What about the crimes of Atheist and non theist regimes Like Stalin, Pol Pot and Chairman Mao and The slaughter of the French revolution? — Andrew4Handel
There is no reason believe that an absence of religion leads to a better society or better people. — Andrew4Handel
Richard Dawkins and Daniel Dennett et al are not targeting theocratic regimes but the soft beliefs of moderate Christians. — Andrew4Handel
Consider Richard Dawkins for example. — Gregory
It often seems to me that some atheists use the lack-theism definition as a way of getting out of having to meet their burden of proof — busycuttingcrap
Religious truths are not like scientific truths. Even scientific truths are relative to a degree. Only God is absolute. If you hold to objective truth and yet remain an atheist because of lack of evidence you're being hard headed and ignoring the whole experience of religion, which is supposed to grow our hearts. God can do anything — Gregory
But I think it is a state of agnosticism not to commit ones self to an opinion on something. — Andrew4Handel
I am not saying atheists need to do this but certain things that come out of the what can be called the atheists community are claims that people can disagree with. — Andrew4Handel
This sounds like you are from The States. — Andrew4Handel
. Also militant atheism and secularism entered universities. — Andrew4Handel
Do you think that's faster than a big rock from space could achieve, or how about a massive eruption of the caldera under Yellowstone park or — universeness
The point there is: he doesn't. He's a product of human imagination, and he's used by humans as a benevolent force and a destructive force, because humans have both of those impulses and they express both of those impulses in all their creations.how fast do you think the Christian god could do it, if it existed?
Zero. If you wait as long as Christianity has failed to1959! You are impatient Vera! That's only 63 years ago. It's a bit of a 'diva stance' to complain that the human race has not made enough satisfactory global improvements in your lifetime. — universeness
even though they both haveunite people in common cause — universeness
I think you'll be alone in a desert.put significant dents in human primal fear.
No. While an 'elegant' solution is much to be desired, and hard to let go, we settle for awkward, inconvenient, mean truths all the time. We always hope they will fit into a larger, more beautiful picture, and sometimes we luck out.appeal IS a central element of what we call truth, especially in the sciences. An important value in choosing one theory over another is aesthetic appeal. — Joshs
No. facts have coherence whether we like them or not. We just make don't all all make use of them all all of the time.The facts have no coherence outside of their relation to our pragmatic goals and purposes. — Joshs
No. Facts do not change. Our perception of them may grow clearer, our understanding of how they fit together may render them less cold, but our concerns and practices shape nothing but our immediate environment, and our expectations are as often dashed as are fulfilled.We convince ourselves that we conform our empirical models to the cold, hard facts of the world, but those cold , hard facts are constantly shaped and reshaped by our evolving concerns, expectations and practices. — Joshs
Oddly enough, I said that very thing in another thread. People take in what they hear, see, feel, read and they remix it in their head according to their previous experience, temperament and needs. Sure.Everyone approaches faith differently because they all experience religion differently. — Gregory
Somebody can think it's literally true (I have some doubt about this: the people I've met who insisted that the scriptures were literally true were quite selective in the parts they quoted. They seem to like Paul for some reason... hm) but either was a woman named Esther in Persia or there wasn't; either she married Xerxes or she didn't; either he retracted the order to massacre the Jews or he didn't. Either Noah built an ark like the one in the Creation Museum in Kentucky or he didn't. I choose to believe Esther existed and Noah didn't, but that doesn't change their histories.The Bible can be true for one and not another. — Gregory
Sweet... for those whom that fickle god likes. I have to squint really hard to see this, and it's not worth the effort. Microsoft fixed Windows 11 so that every time my cursor moves too far left, a window pops up with a too-familiar ugly orange balloon face in one of its frames, hour after hour, day after day... I can't see anything on the actual screen.God gives spirituality to each person as he likes because it is as if we are children on this earth. — Gregory
Once atheism makes claims about wider issues such as about whether there is a creator, whether reality needs a first cause, whether reality is purely physical — Andrew4Handel
whether morality can survive the death of religion etc. — Andrew4Handel
The idea is once you abandon religion the only other option is to be a materialist atheist reliant only on science. — Andrew4Handel
It's interesting how 'absolute certainty' is itself a kind of god in a lot of thinking. — Tom Storm
If you take the Bible literally you've missed its message — Gregory
Loving god is faith/spirituality — Gregory
My lack of evidence justified my absence of belief. But as has been said lack of evidence isn't evidence of absence. — Andrew4Handel
So I think the only real lack of belief is total ignorance like a babies where there is no evidence or concepts to evaluate. — Andrew4Handel
Science wins because the magic works. Making wine from grape juice works; making wine from water does not. — unenlightened
Especially when so many of them take certain quotes from people like Aquinas as one of their main purposes in life: — universeness
The speed of advances in science has been incredible and very impressive indeed imo. — universeness
We were always under threat of extinction. 99.9% of all creatures that have ever lived on Earth are extinct, the vast majority of those extinctions have nothing to do with the human race. — universeness
It can show us real pictures like pale blue dot and by doing so, demonstrate to us that we are indeed one little planet and one species that needs to globally unite. — universeness
Science and secular humanism is trying to achieve the protections we all want and I have more confidence that they will succeed, compared to the solution of pointing a Christian cross and a bible at our problems alongside praying for a nonexistent god to intervene. — universeness
So far, Hanover, your examples suck. — 180 Proof
Shadowbox with strawmen to your heart's content. — 180 Proof
Reasoned fears are far more adaptive than the unreasoned fears from the childhood of our species. — 180 Proof
agree, but I can still challenge them on the 'delusion' part, yes? — universeness
Science WILL offer all sorts of transhumanism in the future and I think science makes many of us fear a lot less. — universeness
To boldly go.... does exemplify a human wish to conquer primal fear. — universeness
Science can help us to get over this craven fear in which mankind has lived for so many generations. — universeness
For me, it is far better to grasp the Universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring. — universeness
He taught that humans are subject to three innate fears: the fear of death, the fear of the destructive forces of nature, and fear associated with suffering and the physical demands of life. — universeness
Science has found truth about the physical universe. There is no Christian chemistry, Islamic chemistry, and Buddhist chemistry. There is just chemistry — Art48
Religion has failed to find truth about the spiritual universe. — Art48
It fails to converge on a coherent picture of the spiritual universe. — Art48
Second guess: You’re still stuck in in the Marxist-structuralist tradition of scientific realism. Better?
Give me a hint. — Joshs
Religious vows are much more powerful than you suggest imo. — universeness
The Eastern civilization (as we call it today) was too strong to conquer. — Alkis Piskas
The Indus Valley Civilization dates to c. 7000 BCE and grew steadily throughout the lower Gangetic Valley region southwards and northwards to Malwa. .
and for another, they are large, populous lands.the Chinese 'Cradle of Civilization' is the Yellow River Valley which gave rise to villages sometime around 5000 BCE.
I personally don't use my religion to answer questions about how the world physically works. I've candidly not ever turned to my religious leaders to figure out how to start repair my car, build a house, to cure me of an illness, or of any other scientific inquiry. — Hanover
Yeah but are you really suggesting that there is never any price to pay if you break a 'sacred vow?' — universeness
There is power behind such labels as 'sacred vow.' Would you not agree? — universeness
I don't see why you use the word 'subjective' in the quote above Vera. I would suggest the covenant mode by Christians is presented more like a sacred vow than a subjective agreement open to revision. — universeness
My main point is that science converges to what seems to be objective truth, — Art48
religion fails to converge to any coherent picture of the universe. — Art48
This is claimed to be the spoken word of god to Moses, is it not?
It what way are such claims not presented as objective realities? — universeness
And Christians know it's BS, since they disobey most of them most of the time, without showing the least fear of being struck down. But what has the bullying of Big Dogma got to do with reality?The ten commandments are presented by Christians as applicable to all humans in all circumstances. — universeness
They make lots of claims, yes. Very successfully. But making claims about reality is not the purpose of the religious impulse. The claims are a stratagem of power structures - all power structures, whether they are labelled as a religion, a political party or a corporation.I think religious doctrines do make objective reality claims and they have failed in the attempts. — universeness
It has failed to find objective reality, as the OP makes clear. — Art48
Still, I challenge you, Vera, to name at least one major world religion that completely lacks idols, superstition, conformity and/or scapegoating (i.e. the stigmata of magical thinking). — 180 Proof
That's waaay simplistic. It's accurate the way one piece of a jigsaw puzzle is accurate.religion which is concerned with idols and superstitions, conformity and scapegoating, — 180 Proof
On a Christian forum I frequent, the question was raised as to why Christianity has failed to spread across India and further Eastward. Here is my answer. — Art48
It is very clear that a true form of democracy hasn't existed in any government. — TheMadMan
Would you like to hear from some more “bad-faith” atheist debaters with similar comments on Dawkins and Dennett? I can give you plenty. — Joshs
I am not a theist but you clearly have your prejudices towards them and seem to assume I was one with no evidence. — Andrew4Handel
As an agnostic I have debated heavily with atheists over the years and I know what common trends and beliefs are amongst them. — Andrew4Handel
I think you can defend gods and the esoteric as explaining these types of things that a purely materialist atoms banging together doesn't explain, like meaning in language, concepts, desires and so on. — Andrew4Handel
This does not exhibit a deep understanding of science.explaining these types of things that a purely materialist atoms banging together doesn't explain,
What makes you think those are other-worldly, or non-physical phenomena?like meaning in language, concepts, desires and so on
Atheists appear to be trying to make us just another senseless causal determined mechanism of brute nature in my opinion. — Andrew4Handel
Any time you hear someone defend atheism on the basis an argument to the effect that there is no empirical evidence in support of God, or that religious believers can’t put their ideas to a scientific test, youre in the vicinity of a scientistic thinking, and a doctrinaire atheism which asserts with authority the‘truth’ of their position. — Joshs
So what does theism explain that nontheism can't (or, put another way, what does theism explain that doesn't have some microcosm question rendering it toothless in terms of explanatory power)? — Astro Cat
Am I making my point clear? — Athena
Your blindness to cultural differences is as disrespectful of all people as the missionaries and is as dangerous as driving blind. — Athena
Did you learn that in school? — Athena
