The condescension and self-assurance is such an outlier, such a relative novelty, that it's stimulating in some perverse way. Is this dude for real? This dude is for real. I know that some part of me is like that too. Which is scary. But such is life. — dog
1. As you are quite accustomed to belief, I see that it may be difficult to detach yourself from it. — ProgrammingGodJordan
2. It may be somewhat odd to grasp, since you had probably been used to the concept of belief for quite some time.
3. In perhaps a short while, you may come to recognize that instead of belief, one may instead employ scientific thinking. — ProgrammingGodJordan
1. What "high hanging fruit" has been offered by the others? — ProgrammingGodJordan
After 4 years of being an atheist, one day I thought about belief, and I recognized that not only was theistic faith invalid, but also, the very concept of belief! — ProgrammingGodJordan
3. In perhaps a short while, you may come to recognize that instead of belief, one may instead employ scientific thinking. — ProgrammingGodJordan
As Neil deGrasse Tyson says, science is true whether or not one believes in it!
Pertinently, that one may believe in science, does not suddenly remove that belief is a concept that permits that one may typically ignore evidence, as observed in the analysis below:
Belief (by definition and research) is a model, that permits both science, and non-science.
However, crucially, belief typically facilitates that people especially ignore evidence.
A model that generally permits the large ignorance of evidence contrasts science.
Instead, we may employ scientific thinking, that largely prioritizes evidence, rather than a model (i.e. belief) that facilitates largely, the ignorance of evidence.
Unfortunately, I had been a theist up until my 21'st birthday. Fortunately, at age 22 (I am now 27), I finally identified as an atheist. After 4 years of being an atheist, one day I thought about belief, and I recognized that not only was theistic faith invalid, but also, the very concept of belief!
As a precaution for preventing myself from absorbing nonsense, I had come to invent something called "non beliefism".
Beyond atheism, "non beliefism" enables a state of mind that rejects not merely religious belief, but the very concept of belief. — ProgrammingGodJordan
It is probable that somebody/something is utilizing your account to compose messages. I need not belief to observe said probability. — ProgrammingGodJordan
1. In contrast, I refer to standard definitions: — ProgrammingGodJordan
Why do you garner you must believe, in order to observe that science prioritizes evidence, whereas belief, by definition/research permits typical ignorance of evidence?
In other words, don't you recognize that regardless of whether or not you believe, science prioritizes evidence, whereas belief, by definition/research permits typical ignorance of evidence? — ProgrammingGodJordan
2. Again, why do you garner that belief is unavoidable? — ProgrammingGodJordan
1. I don't detect any novel information from those threads.
I've been discussing "non-beliefism" online since 2016, so I've seen many similar responses. — ProgrammingGodJordan
2. My response: That's ironic, for you have constantly rehashed or implied that belief is crucial. — ProgrammingGodJordan
3. Why do you garner that belief is crucial? — ProgrammingGodJordan
3. In perhaps a short while, you may come to recognize that instead of belief, one may instead employ scientific thinking. — ProgrammingGodJordan
bagpipe horror show. — Bitter Crank
You decide for all time: Just say which one said "Art is whatever you can get away with" and that will be that. — Bitter Crank
Sure, but not nearly as much as music. Sculptors would need a great deal of material knowledge in order to take a chisel to marble or a spatula to clay. So, I know I couldn't write a decent short poem in iambic pentameter let alone a longer one with a formal rhyme scheme. Iambic tetrameter I can manage, and can manage a rhyme scheme too for short poems. (Iambic tetrameter is ideally suited to drivel poetry.) — Bitter Crank
think musical composition would have to be more intuitively integrative and experiential than literary or plastic arts, because the composer has to know what a voice can and can not do, as well as what a violin, kazoo, gong, french horn, oboe, piano, guitar, or whatever the instruments are that one is going to compose for can and can not do. — Bitter Crank
All creators of art have to know what they get away with--as Warhol or McLuhan said, "Art is whatever you can get away with." — Bitter Crank
Well, right, just because there are several editions of Plato on the shelf, doesn't mean Plato stood the test of time for everybody that walked into the bookstore, or even bought one of the editions of Plato, or even read some of it. Shakespeare hasn't stood the test of time for a lot of people, because his large volume of work in early-modern English is at least something of a challenge for many to read, and there is a lot of it. — Bitter Crank
McLuhan thinks that the real art of our time is advertising, and at least to some extent I agree. — Bitter Crank
And if influence is a hair too obvious, then we sneer dismissively, "Derivative". — Bitter Crank
Of course, some hermeneutical effort will be needed to get the maximum value out of the thing, and we will never be THE intended audience. But I liked it when I read it, and if a dunce such as I was when I read it can get something out of it, then many others can too. It was better than some contemporary experimental literary works I have had the misfortune to come across. — Bitter Crank
Musician? — Bitter Crank
You will know, for instance, that the lines of a poem can have, may have, should have (depending) rhythm and rhyme. You will know (maybe) that a novel benefits from having an intriguing plot, very interesting characters, and lively dialogue. You'll know before you begin that plays are divided into acts, are all talk, but you get to provide stage directions. You will have poems, novels, and plays floating around your head, which you will want to keep at bay so you don't end up writing something too similar to last week's very popular episode of the horror show, Writer's Cramp on Amazon. — Bitter Crank
For the most part, though, you are on your own. YOU have to come up with all the amazingly good ideas, clever comments, exquisite word choices, etc., and no amount of familiarity with literature is going to help you very much. Evidence: how many Professors of English Literature (or any other literature) are also published authors of poetry, fiction, or drama that people actually enjoy? Few, few, few. Conversely, how many prize winning authors dump writing so they can teach at your average debased university English department? — Bitter Crank
Philosophers, artists, writers--creative workers in general, start from scratch. — Bitter Crank
The epic of Gilgamesh is 4000 years old. — Bitter Crank