / Series of Co-incidences that Cannot be Logically Explained / Just Being Happy / Apparent Telepathy / Out of Body Experiences / Pure Meditation to a Higher Plane / Working as a Team to Make The Almost Impossible Work / Apparent Miracles / Prayer Actually Working...
I could go on - and whilst all these experiences can be explained as Mental Illness/ The Manic Side of Manic Depression/ Schizophrenia / Psychosis / Delusion...
Its much more fun and healthy to believe in God. It also allows you to communicate much more easily with complete Nutters (spiritual People) like Born Again Christians - or Hindus who go off to a mountain to Mediatate for 8 weeks every couple of Years and People who do stuff like LSD and extremely strong Cannabis.
For example - why are literally Hundreds of Thousands / Probably Millions of People going to Music Festivals This Summer in the UK.
They can listen to all the Music at Home - and Watch it on TV
But they are doing it For The God experience - of Being a Part of The Live Experience.
Atheists meanwhile are too busy analysing and rationalising other people's God like experience - and laughing at the nutters having a good time sliding in the mud.
Give up being an atheist - and have a God time instead
Tony
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» RE: Futile Trying To Convince People That God Does Not Exist - Instead Attack The Lunacy of Religion
Posted by: micko
» RE: Futile Trying To Convince People That God Does Not Exist - Instead Attack The Lunacy of Religion
Posted by: tony_opmoc
» RE: Futile Trying To Convince People That God Does Not Exist - Instead Attack The Lunacy of Religion
Posted by: altchap
» RE: Futile Trying To Convince People That God Does Not Exist - Instead Attack The Lunacy of Religion
Posted by: lysdexia
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Posted by: progressive-life on Jun 26, 2009 10:59 AM
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Posted by: MotherLodeBeth on Jun 26, 2009 11:13 AM
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» RE: Dislike pushing beliefs
Posted by: Collielady
» RE: Dislike pushing beliefs
Posted by: factbased
» RE: Dislike pushing beliefs
Posted by: aonghus36
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Posted by: bettyn on Jun 26, 2009 11:16 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am personally offended when anyone tries to "sell' me on some religious belief. It's an insult to my intelligence as far as I'm concerned. The minute someone comes up to me and says. "You ought to be in church!" (usually meaning THEIR church), I'm done with them. Don't tell me WHAT I should "believe" because it's none of your damned business!
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Posted by: pawheel on Jun 26, 2009 11:37 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I believe he was a pacifist. AND a socialist. And the original hippee :)
I believe the Bible has only one fault, it was written by humans! Imperfect beasts that we are...
I believe Athiests have as much right to their opinion as I do to mine, as Muslims and all others do to theirs.
I would love to attend church, but the hypocracy and smugness throughout the ones I attended over the years made me feel unwelcome and unaccepted because I didn't think just like the followers I met.
I try to live my life as close as I can to how Jesus told us to in the first 4 books of the new Testament; the poor, weak and ill were more important to him then any of the leaders, rich people or other higher ups in their society in his time on earth.
But what do I know? I am politically a Green Party member who loves to get into political discussions with hard core Republicans.
You learn more from listening than talking, but most heavily religious people rarely give themselves a chance to listen to and consider opposing opinions of others who don't think like they do, which is kinda like talking to yourself, isn't it?
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» RE: My 2 cents worth.
Posted by: factbased
» And here's mine: I have no problem with folks who believe good stuff and behave that way.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
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Posted by: Universe.in.Flux on Jun 26, 2009 11:49 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most very early indigenous belief systems understood reality (rightly or wrongly) as a homogenous unit with multitudinous aspects which were merely reflections of a singular truth. For example, the many Hindu gods we know today were originally considered to be aspects of man's fractured psyche, not physical, separately defined gods, and in fact those gods were not considered "real" at all in the way modern religionists think of god as an actual provable being. The closest thing one could say that would truly reflect mid-era Vedantic beliefs would be that they thought of reality as an unchanging energy that permeates the whole of the universe; that by virtue of the fact that all phenomenally manifested objects (in other words, all things that break through the barrier from energy to matter) are part and parcel of that one thing, and so all we see can be considered “god” (‘Tat tvam asi,’ Thou art that).
So is that an expression of religious belief? Is it a metaphysical construct? Or, if you read some of the first quantum physicists like Niels Bohr, is it just a more lyrical way of explaining how the universe works (the transformation of energy to matter)? Bohr wrote things in his early career about the nature of quantum reality that he was shocked to find had already been expressed, albeit somewhat differently, 3,000 years before him in India.
And again, many early indigenous peoples who worshipped rivers or rocks or trees as “gods” would be disgusted by an outsider’s interpretation in which it was assumed that they worshipped many distinct divine beings. They would have thought it patently absurd. They understood that when they worshipped a tree, they were in fact paying respect and homage to the mystery of creation and the spark of life that gave shape to the reality of the tree, not that there was some god inside that or any tree to which they could ask for divine guidance and from which they could expect an answer.
One can find countless books and essays that discuss religious belief systems not in terms of right or wrong, real or fake, reality or delusion, but as metaphors for helping man to understand his biology and his mind. And these aren’t books giving post-modern spins on religious belief systems, but instead they explain what the very people who developed these systems said about god and religion itself. The originators of most of these belief systems (yes, even early Gnostic Christians) understood their beliefs to be metaphors employed to help them understand themselves, not as literally being true.
In the end, it’s the overwhelmingly arrogant assumption of dogmatic religionists that they are right and the shrill reactionary bleating of atheists falling into the trap of discussing religion as real or not real (as opposed to it’s being an expression of metaphor helpful to man in his life, in which case the question of belief systems being “real” is rendered moot) that keeps this debate at the deplorably juvenile level we see it today. Given the kind of people both sides elevate as poster children for their causes, this isn’t going to change any time soon.
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» CORRECTION RE: Ignorance and assumption on display from both sides
Posted by: Universe.in.Flux
» RE: Ignorance and assumption on display from both sides
Posted by: tony_opmoc
Comments are closed-
Posted by: mejsmith on Jun 26, 2009 11:58 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The other problem is that there are so many more important things to persuade people of than their views on religion, pro or con. There are people being oppressed, declining standards in our standard of life and well being and other problems that should concern us far more than this. I find the whole thing rather trivial and unimportant.
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» RE: Atheism is no more rational than religious beliefs.
Posted by: logic11
» RE: Atheism is no more rational than religious beliefs.
Posted by: factbased
» RE: Atheism is no more rational than religious beliefs.
Posted by: mejsmith
» Your "straw man" argument is misleading
Posted by: Moonray
» RE: Atheism is no more rational than religious beliefs.
Posted by: factbased
» RE: Atheism is no more rational than religious beliefs.
Posted by: lysdexia
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Posted by: sirios on Jun 26, 2009 12:11 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Because...
Posted by: factbased
» RE: WHY - Because believers have been enthusiastically murdering "heritics" since time began.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: WHY - Because believers have been enthusiastically murdering "heritics": NOT
Posted by: SamFox
» Prophecy
Posted by: factbased
Comments are closed-
Posted by: ClassAct on Jun 26, 2009 12:20 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
God or no god is a common debate in Buddhist circles and neither side considers the other strident.
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» RE: eligion and Atheism
Posted by: aonghus36
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Posted by: aonghus36 on Jun 26, 2009 12:25 PM
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» RE: Ganesha Milk Miracle
Posted by: factbased
» RE: Ganesha Milk Miracle
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: Ganesha Milk Miracle
Posted by: aonghus36
» RE: Ganesha Milk Miracle
Posted by: lysdexia
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Posted by: tony_opmoc on Jun 26, 2009 1:00 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
So we went walking and found a Man with a Tuk-Tuk
Hardly anyone spoke much English - but we asked if he could take us to see the local Temple
Instead he took us to see his home and introduced us to his wife and children and his brother - and showed us his little traditional machine where he made coir carpets - totally human driven and still working and functional and making carpets...
He then took us on a drive in his Tuk-Tuk (we were expecting 5 minutes)
Nearly an hour later - we arrived in the Middle of an Enormous Hindu Festival - where there were about 10,000 People.
We were the only white people there.
Both myself and my wife have long blonde hair and white skins.
We were walking round with the bloke who took us their and soon an enormous crowd was following us.
All the children wanted to shake our hands and talk to us. The women started passing their babies to us to Bless. There was absolutely no begging. It was just a giving thing. They didn't want anything from us - except to talk to us and touch us as if we were some form of Gods that had arrived from another planet.
It simply does not matter what you personally believe in.
Faced with that situation - we just had to play the roles we found ourselves in.
It was completely AMAZING.
It was like Being Rock Stars x 100
Neither of us can sing for Toffee - but we can't ignore the complete Loveliness of People in a very Remote Rural Village who have Nothing of Financial Value - But the True Love of Humanity
Tony
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» And you didn't . .
Posted by: pete ess
» RE: And you didn't . .
Posted by: tony_opmoc
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Posted by: GretaChristina on Jun 26, 2009 1:19 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... but I did not put the phrase "Because We're Right" into the title of this piece. The title I gave this piece was simply, "Why Do Atheists Have to Talk About Atheism?" "Because We're Right" was added by AlterNet. I have asked them to change it, as it sets a tone for the piece that I absolutely did not intend.
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» Shame on Alternet
Posted by: pete ess
» RE: Shame on Alternet
Posted by: outsideagitator
» Shame on Alternet
Posted by: pete ess
» RE: Author clarification on title
Posted by: comradebob
» RE: Author clarification on title
Posted by: logic11
» Glad you clarified, but a lot of us - maybe most - are used to this from Alternet.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» The smugness I might point out came from christers and others who
Posted by: outsideagitator
» RE: The smugness I might point out :Actually
Posted by: SamFox
» Sorry, Sam, you just don't understand proof.
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Sorry, Sam, you just don't understand proof.
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: The smugness I might point out :Actually
Posted by: factbased
Comments are closed-
Posted by: billslm on Jun 26, 2009 1:34 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
IF God is willing but not able to prevent evil in the world then he is not omnipotent.
IF God is able but not willing to prevent evil in the world then he is malevolent.
IF God is both able and willing to prevent evil in the world then from whence comes evil?
IF God is neither willing nor able able to prevent evil in the world, then why call him God?
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» RE: IF, IF, IF???!!!!
Posted by: johnbradleycopeland
» "...Virgin births..." Actually, if to search the web you'll this is possible in Nature ...
Posted by: harryf200
» RE: "...Virgin births..." Actually, if to search the web you'll this is possible in Nature ...
Posted by: donl51
» RE: IF, IF, IF???!!!!
Posted by: John Sawyer
» Thankyou ,billsin and johnthats along name,..
Posted by: donl51
» RE: IF: IF FROGS had big hips
Posted by: SamFox
» RE: IF: IF FROGS had big hips
Posted by: lysdexia
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Posted by: grindermonkey on Jun 26, 2009 2:04 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Absolutely!
Posted by: donl51
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Posted by: willymack on Jun 26, 2009 2:06 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: I don't give a roach fart
Posted by: donl51
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Posted by: popsicle67 on Jun 26, 2009 2:18 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: My Atheism
Posted by: donl51
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Posted by: Philip Newton on Jun 26, 2009 4:47 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"But for many of us, religion is, above all else, a hypothesis about how the world works and why it is the way it is."
I doubt that is how many people who believe in God would define faith.
Certainly faith regards terrestrial experience. But it does so in light of the transcendent.
Do atheists believe in the transcendent?
If so, what is your hypothesis about how THAT works?
Because that is, principally, what most religions aim toward.
How "this" works is the better province of science and math.
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Posted by: gsmiley on Jun 26, 2009 5:58 PM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The only computer complex enough to work out an answer to the future is the universe itself, and it can only grind out one answer in real time of thousands of trillions of possible answers that are presented to it in every second. Nor is it even complex enough to remember where it has been a moment before, which is also intrinsically incalculable and if some hypothetical computer like the 'mind of god' existed that could remember then it would have to be orders of magnitude more complex than the universe itself, which would make creation a relatively trivial exercise that such a deity would hardly have bothered with.
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» RE: ven Einstein was a believer
Posted by: Philip Newton
» RE: ven Einstein was a believer
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: tony_opmoc on Jun 26, 2009 6:15 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I Am Just Trying To Get Through The Gates
I am Not Allowed To Bring Any Camera Equipment
I am Not Allowed To Bring Any Food
I am Not Allowed To Bring Any Liquids
I am Just Allowed ONE Bottle of Water
I am just Trying to See Neil Young and The Fleet Foxes and The Pretenders
In Hyde Park
In Central London
Tony
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Posted by: al.b420 on Jun 26, 2009 6:43 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Agnostics Make Better Lovers: Not so quick. How possible
Posted by: SamFox
» RE: Agnostics Make Better Lovers: Not so quick. How possible
Posted by: mjglow
» RE: Again, Not so quick. How possible
Posted by: SamFox
» RE: Again, Not so quick. How possible
Posted by: mjglow
» RE: Again, Not so quick. How possible
Posted by: lysdexia
» Also...
Posted by: mjglow
» RE: Also...
Posted by: lysdexia
» RE: Agnostics Make Better Lovers: Not so quick. How possible
Posted by: cplot
» RE: cplot: Not so quick. How possible:
Posted by: SamFox
» You bash science but enjoy its fruits
Posted by: factbased
» RE: cplot: Not so quick. How possible:
Posted by: mjglow
» RE: cplot: Not so quick. How possible:
Posted by: lysdexia
» What rubbish
Posted by: factbased
» Ah - the beetle that farts fire. Just one problem: IT'S A LIE!
Posted by: UnEasyOne
» RE: Agnostics Make Better Lovers
Posted by: Collielady
» RE: Agnostics Make Better Lovers
Posted by: GEM-592
» RE: Agnostics Make Better Lovers
Posted by: GEM-592
» Maybe agnostic is not the proper term, what do you call
Posted by: al.b420
» RE: Maybe agnostic is not the proper term, what do you call
Posted by: GEM-592
» RE: Maybe agnostic is not the proper term, what do you call
Posted by: GEM-592
Comments are closed-
Posted by: pnsuitec on Jun 26, 2009 6:47 PM
Current rating: 1 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Atheists, however, should be advised that what they tell themselves will have much more impact on their lives than anything they will ever hear from someone else.
If, for instance, a person convinces himself that there is no God and no possibility of re-birth into God's Greater Kingdom, this thought process will install a set of subliminal instructions in the non-believer that will attempt to shut down his whole being at the termination of his mortal career.
By denying the existence of an "after life," the atheist effectively sets in motion a self-destructive internal program that, barring devine intervention, will cause the mind and soul of such a misguided individual to die simultaneously with his body.
"As a man believeth, so is he."
I would, therefore, encourage every atheist to, if nothing else, update his or her mental software to include the possibility of survival after death.
And I would counsel them to make a sincere request for God's guidance and deliverance from spiritual darkness. "Ask and it shall be given."
There is so much to gain if you simply ask for God's help, and absolutely everything to lose if you don't.
Blessed shall be the blind who pray for clear sight.
Paul Howard Nicholas
Natural Light Network
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» RE: Prayers for those who deny the existence of God
Posted by: antistokes
» Which god should I pray to?
Posted by: MelKnee
» RE: Which god should I pray to?
Posted by: cplot
» RE: Prayers for those who deny the existence of God
Posted by: cplot
» prayer = liar
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: weslen1 on Jun 26, 2009 7:44 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: aberdeen on Jun 26, 2009 9:31 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Second, like most atheists, this author claims that belief in God (i.e., religion, in the view of this author) is harmful, while the author fails to point out that belief in science and education resulted in the Manhattan Project, the American, French and Russian revolutions, British, French, American, Soviet and other imperialism, atomic, nuclear, space-ray and God only knows what worse weaponry science and education will produce in the future, global pollution and global pharmecutical addiction.
Now, atheists are quick to point out this is not the fault of science, that science can be used for either good or harm, but they never do the same thing regarding belief in God. For example, this article fails to mention the billions of people who have helped other people because of their faith in God, nor does it mention the homeless people who have been helped, orphanages and hospitals that have been built and similar.
It is fair to conclude that neither belief in God or belief in science is bad unto itself. When it becomes a lie is when atheists pretend one is harmful and the other is "good", as the obvious EVIDENCE, a concept foreign to atheists in general, indicates that either religion or science can be used for harm or for good.
Quite obviously, this article is no more fair regarding the known evidence than the most conservative of religious fundamentalists.
Who Would Jesus Bomb?
www.FreedomTracks.com
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» RE: esponse to atheists
Posted by: pringram
» RE: esponse to atheists
Posted by: cplot
» RE: esponse to atheists
Posted by: lysdexia
Comments are closed-
Posted by: pringram on Jun 26, 2009 10:54 PM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Religions are systems of media - they are not just some thing that you can point at and make a "good" or "bad" assessment of. You can make that of individual behaviors that (ab)use these media, but blaming the media themselves misses the point. Like so many other things, it lets people who do bad things off the hook if you're really so naïve as to think the media by which bad people justify and mutate (or don't justify and block) their actions are at fault instead of those people themselves.
And just to point it out to you - "evangelical" and "evangelize" are terms that mean to go around arguing and trying to spread the Gospel. Arguing your atheism is evangelical - you just wrote a whole blog defending that. Why then would you tie it up into the danger-language used against progress? It's an accurate assessment, and if you don't like that that's what you're doing, then by all means, stop blogging about it.
So give it a bone, please.
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Posted by: gc94112 on Jun 26, 2009 11:28 PM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: Why Atheists,Agnostics, and Unbelievers Part of the
Posted by: SamFox
» RE: Why Atheists,Agnostics, and Unbelievers Part of the
Posted by: factbased
» RE: Why Atheists,Agnostics, and Unbelievers Part of the
Posted by: gc94112
Comments are closed-
Posted by: Aureantes on Jun 26, 2009 11:30 PM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The US and the UK, while misleadingly similar in some areas (such as, having the same language...), have vast differences in others -- most notably, in that the UK has had a much longer time, historically and politically, to get through and over the storms and stresses of heterodox religion, sexuality, ethnic relations and other such issues of human life. Even with the ethically-troublesome CoE bond to the Crown and upper government levels, there's a good deal more open political tolerance for differing beliefs on your side of the pond than in the adolescently-extremist US, where true believers and true disbelievers alike tend to consider it their religious/antireligious duty to be as dismissive and unaccommodating of each other's side as possible.
There are definitely prejudices and enabled discriminations against atheists in the US -- and I think that they should be done away with, because they are unsubstantiated and intrinsically unfair. But for either side to prefer and anticipate the eradication of the other point of view does not support its own validity or desirability.
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» RE: "Cake or Death!!!"- CLARIFYING
Posted by: Aureantes
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Posted by: SamFox on Jun 27, 2009 1:11 AM
Current rating: 2 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a Christian I naturally disagree with the overlying philosophical base of atheists, that there is no Creator God. But I defend their right to believe what they wish. That's in the Constitution.
One one point I even agree with them. I don't like religion either. Even the OT religion of Israel did not work. It was never intended to. The OT Law was intended to show us how inadequate we are to get our selves back to the garden, so to speak. It was intended to show us we need some one who could cleanse us from sin & introduce us to Heavenly Father.
I believe Jesus Christ is the divine Son of God. This is not a religious statement. Jesus did not come to start a new religion.In fact He set Israel's religion aside as He fulfilled it & fulfills it in & for us. He came to show us how we could have a relationship with Creator God. He came to give us the ability to walk with Heavenly Father, how to allow Him into our lives, the opportunity to meet Him for ourselves. As I see it, God no longer makes 'religious' demands. He does ask us to abide by the 10 commandments, which Christ summed up as love God fully & love your neighbor as yourself. He asks this of us not to keep us from having fun, but to protect us from the destructive power of sin. That is one power I know quite well. I sinned a lot.
I do know that when I prayed in '69, asking Christ to forgive my sin & come into my heart (innermost being), that something good happened in me. I was not made perfect, but I did know that for sure there is a God/Creator.
He put the witness of His reality in me.
I backslid from my baby relationship a couple of times. When I repented He forgave me & set me back on course. My former 'religion' in the 60's was sex, drugs & rock 'n roll. I still listen to old time rock as well as Christian music.
I even, as a citizen activist, advocate for the RE-legalization of MJ & hemp. But I no longer get drunk, have unmarried sex (can't wait for my honey moon next June :-D&) so on as listed in the NT. I like sex,a lot, but have learned the hard way to control myself.
I know by experience that God is real. That the claims of Christ are true. The Bible has a 100% accuracy rate regarding prophecy. On the day Jesus died He completed some 30 of them.
This is not meant as a slam against any one. I just want to share that the reason I follow Jesus & read the Bible is because it works! He is real! I do not HAVE to go to church on any given day. I do not have to believe every thing any preacher says. I am free to make up my own mind. Any church that says 'you gotta do every thing THIS WAY' should be left ASAP. I am free to read the Bible & pray when I want. His 'burden' is light...
I am not some kind of super saint, just a regular person who has experienced the love of God.
And I am free to use MJ for my back disease. Just because a bunch of liars made MJ & hemp illegal does NOT mean using it is a crime.
I know there are phony 'Christians' out there. But underneath the coverage they get there are many of us who do our best to live as Christ lived. He loved people, He helped them, He lifted up broken human spirits, like mine. I try to do the same. I try to live by "Neither do I condemn you. Go & sin no more".
SamFox
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» RE: Atheists have a right to choose, just like the
Posted by: Nightowl
» RE: Atheists have a right to choose, just like the
Posted by: cplot
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Posted by: tedrowe on Jun 27, 2009 5:51 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» RE: No, agnostic is not the word
Posted by: donl51
» RE: No, agnostic is not the word
Posted by: GEM-592
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Posted by: donl51 on Jun 27, 2009 7:14 AM
Current rating: 4 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: lyta on Jun 27, 2009 9:35 AM
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Posted by: altchap on Jun 27, 2009 12:58 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From what I've read in these discussions it seems that I (like God/dess?) probably don't exist, but I do. As many folks have responded, all Christians don't believe the standard dogma that's being described here. In fact, all religious/spiritual people are not what many of you seem to think we are!
That's the problem I have with the arguments I've been hearing from atheists lately. Of course it's fine for you to talk about atheism and express your experience. However (in your pent-up anger about being stifled for so long?) many of you seem to be saying that not only is institutionalized religion the veritable "root of all evil," but that anybody who claims to believe in God/dess -- or to have any kind of spiritual life, for that matter -- is a dangerous psychotic and a threat to society. Come now! I don't think that not being religious is a symptom of mental illness ... it's not even bad manners!
The other thing I find frustrating about discussing these issues with the progressive atheists I know is that so many people, while denouncing the lack of "science" and "facts" on the religious side, are utterly unaware of contemporary interpretations of Christianity (or any other faith). Sometimes I feel like I'm arguing with people's internalized Sunday School teachers, not the intelligent adults I know my friends to be ... well-informed on a wide range of subjects, but still citing some screwed-up version of 16th Century Calvinism that they can easily knock down with 18th Century Rationalism. That's just not adequate for a 21st Century understanding of spirituality and the impact of religion in the world we live in!
So please, let's talk! I will admit that I don't expect my mind to be changed based on this kind of debate, because I can't really see how any amount of intellectual analysis could convince me that I haven't personally experienced what I would call The Divine. Like if you were in love (an intangible, subjective state experienced by people of faith and atheists alike) with someone I found profoundly unattractive, could my careful, objective, critical deconstruction convince you that you were not in love? That's not how it works, is it?
Rather than belabor why I believe I have a relationship with something transcendent that you think is bunk, I'd like to find out just what it is that turns you on. What animates you? What gives you a smile that warms your heart? What gives you comfort? How do you tap into that strength that comes from deep inside you and from somewhere else less tired than you are, that keeps you going to that peace vigil even though there's little "evidence" to prove it makes a difference? Do you got soul???
If we could restart the conversation there, I think it'd be a lot more constructive. We might even find out we're not so different after all!
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Posted by: rogerpepitone on Jun 27, 2009 2:47 PM
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Posted by: Jesse Forgione on Jun 27, 2009 4:01 PM
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My only complaint is that, like many atheist writers, you concede that the existence of God (or magic, or whatever other stupid thing) is only extremely improbable, and thus an irrational thing to believe or assume.
By definition, the supernatural is not "unlikely" but impossible, every bit as much as three-sided squares.
To be super-natural (above, or outside of nature), is to be outside of reality, and outside of the possible (literally, "outside of what is real").
As for the cosmological argument, there is of course, something that has the property of "self-existence" by it's nature, namely, existence.
Existence would have to exist before any god or fairy or anything else. It logically could never not exist.
Of course that doesn't explain every specific object that exists, but as you've pointed out, the "God of the gaps" is always shrinking.
If there was a powerful being that went around calling itself "God" it would:
1. still be bound by the laws of logic, and so, could not do the impossible, but only the possible (like everyone else).
2. not have created existence, but could only exist within it.
3. have no claim to arbitrarily define morality, which is based on life and it's natural values.
And so it's only reason left for being called "God" would be that it's name happened to be "God".
I cannot promise that there is no giant dinosaur at the bottom of the ocean, but I can promise that if there is, he doesn't have magic powers.
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Posted by: Bearzerker on Jun 27, 2009 4:59 PM
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then at the very least you are subscribing to a cause that can really use the lift while supporting the cause of sustainability.
but I do agree with most atheists thoughts on the dangers of most organized religions
Especially religious wolves that will kill you for not following the herds beliefs mechanisms as is done in Afghanistan where people are sentenced to death for converting to Christianity... and other like minded places...
unfortunately most of these narrowed minded societies that I've found are followers of the Islamic faith and with extreme secular beliefs and little to no real education to support their belief systems... diversification and education should be embraced as it actually tend to enforce real religious substance and enforces a healthy vitality that individual faith brings to an individual.
forcing ones belief onto another like the Spanish Inquisition in this day and age just buggers my mind with questions like why, and why here?
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Posted by: lysdexia on Jun 27, 2009 5:35 PM
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And it's good to be intolerant, so shh.
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Posted by: lysdexia on Jun 27, 2009 6:22 PM
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Posted by: Aquinas on Jun 27, 2009 9:26 PM
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That's why all religions require some rite of passage where they name, dub, christen, baptize, or whatever they call it and without which you'd live perfectly normal lives.
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Posted by: Fempatriot on Jun 28, 2009 12:06 AM
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Posted by: outsideagitator on Jun 28, 2009 12:38 AM
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Posted by: wisegalah on Jun 28, 2009 4:35 AM
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And who ever heard a catholic, muslim or jew say that they think they are wrong.
Simple really.
They can not all be right, in fact it is plainly obvious that all but one must be wrong at least in areas of difference.
The best idea is to drop all the crap, grow up and take responsibility for your relationship with whatever or whomsoever is out there.
Wisegalah
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Posted by: ZPaul on Jun 28, 2009 5:44 AM
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However, a clear line must be drawn between "persuasion" and "imposition", between conviction and condescension: "You poor ignorant religious person, I the in-the-know atheist, am going to enlighten you" is just as bad as "You poor lost sinning godless soul, I, a godly person, have come to save you from hell".
Being, or saying you are, an atheist, does not automatically mean you are a critical thinker who is for open dialogue and respects other people's opinions. This is something that must be demonstrated.
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Posted by: justAnEgg on Jun 28, 2009 7:25 AM
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Wrong, ladies and gentlemen!
Atheism (a-theos) = absence of belief in god(s), godlesness. Atheism does not have a canon, dogma, rituals, the way all institutionalized religions have.
Atheism is a religion just as not collecting stamps is a hobby.
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Posted by: ellie on Jun 28, 2009 8:04 AM
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see the Saphier-Whorf hypothesis... it's all there...
this author had the guts to put into words, yes emotionally charged words, for those that do not agree with her belief in atheism... as soon as one creates words for a belief system it becomes a cult because it has been named...
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Posted by: tyrants4freedom on Jun 28, 2009 7:45 AM
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In my judgment it may be better to accept that god may/may not exist, and seek to extend ALL humanities kn
