It seems to me - outside the US at least - a bit odd to define yourself in terms of a belief you don't hold. As I have rather tediously reiterated, I do not put myself down as an anti-phlogistonist or an a-flat-earther. — iolo
It's worth recalling that in the Analogy of the Divided Line, which is the central to Platonic metaphysics and epistemology, that whilst knowledge of maths and geometry (dianoia) is higher than mere opinion or belief (pistis or doxa), it's still not quite so high as knowledge of the ideas (noesis). I am inclined to think that what this refers to has actually been altogether forgotten by modern culture - so, to us, it appears a nothing, a non-entity, nonsense. But that's because we're configured to think in certain ways. This is why critical philosophy really is critical - it calls into question most of what sober and sensible people take for granted. — Wayfarer
Wrong. You dont even like vegetables. Meat is no ones friend but for the devils forked feet.
(I think that's right, not sure exactly how to play but that makes as much sense as any two thoughts T Clark has expressed. Do I win anything?) — DingoJones
For what it's worth, I include atheism as one of the religious beliefs that deserves protection. — T Clark
I disagree. — T Clark
"show they are true" can also be interpreted both ways..... Either empirical or axiomatic proof. I was saying that you can't prove newton's laws axiomatically in the same way you can prove that the sum of angles in a triangle is always 180. — khaled
I'm still waiting.
And do come with something tangible rather than insults and opinions. — Tzeentch
That IS the least risky option though. — khaled
That's not what my analogies are like though. The things being compared share common features, it's just that one is extreme. Fish and dogs don't share any common features. — khaled
I don't know. Do you have any candidates for other beliefs that might deserve special treatment? — T Clark
Although many of my posts this morning have been facetious and sarcastic, I want to give this a serious answer.
Throughout history people have been persecuted for their religious beliefs. Tortured, killed, enslaved. Yes, I recognize that, in many cases, the persecution has come at the hands of followers of other religions. That is why the foundational protections for religious belief in the US Constitution are so important. The first amendment, the first and most important of the rights in the Bill of Rights, protects religious belief and freedom of speech. In truth, they are the same thing.
Rabid attacks by atheists on religion have a goal - to exclude religious believers and their values from public life. Not torture, death, or slavery - just disenfranchisement. It's worth resisting that goal. — T Clark
Although many of my posts this morning have been facetious and sarcastic, I want to give this a serious answer.
Throughout history people have been persecuted for their religious beliefs. Tortured, killed, enslaved. Yes, I recognize that, in many cases, the persecution has come at the hands of followers of other religions. That is why the foundational protections for religious belief in the US Constitution are so important. The first amendment, the first and most important of the rights in the Bill of Rights, protects religious belief and freedom of speech. In truth, they are the same thing.
Rabid attacks by atheists on religion have a goal - to exclude religious believers and their values from public life. Not torture, death, or slavery - just disenfranchisement. It's worth resisting that goal. — T Clark
Give an example of it being false. — khaled
Why is this one a false analogy do you mind explaining? — khaled
Does this mean you don't want to be our mascot? — T Clark
Nuh unh. You get one "Nuh unh," then that's enough. — T Clark
Wayfarer's post was respectful of anti-religionists and proposed peaceful coexistence. I agreed with that sentiment. — T Clark
I'm shocked, shocked! — T Clark
I was trying to be pointed and direct. Apparently I wasn't clear. I believe religious beliefs are special and deserve special respect and tolerance. — T Clark
It's about those who troll such threads, with the intention of preventing the discussion of (what they see as) 'nonsense'. — Pattern-chaser
The UK could quite possibly have had a million or two Turkish people coming in, with no way of controlling it.
— Punshhh
Could you explain why that's problematic? Is it a problem with resources to accommodate the immigrants? — frank
There's constructive criticism and then there's whining.
And whining turns discussions in to gang wars. — Shamshir
I'm a quasi-god-mongerer. That means I monger God in a quasi way, not that I monger quasi-gods, although maybe I do that as well. Anyway, this forum is way less religion-bashing than the last one (Paul's forum) it seems to me, and I actually miss the rabid attacks a bit, although they did go too far sometimes. I think crappy ideas should be strongly criticised. I miss getting my panpsychism bashed. Apo was the last person to have a go and he seems to have fucked off. Nobody gives a shit that I'm wrong any more. Worse, panpsychism may be becoming popular, which means I may have to adopt another view. — bert1
You could be skeptical, focus on their justification or lack of it. Point out logic flaws or unsupported assumptions. Avoid calling them or their ideas stupid. IOW role model rational thinking for people you think are being irrational about whatever the issue is.
If someone is pressuring you to hug people, just ignore them. — Coben
If the difference is so obvious, please show it to me.
As far as I am concerned, in both cases one is reading words and choosing to believe them or not. — Tzeentch
The first forum I signed up to was the Dawkins forum. That was an absolutely seething hotbed of 'fear of religion'.
My feeling is, many people believe the whole 'religion' thing has been settled, 'science has shown that God is dead', and they really don't want to re-open the whole can of worms. Either that, or they're just not interested in spiritual and/or religious ideas. But since then, I have gotten over the need to persuade people of my views. I put the arguments, but past a certain point I desist.It's like the little old lady who rings the television station to complain about a risque television show - the advice is 'just don't watch it'. ;-)
— Wayfarer
Generally I agree. — T Clark
The first forum I signed up to was the Dawkins forum. That was an absolutely seething hotbed of 'fear of religion'.
My feeling is, many people believe the whole 'religion' thing has been settled, 'science has shown that God is dead', and they really don't want to re-open the whole can of worms. Either that, or they're just not interested in spiritual and/or religious ideas. But since then, I have gotten over the need to persuade people of my views. I put the arguments, but past a certain point I desist.It's like the little old lady who rings the television station to complain about a risque television show - the advice is 'just don't watch it'. ;-) — Wayfarer
Segregation is wrong, but if you're going to do it, it's anti-religionists who should be segregated because they are the primary cause of conflict and disruption. I stand by that judgment. — T Clark
You said religious ideas are not special. I described why they are, at least in the US. You can argue they should't be, but they are. — T Clark
In summary, Newton's laws boil down to f=ma. An enormous quantity of physical science has been developed by applying this simple mathematical law to different physical situations.
Where did you get that I was appealing to consequentialism? — khaled
And for all of those cases where putting a child through surgery is considered to be ok is when the risk of not going through surgery Trumps the risk of going through surgery. — khaled
You wouldn't consider it moral for parents to force their children to go through a surgery that replaces their hands with hooves for example would you? — khaled
The only situation where people find it ok to put children through surgery is when the surgery is the least risky option. — khaled
If you think it's so absurd, you probably haven't deliberated upon the subject enough. — Tzeentch
Although as noted, Jacalyn Duffyn professes atheism herself - she simply notes that these cases defy scientific explanation. — Wayfarer
Well, those cases that the article mentions number in the hundreds. They’re documented and have been subjected to expert testimony. So they are a body of evidence that something has occurred which can’t be accounted for in scientific terms. I mentioned it because the OP seems to assume there is no evidence of any kind, but there actually is. — Wayfarer
well, like children who remember their last lives, we know it can’t be real, right? It doesn’t fit in with our picture of the world so it can’t happen. Sort of a ‘no gap’ theory. — Wayfarer