What I hope and what the truth is are two different things. It seems that many people on this forum can distinguish between the two. Which one were we talking about again?Good for you. What about the truth of the finitude of existence, suffering and death? I'm sure you hope that truths didn't exist? — TheMadFool
Not me. I want the truth - always. My feelings are secondary to the truth.Not always. Lies can be comforting too. Let's just say that the issue is quite complex. We need to be in touch with reality (know truths) to survive and evade pain but to be happy we sometimes need the odd lie, lies about our looks, our sexual prowess, our intelligence, our worth in society, etc. — TheMadFool
I don't know what New Atheism is and how it is different from just atheism. Is what I've been arguing "New" atheism, or just atheism? I don't know of any "new" way of rejecting claims that can't be falsified.It's not prejudiced. New Atheism is actually recognised as entirely childish and not worthy of intellectual respect. It's so intellectually dishonest, I wouldn't even give it a second glance. They don't even understand what they're talking about. And that's a fact. Anyone who understands theism - even if they are an atheist and disagree with it - will actually agree. — Agustino
You're forgetting that the "other random person" was a little girl, not a big scary dude.:s so you think a scientifically-minded atheist would not be afraid in that situation? Fear is a normal reaction when strange, out of order events happen. That event was out of order. If the elevator stops, electricity goes out, and then you find that another random person is inside the elevator who wasn't there before wouldn't you be scared? I'd be very scared, and I might even attack that person out of fear. Becuase I just wouldn't know what happened. Maybe someone hijacked the elevator, some psycho, and they're trying to kill me. How am I supposed to know in just a few seconds reaction time?
I wouldn't necessarily assume it was a ghost, but by all extents something abnormal is happening. I would definitely assume that.
Isn't it because they already accepted the premise of spirits, devils, angels, gods, etc. and THAT influences how they interpret their experiences, which is no different than your interpretation of your experiences? — Harry Hindu
No. It's because an event that they didn't expect - actually multiple events that they didn't expect - happened all at once. So they were confused and afraid because they couldn't understand what was happening. Anyone would be afraid, regardless of religious convictions. — Agustino
Watch this video. This video was done in Brazil, which has the largest number of Catholics in the world.I cannot give you evidence, as I said evidence is found in your own experiences. — Agustino
Let's pick some astrological terms then:Depends what the terms are in question are
So, again, how is it knowledge if the terms they use refer to non-existent things - like the influence of the planets and stars on your life? — Harry Hindu
That's not non-existent things. I imagine they must make predictions based on the planets and stars that the state of my life. Those predictions can be verified, once you understand what they are and what they mean.. — Agustino
This is an appeal to popularity - a logical fallacy (tell me how you are using reason to get at your truths again). At one point in history, most people believed the Earth was flat and at the center of the universe. Did that make them right? This is just evidence of a mass delusion. Most humans fear death, including atheists. It's just atheists have rejected or haven't succumbed to the delusion the fear feeds. We accept our finite existence and get on with our lives as atheists understand better than any theist the value of life. An afterlife diminishes the value of this life, the only one we have. Imagine how much more precious this life is without an afterlife.And what about the 72 year old Muslim, or Hindu, who has studied their religion their whole life and disagrees with what your word, "God" refers to? — Harry Hindu
Depends on the particular person. Study time is necessary to know better, but not also sufficient.
And I doubt they'd disagree. As it has already been said by multiple people in this thread, there is a mystical core that all religions agree to in one way or another. They may disagree about the path to get there, but not about the destination. — Agustino
And what about the 72 year old Muslim, or Hindu, who has studied their religion their whole life and disagrees with what your word, "God" refers to? Your argument suggests that they know better what the term, "God" refers to. You seem unwilling to admit that there are others that have studied "God" more than you and have come up with a different idea of God, or that it doesn't exist at all - a symptom of a grandiose delusion.I assume that I know better what the word "God" refers to, and I've cited why. So at the very least, my definitions (or the believer's more generally) ought to be accepted as a starting point. I don't think there is much room to doubt that someone who devotes more time to one particular topic - say God - generally understands it better than someone who never devotes much time to it. — Agustino
So, they know what the terms mean, which is to say that what they refer to, but the things that they refer to aren't real, wouldn't you agree? So, again, how is it knowledge if the terms they use refer to non-existent things - like the influence of the planets and stars on your life?Know WHAT better than others? What the field-specific terms refer to? They know that better than others because they frequently use those terms and try to understand them. — Agustino
A contradiction.Whether it's real knowledge or not doesn't change the fact that they do know better than those who don't study astrology what astrology-specific terms mean or refer to. — Agustino
That didn't answer my question about what age we will be when ressurrected. Why wouldn't it be different, if our bodies are still the same, just ressurrected - whatever that actually means?Bodies age in this world, as things stand now. We don't know how it will be in the afterlife. — Agustino
Citing reasons doesn't mean that it isn't a delusion. Delusional people cite reasons for the beliefs all the time in order to maintain the delusion.What makes you think you or Hanover know better what "God" refers to? I cited reasons for making this claim, so that's by all means not a delusion. Do you disagree that the fact that I spend more time than both of you combined studying this topic likely means I know more about it than both of you combined? — Agustino
A symptom of a grandiose delusion.The problem is that you assume superiority in your position. — Hanover
It looks like he still doesn't see his problem, Hanover. He knows better what the word "God" refers to, you ignorant dolt.I assume that I know better what the word "God" refers to, and I've cited why. So at the very least, my definitions (or the believer's more generally) ought to be accepted as a starting point. I don't think there is much room to doubt that someone who devotes more time to one particular topic - say God - generally understands it better than someone who never devotes much time to it. — Agustino
Then you need to explain your distinction between seeing and experiencing.The only way to receive salvation is to experience what you experience, which means to see things the way I see them. — Harry Hindu
I don't see how the last part follows. — Agustino
Exactly. My point is that in order to receive salvation, one must experience things the way you experience them. In other words, we must simply accept your own understanding of your own experiences and hope that ours is like yours without fully knowing what your experience is.I didn't say all atheists will receive salvation or can receive salvation. — Agustino
Sure, now try that with god. What kind of experience should I have to know that it is god?In order to know what "water" means, you must experience water no? That's no delusion, that's quite sensible. — Agustino
What age will we be when ressurected? Bodies age, will we continue to age?Yes, until the bodily resurrection of the dead. — Agustino
You said atheists can even receive salvation. I consider myself an atheist. The only way to receive salvation is to experience what you experience, which means to see things the way I see them.Same thing. I made no reference to you when I said non-believers can receive salvation. — Agustino
What does it mean to "come and see for yourself"? Try what out?So take the attitude that us Eastern Orthodox have with regards to conversion. We say come and see for yourself - try it out. "Taste and see that the Lord is good". Without that experience, you cannot know. — Agustino
Sure, non-believers can receive salvation by seeing things the way I see them. — Harry Hindu
I didn't make the underlined comment. — Agustino
Let's start with our moral codes. People call the Christian God loving, yet the Bible shows otherwise. If hell exists, that also shows that it isn't loving.So what about the Christian God is inconsistent with our knowledge? — Agustino
In other words, Christianity is a mass delusion perpetuated by the culture. By surrounding yourself with people with like-minds reinforces those beliefs, but it doesn't prove them.Keep in mind that religion is also a communal activity - that's one of the reasons for being a Christian, or a Muslim, or a Buddhist and not an independent seeker. I think it's best for people to delve deeper in the religion of their country, wherever they happened to be born. It is their tradition, and they are most equipped to understand it and progress most fully in it, rather than switch. — Agustino
God is a referent to something or someone that can be experienced. So I know that my God is the right God because I experienced Him. This isn't to say that the Christian God is the real God, and the Muslim God is the false God, etc. No. The word "God" in all religions refers to the same underlying reality, approached through different manners and understood to different extents. Catholicism for example freely admits that salvation is possible for Muslims, for Buddhists, and even for atheists. I had a post about it in this thread earlier. And Eastern Orthodoxy admits the same.
So take the attitude that us Eastern Orthodox have with regards to conversion. We say come and see for yourself - try it out. "Taste and see that the Lord is good". Without that experience, you cannot know. — Agustino
Exactly, you have already accepted the premise unquestioningly and made it your life's work to study this particular god.My claims are with regards to the cumulation of my experiences, which includes time spent studying Christianity, the Bible, Buddhism, mysticism, philosophy, and other such subjects. So I am trying to convey you my experiences through words. I cannot make you, through those words, to have the same experiences. You have to do the work yourself, as it were. — Agustino
No, it requires logic and reason - by integrating all knowledge into a consistent whole. God doesn't use faith and neither do we when determining someone's guilt or innocence. Faith is accepting a premise unquestioningly - a symptom of a delusion.I cannot give you evidence, as I said evidence is found in your own experiences. God isn't something or someone that can be shown in a photograph, the way I'd show you a gazelle, or a black swan. And even then, you could say that the photograph doesn't correspond to something that exists in reality, but was altered with Photoshop, etc. So some faith is inescapable to live in the world. Whatsoever knowledge is transmitted to you requires some faith to be accepted. — Agustino
Fair enough. I admit that that was a bad example. I can admit that I'm wrong. You have yet to do that - a symptom of being delusional.I have not found evidence that unicorns exist, but there might be horses with horns somewhere in the Universe, how am I supposed to know there aren't? :s However, whether there are or not, isn't very relevant to my life. Whether there is a God, on the other hand, is a lot more relevant. — Agustino
A true falsehood is if you believe that your brother had sex with your wife (for example) and you rush and kill him, even though he hasn't actually done it.
A regular falsehood is when you're delusional because of high fever and want to commit suicide, and I tell you that this pill is a euthanasia pill, while in truth it's just an anti-anxiety medication. I have told you a lie, and you will act according to the lie, but it is not a true falsehood because you don't misinterpret the correct nature of reality - which you would do if you were to commit suicide. — Agustino
Yes, until the bodily resurrection of the dead. — Agustino
So then death is really the end then?Did you read, for example, Genesis? Before they sinned, Adam and Eve did have bodies. So the body in its natural state is holy, it is meant to be a temple for the spirit, and together the two form the person. — Agustino
?Because, how do you know there isn't any evidence? — Agustino
So, truth is what makes us feel good?You paint a dismal picture. If I may say so I think you're being too scientific. Science is great but it's not the only stuff we have to play with. What about religion? Of course we need to delete some of the icky stuff like slavery, human sacrifice, etc. but the possibility of a creator, all good and loving, can and does uplift some souls. — TheMadFool
So you don't believe that you are an eternal spirit and that the body is just a faulty (sinful) copy of yourself? If eternal spirits don't need bodies to exist, then what it the point of a body? What is the point of a soul when all that does is make me a faulty copy of myself?grandiose (I am a eternal spirit and the body is just a faulty copy of myself (imposter)) — Harry Hindu
No. Questioning someone's premise for which there is no evidence is not indicative of having a grandiose delusion. It IS indicative of having delusions if you go about believing in things, unquestioningly, for which there is no evidence in order to make you feel better in the face of things for which there is evidence.Grandiose type: delusion of inflated worth, power, knowledge, identity or believes themself to be a famous person, claiming the actual person is an impostor or an impersonator. — Harry Hindu
This type seems to sum you up quite well, but I'm sure you won't see that irony. — Buxtebuddha
It's not a matter of being cultured. I was a believer the first half of my life. It's a matter of being logical and reasonable.I see you're not very cultured. It's a conditional statement. If X is true, then Y. Do you know the truth conditions of a conditional statement? Obviously not, because if you did, you would know that if X is false, then the conditional X -> Y is still true. — Agustino
You're asking me if I'm afraid of an "if"?If eternal hell exists and if you are someone who is likely to be in hell in the afterlife, would hell be something to be afraid of? Yes or no? — Agustino
OK, so let's examine two claims, which are actually competing theories, which utilise identical equations:
1. Underlying reality does not exist. The equations are purely epistemic.
2. Underlying reality does exist. The equations correspond to elements of reality.
Here we have a genuine situation where your criterion of accuracy is both philosophically and scientifically useless.
And of course we have the age-old ideas:
1. Only my mind exists.
2. There exists a Reality independent of my mind.
Science can't help you with that one. — tom
Not solely. You hold your beliefs for the purpose of alleviating the stress of knowing the world is a certain way that you don't like or agree with. Also, to make yourself feel more meaningful, more special, than your really are.So it seems to me that you want to say that I hold beliefs solely for the purpose of alleviating the fear of death. Correct? — Agustino
Let's start with this one: Do you not accept your premise unquestioningly (that God, the afterlife, the supernatural, spirits, etc., exist) which then has an influence on how you interpret your experiences - that these experiences are "spiritual"?There is a quality of centrality: no matter how unlikely it is that these strange things are happening to him/her, the patient accepts them relatively unquestioningly. — Harry Hindu
It seems that you don't know what any of those words mean in the context of THIS conversation.- yes, quoting the dictionary certainly does make my point very well. You don't understand what ANY of those synonyms mean in the context of diagnosing a psychiatric condition. — Agustino
I mean that you hold beliefs that alleviate the stress of knowing you will die and cease to exist. In other words, you cover up reality with your nice beliefs in order to feel better about your finite existence.No you haven't. You said I suffer of delusions. What does that mean? Do you mean the medical condition known as delusions? Yes or no? — Agustino
