It doesn't really give you a key though. Camus is still dodging by assigning meaning and value to living. Nihilism says there is no meaning or value. — Darkneos
amus doesn't matter. The relevant one is Jean Genet. Life is not a pleasure, but suicide consists of a low level of serotonin in the nervous system. — Miguel Hernández
Is religeon primarily concerned with human Morals? Or primarily with religeous Ritual? Or primarily concened with advice about mundane concerns of day to day living? Or primarily concerned with group activities such as Bingo games or picnics? Or economics? Or all of the above in equal amounts? — Ken Edwards
Yeah. There is a thesis in this subject and we have yet to define terms. Modernism is long gone and was a hugely influential movement that ultimately led to post-modernism.Well, what is the difference between modernity and modernism? — TheHedoMinimalist
have noticed that there seems to be quite a few philosophers who have a tendency of spending a lot of time criticizing modernity. — TheHedoMinimalist
ringing up bigotry as somehow intrinsic to any of this is confabulation. Who is really comforting themselves here? No offence. — Paul S
So the mystery of the origin of life is very real. — Gary Enfield
Okay. So fairies aren't real, you say. But if someone were to experience a fairy, doesn't it make it real to them? Imagine your child has had a very vivid dream about a fairy. Wouldn't it be cruel to say the experience isn't real? — TaySan
Okay. Then give me an example of a linguistic concept that isn't real, if you can. — TaySan
You're cherry picking. That's not at all in the spirit of what I was getting at. — Paul S
Theists are open to the possibility that something divine or supernatural can interfere with an experience and effect the outcome - that's very like an indeterministic outlook of the universe.
Atheists are not accepting of a divine or supernatural influence on experience that can effect an outcome - that's very like a deterministic outlook of the universe. — Paul S
What do you think about my argument that God exists as a linguistic concept. Therefore God exists as a construct in our mind. Therefore God is real? — TaySan
To all The Bible can't be held in one mind... — TheMadFool
I was reading that 80% of marriages end up soon after in divorce and that 10% are unhappy that they are married. — Thinking
here is love and Camus does speak of it... — Cate
I prefer Non-Whites — 180 Proof
The best way to become an atheist is to read the Bible — Dan Barker
Theism just resonates more with me and feels more like how it really is, at least for me. It's at the edge of perception, or what an Atheist would call delusion, it's subjective and fuzzy so it's not like I can really support my view. — Paul S
Well, as far as I know, what is said must stand on its own, who said it is irrelevant. Ref: Epicurean dilemma. — TheMadFool
was saying that it seems like (most) people will do just about anything to obtain something for nothing (and the great majority of it is perfectly legal). — synthesis
What I don't understand is the way in which the whole area of religious thinking has to come down to those who see the central issues viewing in literal traditional ways(Christian or other views), or the other alternatives of atheism. Both seem so extreme. — Jack Cummins
I think that the better question would be is what evidence do you have to suggest that Jung was a 'crank'? I think it is difficult to measure his ideas and probably the only way you could do this would be to measure the way in which his ideas or Jungian therapy have a positive impact on people's lives. — Jack Cummins
I don't see how believing in the existence of Socrates has anything to do with the merits/demerits of his philosophy? — TheMadFool
Carl Jung spoke of the importance of dreams and those coming from the collective unconscious. I do believe that the idea of the collective unconscious is useful for thinking about as a source from which images and stories evolve. — Jack Cummins
Well, I'm approaching the issue from a Doestoevskyian point of view, the view that "if god didn't exist, anything would be permissible" — TheMadFool
Well, this in no way proves that believing in God is, in and of itself, a moral act in the same category as saving someone's life or helping the poor, right? — TheMadFool
Isn't the problem of induction something in philosophy as well ? — Swimmingwithfishes
Nevertheless, there are also another kind of atheists who think there is nothing afterwards. — javi2541997
I haven't ever encountered a man of the cloth taking the position that mere belief amounts to a moral act, an act of goodness, an act that would be equivalent to established good actions such as charity or saving someone for example. — TheMadFool
So I guess not believing in any kind of God goes further than “not having any proof of his existence” — javi2541997
There are no moral differences between atheists and theists - both camps seem to be doing fine in the ethics department as far as I can tell. — TheMadFool
Therefore I really don't know why atheists are so often criticized and thought to have a baseless set of beliefs, when their reasoning may indeed be more credible than that of someone who basically has no more than faith in the existence of God. — BBQueue
I'm agnostic atheist because the evidence for the existence of any god isn't strong enough to convince me but I don't claim to know there are no gods. — GTTRPNK
But only because government is expressed through the state, and not through the indirect interaction of individuals. — Gus Lamarch
