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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC (Read 111150 times)
Stigma
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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #121 - 06/15/10 at 14:04:30
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MNb wrote on 06/14/10 at 23:54:07:
Stigma wrote on 06/14/10 at 15:06:50:
To do it the other way around sounds positivistic, like you believe in the worldview you wish to be true? Maybe I'm misreading you here. 

I don't think we disagree that much in the end.

It's just that I don't trust myself too much in this respect. If philosophic geniuses tended to believe in the worldview they wished to be true, as Russell has nicely shown in his History of Western Philosophy, why shouldn't that be the case for me?
I don't think either that we disagree very much, but it's nice that we have got to the very core.


I haven't read Russell, but I'm sure that happens a lot. It's nice to think that science (and philosophy?) over time is to some extent self-correcting; even if an individual sticks stubbornly to cherished ideas his/her theoretical "enemies" can correct them if enough evidence points the other way. Though maybe someone like Kuhn would find that description of science naive...

I must admit that I see many advantages of religious belief both for individuals and groups, in terms of motivation, comfort, social cohesion and cooperation. The real problems appear when relations to outgroups are hampered by sacred values, self-righteousness or demonizing of enemies, or when religious certainty conflicts with science.

Sometimes I think a little faith would be good for me, both as comfort in an uncertain world and as a push to right action. But given the evidence as I know it I just can't believe. So actually I'm a lot more (though not entirely) certain that God doesn't exists, than that I don't want God to exists! Maybe that makes me an exception, I don't know.
  

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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #120 - 06/15/10 at 13:49:51
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BirdBrain wrote on 06/09/10 at 20:16:14:
To say God being non-existent is obvious makes not one shred of sense.  I guess the sun and the moon and stars were thrown together by random occurence.

So the moon and stars couldn't exist if no-one had created them, but God does exist although no-one created him?
  
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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #119 - 06/15/10 at 13:42:44
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BirdBrain wrote on 06/15/10 at 13:10:21:

Then explain why it is I pray for God to stop a rainstorm and He does.  


Wow!  Shocked
  
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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #118 - 06/15/10 at 13:17:11
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Straggler wrote on 06/15/10 at 12:48:55:
BirdBrain, who created God?


No one created God.  He said it out of His own word - I am God, and there is no other.  He was without beginning of days.  No beginning, no end.  Try to comprehend that with the human mind - inunderstandable.  But to see what has been created by Him gives us a bit of understanding to His nature.

Take a look at the universe.  How old is it?  How perfectly it is held in balance.  Who did those things?  How old must he be?  How much wisdom?
  
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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #117 - 06/15/10 at 13:14:45
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MNb wrote on 06/14/10 at 23:54:07:
Stigma wrote on 06/14/10 at 15:06:50:
To do it the other way around sounds positivistic, like you believe in the worldview you wish to be true? Maybe I'm misreading you here. 

I don't think we disagree that much in the end.

It's just that I don't trust myself too much in this respect. If philosophic geniuses tended to believe in the worldview they wished to be true, as Russell has nicely shown in his History of Western Philosophy, why shouldn't that be the case for me?
I don't think either that we disagree very much, but it's nice that we have got to the very core.

BirdBrain wrote on 06/14/10 at 20:58:30:
And Bertrand Russell was an excessive fool to speak such a proud comment...there would be a hot spot reserved for arrogance as that.

Another reason I don't like your god - btw, I don't hate God, because I can't hate something I don't recognize. There is, if I am to believe people like you, no single hot spot reserved for the arrogance of christians who think they know the truth. I don't think that; neither did Bertrand Russell.
Give me the Flying Spaghetti Monster please, a much nicer and friendlier phenomenon.

BirdBrain wrote on 06/14/10 at 20:57:38:
Stigma, the sad thing is that you KNOW what the Bible says, but don't believe it.

Arrogance, one of the seven deadly sins. There is no reason why this should be sad for Stigma; it is only your arrogant prejudice that makes you using the word sad. You do it because it makes you feel superior, which contradicts the christian ideal of modesty.


Modesty.  You are right.  But modesty means I cannot tell you the truth? I guess Jesus wasn't modest either.  He went and prophesied against the ungodly cities.  You may not like that the Bible speaks of hell.  But it does.  Go ahead and hate God for warning you about a fiery place reserved for those who reject the truth.  But don't say I didn't warn you.  If I didn't care, I wouldn't warn you.  I know that you don't want to hear it...most who aren't serving God don't want to hear it.  But it is real.  The FSM will not save you either.  You want God on your terms, not on His...that won't work.  He didn't create this world, nor this universe, on your terms.  But He did create it with love.  You don't like God, but He gave so much for you.  Talk about hell?  That is what we deserve, but God sent His son to pay the price.  Without Jesus' death on the cross, there is no remission of sin, and if you reject it, you have no way to be saved.
  
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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #116 - 06/15/10 at 13:10:21
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Stigma wrote on 06/14/10 at 21:43:01:
BirdBrain wrote on 06/14/10 at 20:57:38:

Stigma, the sad thing is that you KNOW what the Bible says, but don't believe it...but why?  Have you never learned to walk by faith?  Never prayed?  You want proof based on...what?  What more proof do you need?  God tells you to test His word.  You believe in God, you walk according to His word, and His word guides you into all truth.  You know what the Word says - Pray without ceasing.  But you don't pray.  Why?  That is sadder than anything else - that you have learned the truth, but refuse to accept it, and why?


I have tested God's word and both I and others have mentioned several of the problems we've found with it in this very thread. To me it looks like you are the one who's not willing to test the word - you would rather take it as self-evidently true and then interpret everything else in light of that. Am I right?

BirdBrain wrote on 06/14/10 at 20:57:38:

Call me fundamentalist all you want.  To support what the Bible says, I can take name-calling, if that is what you call it. 

OK I can apologize for that if you want, I realize "fundamentalist" is not usually a positive word these days. 

Actually all i meant by it was something like "someone who believes the holy scriptures are divinely inspired and literally true in virtually all details". You seem to fit that description, though maybe you disagree? It's a particular way of believing that can be found in christianity, judaism, islam and probably other religions too.


To say I don't test the word is to not know anything about me.  It is impossible to for you really have tested the word, as you say.  It's funny - I pray and see results, you pray and nothing happens.  Why is that?  You don't believe.  The Word says it - you must have faith.  Jesus told them that they were of little faith.  You want to treat God like He is a science experiment.  He looks down and laughs, like watching ants trying to figure out how humans got so big.  Really.   

And I don't mind being called a fundamentalist.  I don't claim it - I only claim to be a Christian, nothing more, nothing less.   

But you continue to say God isn't real - tell everyone He isn't real.  Then explain why it is I pray for God to stop a rainstorm and He does.  I guess coincidence.  Real prayer must take place, real faith.  There are too many puny Christians these days, who sit back and don't pray, maybe pray once.  You don't see miracles because even the Christians you walk along don't pray to see things happen.  I hear good reports all across the world of miracles happening.   

The Word says that all word is given by inspiration of God and is profitable to help us grow spiritually.  I can choose to believe it or not.  But I choose to believe it - and it works.
  
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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #115 - 06/15/10 at 12:48:55
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BirdBrain, who created God?
  
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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #114 - 06/14/10 at 23:54:07
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Stigma wrote on 06/14/10 at 15:06:50:
To do it the other way around sounds positivistic, like you believe in the worldview you wish to be true? Maybe I'm misreading you here. 

I don't think we disagree that much in the end.

It's just that I don't trust myself too much in this respect. If philosophic geniuses tended to believe in the worldview they wished to be true, as Russell has nicely shown in his History of Western Philosophy, why shouldn't that be the case for me?
I don't think either that we disagree very much, but it's nice that we have got to the very core.

BirdBrain wrote on 06/14/10 at 20:58:30:
And Bertrand Russell was an excessive fool to speak such a proud comment...there would be a hot spot reserved for arrogance as that.

Another reason I don't like your god - btw, I don't hate God, because I can't hate something I don't recognize. There is, if I am to believe people like you, no single hot spot reserved for the arrogance of christians who think they know the truth. I don't think that; neither did Bertrand Russell.
Give me the Flying Spaghetti Monster please, a much nicer and friendlier phenomenon.

BirdBrain wrote on 06/14/10 at 20:57:38:
Stigma, the sad thing is that you KNOW what the Bible says, but don't believe it.

Arrogance, one of the seven deadly sins. There is no reason why this should be sad for Stigma; it is only your arrogant prejudice that makes you using the word sad. You do it because it makes you feel superior, which contradicts the christian ideal of modesty.
  

The book had the effect good books usually have: it made the stupids more stupid, the intelligent more intelligent and the other thousands of readers remained unchanged.
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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #113 - 06/14/10 at 21:43:01
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BirdBrain wrote on 06/14/10 at 20:57:38:

Stigma, the sad thing is that you KNOW what the Bible says, but don't believe it...but why?  Have you never learned to walk by faith?  Never prayed?  You want proof based on...what?  What more proof do you need?  God tells you to test His word.  You believe in God, you walk according to His word, and His word guides you into all truth.  You know what the Word says - Pray without ceasing.  But you don't pray.  Why?  That is sadder than anything else - that you have learned the truth, but refuse to accept it, and why?


I have tested God's word and both I and others have mentioned several of the problems we've found with it in this very thread. To me it looks like you are the one who's not willing to test the word - you would rather take it as self-evidently true and then interpret everything else in light of that. Am I right?

BirdBrain wrote on 06/14/10 at 20:57:38:

Call me fundamentalist all you want.  To support what the Bible says, I can take name-calling, if that is what you call it. 

OK I can apologize for that if you want, I realize "fundamentalist" is not usually a positive word these days. 

Actually all i meant by it was something like "someone who believes the holy scriptures are divinely inspired and literally true in virtually all details". You seem to fit that description, though maybe you disagree? It's a particular way of believing that can be found in christianity, judaism, islam and probably other religions too.
  

Improvement begins at the edge of your comfort zone. -Jonathan Rowson
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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #112 - 06/14/10 at 20:58:30
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And Bertrand Russell was an excessive fool to speak such a proud comment...there would be a hot spot reserved for arrogance as that.
  
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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #111 - 06/14/10 at 20:57:38
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Stigma wrote on 06/13/10 at 23:23:33:
@BirdBrain

You're still citing fundamentalist theology without any argument or evidence why your assertions should be true.

But you see, I was brought up a Christian. I went to Sunday school. I've heard all these ideas before. What I really would like to know is if there are any good reasons to believe any of them!

Until then I'm with Bertrand Russell, when asked how he would defend his unbelief were he to face his Creator after death:

"Sorry God, not enough evidence!"


Stigma, the sad thing is that you KNOW what the Bible says, but don't believe it...but why?  Have you never learned to walk by faith?  Never prayed?  You want proof based on...what?  What more proof do you need?  God tells you to test His word.  You believe in God, you walk according to His word, and His word guides you into all truth.  You know what the Word says - Pray without ceasing.  But you don't pray.  Why?  That is sadder than anything else - that you have learned the truth, but refuse to accept it, and why?   

BTW, whoever pointed out the Crusades, consider this - after Christ died, there were no more wars, like in the Old Testament.  Christ said it this way "My kingdom is not of this earth - otherwise my soldiers would fight for me."

Call me fundamentalist all you want.  To support what the Bible says, I can take name-calling, if that is what you call it.  Read all the atheistic arguments you want and argue why they don't match up.  You will never find the truth that way.  The Word is the only way.
  
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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #110 - 06/14/10 at 15:06:50
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MNb wrote on 06/14/10 at 10:33:18:

For the last time, I am an atheist already since more than 20 years or so. Still I don't like juggling with percentages like that. It suggests an accuracy that is simply not there. These percentages are based on nothing but biases.

I never meant to doubt your subjective atheism. But you have been defending an "objective" agnosticism here, and that's what I'm responding to.

I don't really like juggling with percentages either. It's only meant as a "consciousness-raiser" (as Dawkins would say) since so many jump from "we can't prove or disprove God" to "both points of view are about equally likely to be true and it's all subjective opinions", which doesn't follow at all. My point is not about accuracy, but to show that 0, 50 and 100 % are not the only possibilities. In other words that it's not all completely subjective and there's still a meaningful discussion to be had, about the problem of evil and the authority of scripture for example. I don't think atheists and theists are from different planets, even when some discussions make it look that way!

MNb wrote on 06/14/10 at 10:33:18:

If I follow my bias I would say that the probability of an existing god is zero. That's because I am an atheist. I just realize that it's completely subjective; it is my impression that Dawkins and Draper don't.

This sounds a bit like putting the cart before the horse to me. I first conclude that the existense of God is not very likely, and only then I can define myself as an atheist. To do it the other way around sounds positivistic, like you believe in the worldview you wish to be true? Maybe I'm misreading you here. 

I don't think we disagree that much in the end.
  

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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #109 - 06/14/10 at 10:33:18
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Stigma wrote on 06/13/10 at 22:47:36:
Step by tiny step the arguments for God get weaker.

Once again for the sake of clarity: I am not defending that god exists, I am defending the hypothesis that we cannot have any certainty about this subject, ie the agnostic point of view. After all I am an atheist mysef, but one who thinks his arguments are not conclusive. It other words I have never been impressed by any argument for god. You don't have to convince me.

Stigma wrote on 06/13/10 at 22:47:36:
What flaw? I think I may have missed your point here.

That an existing god is not necessarily inconsistent with pain, suffering and evil. It's an emotional so subjective argument. As such it is one of my two reasons to be an atheist. But it does not prove anything.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Problem_of_evil

Stigma wrote on 06/13/10 at 22:47:36:
That's like saying you can't say anything about Freudian psychoanalysis with the aid of science (another example of an unfalsifiable theory, as Popper pointed out).

Exactly my view, which I share with the vast majority of professional psychologists. Your conclusion is wrong though: it only means that science hasn't anything to say about it. Nor has religion (or Freud) anything scientific to say.

Stigma wrote on 06/13/10 at 22:47:36:
therefore doesn't deserve our attention as a serious explanation of the world and a source of morality.

The first is certainly true; I am not sure about the second, as it smells like a non-sequitur. Note however that the very religious Kierkegaard agreed that religion and morality should be separated.


Stigma wrote on 06/13/10 at 22:47:36:
It's really a bit sad how many mistakenly see this unfalsifiability as a strength of religion rather than a flaw.

That's the obvious trick when debating with religious people: provoke them to show that faith has a scientific foundation. The results can be very funny. But by now you know that I don't think it a strenght either.

Though theism itself is unfalsifiable, many of the specific claims of the world's religions are of course testable in principle, and can be shown to fit well or poorly with the world around us.

Stigma wrote on 06/13/10 at 22:47:36:
I'm certainly not trying to prove that God does not exist, as I said earlier I don't think that's possible. The evidential arguments from evil can still tell us something about the probability of God. It's very easy to lazily assume if we can't prove or disprove God, that atheism and theism must be about equally likely. Both Dawkins and Draper have pointed out that this is false: the options are not simply 0% (God certainly doesn't exist), 100% (God certainly exists) or 50%-50% ("even" agnosticism). Right now I would give God a 5% to 10% probability of existing, and that's low enough that I call myself an atheist. If we're intellectually honest there can be no 100% certain atheism. The question then becomes: How unlikely must the existence of God seem to someone before they stop being "agnostic" and become "atheists"?

For the last time, I am an atheist already since more than 20 years or so. Still I don't like juggling with percentages like that. It suggests an accuracy that is simply not there. These percentages are based on nothing but biases.
If I follow my bias I would say that the probability of an existing god is zero. That's because I am an atheist. I just realize that it's completely subjective; it is my impression that Dawkins and Draper don't.
  

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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #108 - 06/13/10 at 23:23:33
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@BirdBrain

You're still citing fundamentalist theology without any argument or evidence why your assertions should be true.

But you see, I was brought up a Christian. I went to Sunday school. I've heard all these ideas before. What I really would like to know is if there are any good reasons to believe any of them!

Until then I'm with Bertrand Russell, when asked how he would defend his unbelief were he to face his Creator after death:

"Sorry God, not enough evidence!"
  

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Re: Religion WARNING: CONTROVERSIAL TOPIC
Reply #107 - 06/13/10 at 22:47:36
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MNb wrote on 06/12/10 at 22:05:20:

Mortal Games wrote on 06/08/10 at 11:08:13:
What I said was not to be read to the letter but to the spirit of the problem and any intelligent person knows this and I know you know!

Then you know something about me I don't know myself. No way I can subscribe this. The whole point of Popper is that there is an essential difference between proof and confirmation. Essentially you accuse Dawkins of sloppy usage of words with the goal of giving his personal opinions an appearance of scientific objectivity. I hope you realise that is close to scientific fraud. Note your logic implies this; as I haven't read his books it's not what I say.

Exactly this accusation has been levelled on Dawkins countless times, and now that I've looked at the other side (I used to be a 100% Dawkins fan) I must say it's with some justification. I still think he's right on a lot of things, but he sometimes argues poorly (though eloquently and persuading many) for his points and I suspect he relies on his intuitive judgement more than he wants to admit. 

MNb wrote on 06/12/10 at 22:05:20:

Stigma wrote on 06/08/10 at 14:16:14:
The point is that an omniscient, omnipresent and perfectly good God is a worse fit with the evil we see in the world than alternative conceptions of God (evil, indifferent to human suffering, or simply not there).

This means you temporarily accept that an oop god exists. (Btw, I am not surely about this myself, so go ahead and show that I am wrong).

I might say I accept the existence of such a God for the sake of argument. We can't really discuss how likely the existence of God is if we have ruled out the possibility from the outset! That would be very unscientific  Wink

MNb wrote on 06/12/10 at 22:05:20:

Stigma wrote on 06/08/10 at 14:16:14:
I find there are suspiciously many references to doubts and even crises of faith in religious literature. Maybe they don't have such solid evidence after all? Even Mother Teresa confessed to losing her faith.

They don't have any evidence. That does not mean there is evidence for the opposite.

No, but personal experience or feelings is a very common reason people give for believing. When I point out how capricious such experience and conviction based on it can be, the existence of God becomes a little bit less likely. A bit like Darwin taking away the argument from design as applied to biology. Step by tiny step the arguments for God get weaker.

MNb wrote on 06/12/10 at 22:05:20:

Stigma wrote on 06/08/10 at 14:16:14:
MNb wrote on 06/08/10 at 02:35:13:

Stigma wrote on 06/07/10 at 21:00:14:
The problem of natural evil/pain and pleasure (Paul Draper)

Same as the evil argument.

No, this argument is a bit more sophisticated. Draper's point is that the specific pattern of experienced pain and pleasure in the world fits perfectly with an evolutionary explanation.

I am not arguing this, how could I being an atheist myself. My point is that the pain/suffering argument suffers from the same flaw as the evil argument. There is no need to treat it separately.

What flaw? I think I may have missed your point here. 

MNb wrote on 06/12/10 at 22:05:20:

Stigma wrote on 06/08/10 at 14:16:14:
"Gods ways are inscrutable" is almost the definition of unfalsifiability: It can solve every problem and therefore no problems whatsoever.

That's what I have been arguing this whole thread: you can't say anything significant about this subject with the aid of science exactly because of this reason.

That's like saying you can't say anything about Freudian psychoanalysis with the aid of science (another example of an unfalsifiable theory, as Popper pointed out). It sounds a bit backwards: If Freud is unscientific we should drop Freud, not science! An unfalsifiable theory has no explanatory value and therefore doesn't deserve our attention as a serious explanation of the world and a source of morality. So the shoe is really on the other foot: It's the religious folks who should be trying hard to put their ideas from the Bible, Koran, Bagavad Gita etc. in a falsifiable form, to get a hearing and participate in the real discussion. It's really a bit sad how many mistakenly see this unfalsifiability as a strength of religion rather than a flaw.

Though theism itself is unfalsifiable, many of the specific claims of the world's religions are of course testable in principle, and can be shown to fit well or poorly with the world around us.

MNb wrote on 06/12/10 at 22:05:20:

Trying to prove that god does not exist is just as hopeless. From a scientific and a philosophic point agnositicism is the only reasonable point of view. There can be reasons - see Kierkegaard once again - to have faith or not, but they are always subjective.

I'm certainly not trying to prove that God does not exist, as I said earlier I don't think that's possible. The evidential arguments from evil can still tell us something about the probability of God. It's very easy to lazily assume if we can't prove or disprove God, that atheism and theism must be about equally likely. Both Dawkins and Draper have pointed out that this is false: the options are not simply 0% (God certainly doesn't exist), 100% (God certainly exists) or 50%-50% ("even" agnosticism). Right now I would give God a 5% to 10% probability of existing, and that's low enough that I call myself an atheist. If we're intellectually honest there can be no 100% certain atheism. The question then becomes: How unlikely must the existence of God seem to someone before they stop being "agnostic" and become "atheists"?
  

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