No, no, no. You're doing it all wrong. You need to be more vocal and nasty. What you should have said was, "Shut up and go away. You sound like a bloody idiot, so doubly go away". — S
I dont agree that religious ideas are special, a bad idea is a bad idea even its something cherished by the person. — DingoJones
You think anti-theists should just shut up, which is fine, but you seem to be wanting it to pit tules in place to MAKE them shut up. — DingoJones
would you say the same thing about 13 out of 18 anti-nazi threads? Anti racist threads? — DingoJones
If you were antisocial more often, you'd probably be more fun. — S
I have also witnessed atheists complaining about theists incessantly posting bible verse and scripture in an attempt to shut down a philosophical discussion or debate. — HarryBalsagna
While I agree with the sentiment that respect is important in furtherance of substantive discourse, I find it difficult to agree with things akin to "the oppression of Judeo-Christian thought". Thick skin is kind of a requisite to entering into a forum such as this. If you're not willing to have your ideas or beliefs challenged, perhaps this is not the right place for you... otherwise, let the moderators be the judge of what crosses the line. — HarryBalsagna
Yes, I read that part. But like I literally just said to you, it's not a problem for there to be discussions critical of religion. It would actually be more of a problem if discussions critical of religion were a rarity. — S
Your post did not even begin on a helpful note, so it is bizarre you expect people here to follow a more respectful tone.
It is just some passive aggressive complaint about one user and supposedly "anti-religious" people "pissing you off"—posing no helpful guidelines for people to follow.
All it says is, TL;DR — "atheists and the anti-religious" should keep their mouths shut. What does this even contribute to the forum? — Swan
That's not true though. It's not causing a problem to be critical of religion. Religion has much to be critical of. — S
Lol, nothing in this post was anti-religious or an attack on anyone. — Swan
...calling something ridiculous or stupid isnt always just a rude, hyperaggressive or otherwise dick move. — DingoJones
There are rabid anti-theists who are obnoxious, like that Gnostic guy you just barfs out rants but there are just as many other obnoxious folks, the anti natalist guys, the general personalities of sime folks...singling out the ant- religious folks is making a special plea for religious beliefs to be exempt from discourse. Too bad, its not a special set of ideas, — DingoJones
You are acting like its someone elses responsibility that the ideas dont make sense, but its not. Its on the religious people and their goofy ideas. Sorry some people believe in nonsense but they do. Its not rude to point it. — DingoJones
Why do you find religious intolerance more offensive than say free will intolerance or capitalism intolerance or the various other intolerances pervasive throughout this forum? Why demand special respect for the religious (a group I tend to often actually align with)? If I need special protection for my views, then that could mean my views can't stand on their own merit. — Hanover
As you know, I'm trying my best to be a nice and considerate philosopher. So, perhaps you can help me. If someone has a religious belief that is stupid or ridiculous, what should I do? Should I give them a hug? — S
I've been on the receiving end of more than one diatribe by a theist or agnostic here, so "solely" is just plain false. — Artemis
Doesn't this kinda amount to a truism? We'll all disagree a lot less when we only talk to people we agree with? — Artemis
But yes, the idea of segregating the forum along those lines is ridiculous. — S
My avatar ------- what can I say. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Rather selective in your views. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
You centered me out as one of the worst offenders, and you are correct, while ignoring that I am a religionist whom you have tried to label as an atheist. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
BULLSHIT. The main issue with the diagram above (ignoring all the other issues already said) is that it ignores the possibility of not having a belief whatsoever. Proponents of this kind of diagram claim that you have to be an atheist or a theist, and often claim that atheism is the null position (which is question-begging). — darthbarracuda
Practically, under what circumstances could one not have a belief (one way or the other) about god(s) or no god(s) in this god(s)-soaked world? Is anyone born into and matured in a society where the null position of "not having a belief" exists? — Bitter Crank
I think it's usually muddled by different understandings of what "knowledge" and "belief" entail.
Personally I've had to "unlearn" atheistic arguments. My current position is that I don't know what I can know about (1) what God is like, or (2)what the appropriate attitude towards God is. It's the perfect position to piss off both atheists who insist I must therefore be an atheist since I must be rejecting the usual theistic conceptions of God, and the people of the faith I was born into, since it doesn't take much to be declared an apostate under it. — Sinderion
Cool. :) I think that my interests were perhaps more tangential to yours, then. I think I was coming at this from the perspective of "OK, having established this, that, and the other, then. . . " — Moliere
You're putting the carriage in front of the horse. According to you, as I understand, it is not the fault of stupid, outdated, unsubstantiated and improbable beliefs and their ensuing dogma that is the cause of stirfe and conflict, but the people who point out that the dogmas are borne from improbable beliefs, from stupid, outdated, and unsubstantiated claims. — god must be atheist
You realize that you have made a brilliant argument on the side of religion, the aim of which is to stop, stifle and squelch any progress, any creative and logical thought, to silence all those whose thinking can carry the world ahead, instead of keeping the masses steeped deep in ignorant dogma. — god must be atheist
If you want to find a rabid atheist, then look no further than me. — god must be atheist
And I don't know how many rabid atheists you've known, so this may sound new to you: in my opinion any serious talk about religion is an insult to intelligence. This is so because: No prediction has ever come true as written in religious texts; their content is getting more and more ridiculously childish by modern standards; the religious, instead of admitting the failure of their scriptures, try to smoothe over the self-contradictions and obviously wrong claims by "interpreting" the texts; and the entire body fo scriptures, that form the base of religions, is refutable, ridiculous (but not funny) and logically unsound and have been so since day one. — god must be atheist
Under this light, maybe you can understand our, the atheists', fervent attacks against ANYTHING that has to do with religions or with gods. — god must be atheist
A lot, and I mean a lot, of ill feelings and futile argumenting could be avoided this way. — god must be atheist
This forum is also full of illogical theorizing by religious thinkers. — god must be atheist
I am a non-believer. I should point out that belief in cures by holy men and holy places exist also among Jews a Moslems but. unlike in Catholicism, they are not sanctioned by mainstream establishments. — Jacob-B
I don't think we are far apart with respect to what I might term hyper-rationalists -- I take that to be the target of your thread. — Moliere
To see a world of things is to already have categorized the world into objects, which involves a fallible process of reasoning, even though it's non linguistic. — aporiap
When saying why can't object A and B occupy the same space at the same time, I meant why can't object A occupy the space occupied by B at the same time. — elucid
I have been thinking about this for a while now, and I do not understand why people claim that two objects cannot occupy the same space. — elucid
I'm sorry some of this is just really subtle because it's easy to assume an 'introspection' involves a factual claim about your inner life 'e.g. 'I am feeling tired'. I think the moment you begin to try concluding something about your inner life is the moment fallibility becomes possible. — aporiap
Hardly anything characterizes the irrational intransigence of the Catholic church than the belief in ‘Miracle Cures’. — Jacob-B
Generally, pure thought; specifically, as a component of it, understanding. — Mww
I reject the idea of introspection as the most obvious, most readily available, most commonly accessed, means for self-observation. — Mww
I don’t even deny introspection exists. — Mww
What....did I over-simplify?
You accused me of being arrogant in rejecting some collective experience, when all I’m rejecting is an idea.
(Sigh) — Mww
So observing or recognizing yourself as having or experiencing certain internal states, emotions, thoughts. That's introspection correct? I think the process of labeling feelings, 'recognizing' certain feelings is falliable. — aporiap
I don’t like e.g., the Dallas Cowboys, but I wouldn’t disallow a friend from coming in my house because he’s wearing one of their t-shirts. — Mww
I explained my rejection of the very idea of introspection primarily because it is only rationality anyway, and secondary to that, it is redundant to understanding. — Mww
You don't think we occasionally confabulate, thinking sometimes we know how we felt or why we did a certain thing when in actuality the real reason, if any, was different? I think it's very possible to misattribute emotions and misunderstand feelings, specifically when there are implicit attitudes or biases hidden because of whatever discomfort they cause to ackgnowledge. I think, as with any other sort of infering, like with external observation, it's possible to not be right even with introspection. — aporiap
