My thoughts are that I agree, up to the 'instead' (I have no time for certainty of any kind) and I disagree with everything after that. — andrewk
I don't think the amount of religious belief or genuine religiosity has changed much. People who want to be religious still are, as they always were. — andrewk
What has changed is that people who don't want to be religious, or who do but don't want to conform to the locally dominant religious dogma, no longer have to pretend to believe it on pain of being ostracised or burnt at the stake. — andrewk
Actually the word is derived from 'the people over the River Indus' i.e. Indians. Hinduism is not a religion, it is a plethora of religions and philosophies - theistic, polytheistic, atheistic and everything in between. — Wayfarer
religious belief hasn't been replaced by scientific certainty; instead, belief as a fundamental component of the human experience has been transferred from the religion of the masses to the scientific beliefs of the masses. — Noble Dust
war is an incredible waste of resources, — XanderTheGrey
I think the most I would ever seek to do is help create an online movement that encourages mass murder, and murder-suicide, and addresses its true effects on the rest of the population. — XanderTheGrey
I forgot to add perhaps; that even if I had no values, it would make sense for me to expetiment with adhereing to diffetent "patterns" as it were, rathet than devoting myself to the behavior of a loose unit. — XanderTheGrey
The point I'm trying to make here is that the greatest precived common values of the greatest precived majority of mankind: seen convoluted and construed in many areas, including this one; suicide, and homocide. — XanderTheGrey
Those of us in the 1st world suffer from a terrible delusion that our everyday lifestyle choices are not responsible for the vast amount of suffering on the otherside of the globe; — XanderTheGrey
Meanwhile a group of people were locked in a room together with enough resources to last each one 90+ years, it would be considered wrong if a smaller group claimed the majority of the resources as their own. Would it be wrong to those few people so that more of the others could survive? — XanderTheGrey
I'm just putting it out there to check people's thoughts. I don't have a clear-cut strategy on the issue. I don't even know where to begin.
Anyway, how would we define the Devil? — TheMadFool
If by 'religious need' you just mean the need that many feel to explore and express spiritual feelings and ideas, then I agree that it is likely an in-built feature of the human animal, that manifests in many, but not all, humans. — andrewk
But I don't understand the suggestion that such a need is 'descended from religion'. Such a statement sounds like it's either a trivial tautology obtained by equating spirituality with religion, or obviously false. — andrewk
Philosophy and people in general are very "knowledgeable" about the definition of God. They argue about it but everybody circles around omnipotence, omniscience and omnibenevolence. The Devil is rarely discussed and I wonder why. — TheMadFool
If we can't find God directly, perhaps an oblique approach to the issue may help. What I mean is by analyzing what Evil means we may see the light. What do you think? — TheMadFool
To fight or rebel against an omnipotent being (God) is clearly a stupid thing - moron.
Compared to an omnipotent being (God) anyone, even Satan, is obviously impotent. Add or subtract 1 or 1,000,000,000,000 to infinity (God) and we're still left with infinity (God). So Satan is, simply put, as insginificant as zero to God - impotent. — TheMadFool
If morality is dependent upon environmental factors, wouldn't it be subjective? — cincPhil
On atheism, it is as you say, that morality is a product of socio-biological evolution. — cincPhil
I'm arguing that if God does not exist, then morality is just an evolutionary spin-off. It's a kind of herd morality, but it's not really true in any objective sense. — cincPhil
Taken on faith yes, but not in the same way, because the act of faith in science is consistently being vindicated in this world, whereas that in religious dogma is not.
The scientist says the light will go on if you press that switch. The average person has no idea why that should be so, but they take it on faith, press the switch, and the light does indeed go on. — andrewk
But when the hellfire preacher tells us that unmarried couples will be tortured forever after they die, there is no confirmation of that in this world. — andrewk
Address what? — andrewk
Moral and existential problems are part of the human condition, and I'm not aware of anybody that seeks to deny it — andrewk
As for 'transferring the religious need to another sphere of inquiry' I don't know what that means, or why you think it should be true. If you can clarify what exactly that claim means and provide some reasons to believe it, I'm happy to respond. — andrewk
This strikes a personal cord with me. I've done things I regret. I've hurt people. And I know that if God did not exist, then I would embrace my animal instinct, you know? — cincPhil
On atheism, what obligations, if any do we owe to other homo sapiens? — cincPhil
My argument is not about what atheists believe. It is about the nature of morality if atheism is true. — cincPhil
Another way to look at premise one is to say that if atheism is true, then morality is not objective. And that is precisely what atheism asserts. Any atheist worth his salt will tell you that you don't read morality into nature. Nature is red in tooth and claw. To quote Richard Dawkins, "there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but pitiless indifference." — cincPhil
Now, which premise do you deny? — cincPhil
Are you really willing to deny the objectivity of moral values and duties? — cincPhil
the less people, the more resources available. — XanderTheGrey
Given that the Devil is the exact opposite of God — TheMadFool
so how can Salvation be an action, per se? — jancanc
"Will-less action" can only be a metaphoric expression — jancanc
Not yet at least. It is necessary but not also sufficient. To get far you have to find a way that works. How can your music reach a wide enough audience? Who would recognise your music as great? How can you make people love it? A lot of this is marketing, and not really making music. Without the right marketing, even the greatest music will remain unknown. — Agustino
I never really had someone who believes in me - that's how I ended up believing in myself in the first place. No one else would, and I needed it. It does help if you have a self-belief, like Schopenhauer did, in your own genius - that can pull you through many things. — Agustino
In that it keeps you going. It keeps you hoping for a great future even when your present isn't so great. — Agustino
Yeah, I never really thought about it, but it's true when I do think about it based on my experience. — Agustino
In my experience, it works. — Agustino