DLH
Theoretical Skeptic
SIMPLY
What difference does it make whether OR NOT gods exist?
What difference does it make whether OR NOT gods exist?
At least DLH admits to being somewhat of an idiot. More of us should do the same, or at least consider the possibility. OTOH, there is no justification for DLH being so confrontational on a message board dedicated to non-belief.
We aren't very good at it because it a difficult subject. Of course it bothers us, or we not be having this kind of discussion at all. Many of us are quite happy with admitting we do not know, and perhaps even cannot know, and we are just making our own best guess, based on what we seen, which may be quite flawed. Anyone honest, on any and all sides, knows their logic, their premises and conclusions, are far from iron clad, and dubious.At least DLH admits to being somewhat of an idiot. More of us should do the same, or at least consider the possibility. OTOH, there is no justification for DLH being so confrontational on a message board dedicated to non-belief.
So a public forum in which belief is confronted shouldn't have a rebuttal with equal veracity? I usually don't get confrontational until I'm badgered or hounded by the house harpies. There are always at least two or three of them. Sometimes larger packs. I know what I'm in for in doing that but I'm not terribly concerned with political correctness, making friends or enemies. I empathize and sympathize with the skeptical and critical. I think they have good reason for it, but I also think it a pity they aren't very good at it and that bothers them.
We aren't very good at it because it a difficult subject.
Of course it bothers us, or we not be having this kind of discussion at all.
Many of us are quite happy with admitting we do not know, and perhaps even cannot know, and we are just making our own best guess, based on what we seen, which may be quite flawed.
Anyone honest, on any and all sides, knows their logic, their premises and conclusions, are far from iron clad, and dubious.
When DLH started posting he made it clear he was here to analogize atheists.
At least DLH admits to being somewhat of an idiot. More of us should do the same, or at least consider the possibility. OTOH, there is no justification for DLH being so confrontational on a message board dedicated to non-belief.
We all have our weaknessses and flaws. You're here to argue with people that you don't like, and that's what we do, so you get what you were looking for. As for dogma, there's an abundant supply of it on all sides.At least DLH admits to being somewhat of an idiot. More of us should do the same, or at least consider the possibility. OTOH, there is no justification for DLH being so confrontational on a message board dedicated to non-belief.
Oh, yeah. I'm an idiot. I consider everyone to be which doesn't render such a concept meaningless, it just means we are all just not as clever as we think we are and I would rather give myself the benefit of the doubt. Douglas Adams said "I'd take the awe of understanding over the awe of ignorance any day." I get that but I'm not so certain. That way, when I fuck it up, which I will, at least I'm not mired in that like a stagnant pool. Dogma.
We all have our weaknessses and flaws. You're here to argue with people that you don't like, and that's what we do, so you get what you were looking for. As for dogma, there's an abundant supply of it on all sides.
Hello Wiploc,I'll let the first two sentences slide so that we can focus on the third. How does it follow that the existence of gods must affect everyone's view of origin, morality, meaning, and destiny? I don't think you can defend any part of that.Everyone has a worldview. All worldviews address origin, morality, meaning and destiny. Whether God exists or not would affect each area of everyone's wv. That is quite impactful.SIMPLY
What difference does it make whether OR NOT gods exist?
I have been gone for years. And on my first post of return, I find you. The person I left off with in great discussion over the KCA. Glad you are still here. anyway....
Hey! Welcome back!
Meaning....the meaning for my life is to know God and make him known. I'm certain you hold a different meaning to your life and are in no way motivated to know God or make him known. Unless things have drastically changed in the past 5 years.
Your claim isn't that your belief in god affects your worldview. Your claim, if I understood it, was that there is no person whose worldview would be unaffected by the existence of any god.
One of my favorite gods is Xal-x, the god of quadratic equations. He didn't create the world; he showed up later. So I don't see how his existence affects anybody's origin. He requires that we worship quadratic equations. That dog won't hunt. It doesn't interest me; I reject it. I can't see that he affects my meaning or destiny at all.
Perhaps you'd like to retrench and just say that some gods affect some people?
Theists believe in gods.
Atheists (all non-theists) don't.
That's what they say, but really it doesn't make a great deal of sense.
In modern-day parlance there is some confusion about what a god is
and then there's the question of what is meant by belief.
As the Bible says, the demons know and shudder.
It isn't necessarily about belief and gods, i.e. venerated.
To me a far more reasonable conclusion - without having to get into specifics - is that theists claim to have gods and atheists claim not to.
For some atheists (babies, for instance), atheism has nothing to do with theology, gods, or the bible.
I don't think a baby has the capacity to believe or disbelieve much of anything.
I don't think theism or atheism has much to do with theology, gods or the Bible. It's about control. A class struggle of sorts. A battle of world views neither side of which seem terribly concerned or informed about theology, gods or the Bible.
We had a deconversion thread here once (in a prior incarnation of this website). By far the most common reasons for leaving theism were akin to, "I finally sat down and read the bible." So, for many of us, theology, gods, and bibles do have to do with our atheism.
I've heard that a lot but you have to ask yourself why they were only then getting around to doing that. The answer is they study the Bible when it becomes important to them. If they want to believe or disbelieve it will serve their purpose, and that's good. I think it a personal responsibility, not group think, or riding the bandwagon, or any other thing.
Politics, I believe can be involved too. The Republican party claims the banner of religion, and then makes religion look bad. Bad enough that some people think, "If that's religion, I don't need it."
Right, and the politics gives some alternative justification for a worldview, like equality, freedom, democrisy, or any other obvious fixation which is, like religion used by Republicans and many other ruling classes for their own agenda. Religion is a tool. One of many.
I think it is about control.
I'm not familiar with this idea, and it doesn't chime for me.
Nevertheless, the evidence is pretty clear to anyone not having a dog in the race, i.e. theists and atheists. From the inquisition, crusades to modern-day "enlightenment."
It isn't that they don't believe in gods as much as it is they want to be gods.
I think this dog won't hunt. I was raised by Christians, so the Christian god is the one I'm familiar with. The Christian god is unattractive. Evil, mean-spirited, petty, inconsistent, depraved.
It sounds to me like you may be preaching to the choir, or to a crowd.
The only time atheists really object to people believing in something they don't believe in is if those other people have sociopolitical control.
Otherwise they do every aspect of the same thing. Mythology is the alleged objective, they teach their children religious holidays, ignorance - no matter what it is hold it up to a microscope metaphorically and it's obvious.
Nobody should want to be like that.
Right. And so no one is.
Imatio Dei, Deus ex machina. Atheism, in my view, is strictly a sociopolitical frustration in a quasi-theocratic society.
Do you think people believe in a round earth because of their frustration with a quasi-flat earth society?
[laughs]
In a way I think it's a rebellion and an objection to mainstream authority and beliefs. If you look at religion from an historical perspective it's pretty obvious that science is rapidly just becoming the new religion. Only with much more dangerous potential.
By the way, I should probably point out that I don't entertain such nonsesne.
Sorry have not figured the new way to address selected portions of what you said. The quote system. Working on it.
Hello Wiploc,I'll let the first two sentences slide so that we can focus on the third. How does it follow that the existence of gods must affect everyone's view of origin, morality, meaning, and destiny? I don't think you can defend any part of that.Everyone has a worldview. All worldviews address origin, morality, meaning and destiny. Whether God exists or not would affect each area of everyone's wv. That is quite impactful.SIMPLY
What difference does it make whether OR NOT gods exist?
I have been gone for years. And on my first post of return, I find you. The person I left off with in great discussion over the KCA. Glad you are still here. anyway....
Hey! Welcome back!
Meaning....the meaning for my life is to know God and make him known. I'm certain you hold a different meaning to your life and are in no way motivated to know God or make him known. Unless things have drastically changed in the past 5 years.
Your claim isn't that your belief in god affects your worldview. Your claim, if I understood it, was that there is no person whose worldview would be unaffected by the existence of any god.
One of my favorite gods is Xal-x, the god of quadratic equations. He didn't create the world; he showed up later. So I don't see how his existence affects anybody's origin. He requires that we worship quadratic equations. That dog won't hunt. It doesn't interest me; I reject it. I can't see that he affects my meaning or destiny at all.
Perhaps you'd like to retrench and just say that some gods affect some people?
Sorry have not figured the new way to address selected portions of what you said. The quote system. Working on it.
Sorry have not figured the new way to address selected portions of what you said. The quote system. Working on it.
The easiest way for me is to toggle BB code, the second from the right option in the editor icons above where you post. Then the code comes up and you can delete the quotes you don't need. When you've cleaned it up you can toggle it again to see what it looks like.
It's what I say. It's what I mean. There are, of course, numberless other definitions, but, unless you want to preface each discussion by defining your terms, it is best to stick to one of the two most popular definitions.
The one I use is overwhelmingly preferred by people who call themselves atheists.
It's also clearer, less confusing, than the other popular definition. It is better for meaningful discussion.
Which is why I consider myself an agnostic atheist rather than a gnostic atheist.
and then there's the question of what is meant by belief.
I'm not familiar with this question, though I assume philosophers can go on about it.
As the Bible says, the demons know and shudder.
Not sure I'm following.
Belief and veneration are separate things. Many people believe in Satan without venerating him. Theists are those who believe that gods exist, not those who venerate gods.
To me a far more reasonable conclusion - without having to get into specifics - is that theists claim to have gods and atheists claim not to.
I pretended to be a theist until high school. By your definition, there was no pretense; pretending to be a theist made me an actual theist.
I don't think that's what people mean when they talk about theism.
I don't think that's a useful definition. It would make it difficult to address the question of whether the Pope is really catholic.
On the other hand, it would have made the Spanish Inquisition painless.
Inquisitor: "Are you a real Christian?"
Crypto Jew: "Yes."
Inquisitor: "Well, okay then."
I don't think a baby has the capacity to believe or disbelieve much of anything.
Which means they can hardly be theists. They are, therefore, atheists.
Nonsense, I want to say. But, on further thought, that is what I assume about schisms in churches. Martin Luther's 95 theses were a response to Italy's political and fiscal dominance of Catholicism. The Anglican church resulted from King Henry's need for an heir. I assume the people who disputed whether baptism had to be by immersion, and the reality of transubstantiation, had real-world political differences that they were really fighting about.
But surely this has nothing to do with my own atheism?
I don't think it does, but you're free to suspect that I see others more clearly than I see myself.
And also, this issue is affected by our different definitions. I, like a baby, am an atheist because I don't believe that gods exist. Nothing political about that. But I speak up about my atheism because I'm tired of religious oppression.
Since you define atheism as speaking up ...
Some atheists (non-believers, I'll try to be consistent in my usage) may have reverted to atheism for political reasons, but many did not. Many of us fail to believe in gods because of the lack of evidence, the same reason we don't believe in Santa and the Easter Bunny.
I'm talking to you. You say I want to be a god. That's absurd. You are wrong.
You have no case. You should retract.
You overstate your case.
Would you also claim that believers only object to non-belief when the non-believers are in control? Because that would mean there couldn't be a conflict unless both sides were in control at the same time.
Your said I want to be a god.
Now you say nobody wants to be a god?
Are you backpedaling? Or are you saying that you get to pick the god I want to be?
Please clarify.
By the way, I should probably point out that I don't entertain such nonsesne.
Why not? Is it because you want to be a god? Or because you are tired of the political sway held by those who do entertain such nonsense?