The issue of scale. Focus on that. — Jake
If your neighbor can do something that impressive, what could a team of well-funded terrorists do with the same technology? If they wipe out the human race or collapse civilization, either with intent or by mistake, do you still care about what's happening with plastic? — Jake
Is that a yes or a no? — Jake
No, you haven't presented an argument for why it's necessary [to change our "outdated 'more is better' relationship with knowledge"].
— praxis
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/3728/the-knowledge-explosion — Jake
The point being here, that it's not their attitude towards knowledge that is driving their research policies.
— ChatteringMonkey
Another good point. Yes, it's their relationship with power, which is what drives our relationship with knowledge. We usually don't pursue knowledge just for itself, but for the power it contains. I like this way of looking at it, as you're helping us dig deeper in to the phenomena. It might be useful to rephrase the question as our "more is better" relationship with power. — Jake
Please note that I'm not arguing that shifting away from the outdated "more is better" relationship with knowledge will be easy. I'm just arguing it's necessary, like it or not. — Jake
Praxis, surely you see that there are more choices here than between nothing and Nazi book burning? — Bitter Crank
Let's make some carefully reasoned decisions about what knowledge and power is appropriate for our children at this stage of their development. This will inevitably involve saying no to some knowledge and power, while saying yes to others. — Jake
God is a not a being among beings, but the very Being of beings. To deny God, then, is not like denying an orbiting teapot; it is more like denying Being itself. Or it is more like denying truth itself as opposed to denying that a particular proposition is true.
And the widely-bruited 'death of God?' It is an 'event' of rather more significance than the discovery that there is no celestial teapot (or Santa Claus, or . . . ) after all. — Bill Vallicella [from Wayfarer's link]

You believe the role which has traditionally been played by God should be played by Reason — Ram
... humans are made of thought, a highly dualistic electro-chemical information medium which operates by a process of conceptual division. — Jake
What do you say to the misanthrope, that I am? — Posty McPostface
Heat shock effects are suppose to be great for mood to, so thinking hot yoga is next. — Nils Loc
The universe (taken as the Parmenidean Being) can be one and whole, and still there can be types of existences within it. — Mariner
I'm wary of this "Being" malarky. Can't say I've ever had any need of this obscure concept. — S
God and other supernatural experiences are a special case, by definition, since the word "supernatural" means precisely something beyond the objects of empirical cognition. — Mariner
since The Enlightenment there has been a strong (but often tacit) element of 'Anything But God' underwriting philosophy; the 'conflict thesis' (conflict between science and religion) comes out of that. — Wayfarer
To give an old Platonic (well, Pythagorean) example [of the difference in meaning between existence and being], numbers do not exist (as ordinary objects do), but that does not stop us from using them. — Mariner
We are trying to talk about something of which we don't have any experience. It is necessary to use symbolic language for that. — Mariner
Perhaps what creates the supposedly huge gap between theism and atheism is that most of us only follow our chosen path a short way down the trail, and then we stop, and build a fort. — Jake
... there are gods in Buddhist doctrine but they're regarded as merely other sentient beings and ignorant of their true nature ("not-manifest, not-born, not-made," etc), if I'm not mistaken.
Are you familiar with the distinction between cataphatic and apophatic theology? — Mariner
Morally, we are absolutely separated from Him. Cognitively, we are absolutely separated from Him. Etc. — Mariner
Existence is a subset of being — Mariner
Religion is socialized art and socialized expression. — Blue Lux
Should we give up on happiness and seek truth? — TheMadFool
I don't believe in a God at all — Wayfarer
Why is the default position that religious ought to be taken seriously?
— StreetlightX
There's an asymmetry underlying this question though. From the atheist point of view, all that is at stake is a fallacious belief; because it has no real content, losing it is losing nothing - other than an impediment. Indeed that is all that can be at stake. But from the believer's point of view, what is at stake is literally everything. Not understanding it correctly, or performing it correctly, or whatever is required by the particular faith tradition the believer belongs to, is literally a matter of life and death - even more than that. It's crucial, it's the most important thing about life. So the assertion that it's not important could only be from atheism, from those who have no sense that there's anything at stake. — Wayfarer
But we don't really know what "Gods could add meaning" means :D. — Mariner
By being the foundation of a cause-and-effect worldview. "A because B" is a worldview that works. And the gods helped with that by unifying observations. To give an imaginary but plausible example: A lion is a dangerous predator. We should be wary of lions. If we see a lion, we should retreat. Etc. There is a cluster of observations around the notion of a lion. And the continuity of this observation between today and tomorrow is guaranteed by the idea that there is a god of lions; or, as we should say it nowadays, there are reasons why lions have traits X, Y, Z, etc., which entail our caution or fear or retreat. — Mariner
You feel that theists are ignorant because they haven't proven anything, and I agree. — Jake
I call myself a "Fundamentalist Agnostic", a silly ironic label which points to a position outside of the theist vs. atheist paradigm. — Jake
