This concerns belief. If you believe in an afterlife, your idea of life's meaning will be with respect to that. — Kenosha Kid
Connecting with God is a good in itself; the ultimate good, really. Jewish teachings as it was taught to me has always been to not worry about the afterlife until one is near death. — BitconnectCarlos
:strong:Hence the incomparable superiority of Spinoza over even a single page of Schopenhauer: "The free person thinks least of all of death, and his wisdom is a meditation not on death but on life". Schopenhauer being exactly the kind of miserable person who made his personality a philosophy. — StreetlightX
:fire:One imagines that the theist - for all his inventions of sky daddies and karmic mysteries - has a lack of imagination so severe that he has to invent a whole 'mythos' to cover over their total inability to recognize 'meaning' seeping through every pore of the universe without all that trash. — StreetlightX
:point: What do 'believers' 'theists' 'idealists' et al mean when they chastise atheists and/or materialists, etc by saying, in effect, that atheism / materialism entails "life has no meaning"? And do tell why that is an objection (bug) rather than an affirmation (feature).It was previously a question of finding out whether or not life had to have a meaning to be lived. It now becomes clear on the contrary that it will be lived all the better if it has no meaning. Living an experience, a particular fate, is accepting it fully. Now, no one will live this fate, knowing it to be absurd, unless he does everything to keep before him that absurd brought to light by consciousness. — The Myth of Sisyphus and Other Essays
What do 'believers' 'theists' 'idealists' et al mean when they chastise atheists and/or materialists, etc by saying, in effect, that atheism / materialism entails "life has no meaning"? — 180 Proof
What do 'believers' 'theists' 'idealists' et al mean when they chastise atheists and/or materialists, etc by saying, in effect, that atheism / materialism entails "life has no meaning"? — 180 Proof
There's no bigger anti-smoker than an ex-smoker, and no greater evangelical than a recent convert. So you went for Judaism? Good for you. This Christianity nonsense is just a fad, it'll pass :D — Kenosha Kid
Same problem, though. If you believe that your purpose is to love God, nothing can be more important, right? But if you don't believe in God, that notion of meaning is worthless. The meaning only has value if you believe in it, which means it's basically arbitrary (insofar as one can choose to believe anything else or nothing). — Kenosha Kid
No, I didn't convert to Judaism. I've been a Jew for 30 years because I was born one and being an atheist doesn't disqualify one from being a Jew. — BitconnectCarlos
Under Judaism our purpose is to connect with God and we do this via rituals (like praying) and mitzvot (good deeds) — BitconnectCarlos
This "all or nothing" mentality you have here seems to me like it's a more of a factor in Christianity than in Judaism. There are plenty of Jewish atheists but just because one is an atheist at one point doesn't mean that that will always be the case or that God's non-existence is regarded as a certainty. — BitconnectCarlos
the best spreaders like Islam and Christianity are universalistic and faith-based and they tend to spread quicker — BitconnectCarlos
The second sentence doesn't support the first. Jewish is an ethnicity. Judaism is an ethnic religion, as you apparently know since you tell me that: — Kenosha Kid
Or are you trying to say that Jewish atheists' purpose is to connect with God? — Kenosha Kid
The point of my conversation with Wayfarer is that he believes these sorts of meanings, where there is some higher purpose intended and some ultimate goal to aspire to, have values generally, such that to be without such a meaning is a loss.
— Kenosha Kid
That's correct, and I stand by that. — Wayfarer
Whereas you don't seem to be able to wrap your head around the idea that a meaning derived from a teleological creator isn't worth a damn outside of a creationist framework, that other meanings that are worth a damn in other frameworks are actually the weightier ones in those frameworks. No one's craving a higher purpose from a non-existent entity, it's not that conceptually difficult. — Kenosha Kid
While you're painting him as the standard Southern redneck fundie. — baker
What do 'believers' 'theists' 'idealists' et al mean when they chastise atheists and/or materialists, etc by saying, in effect, that atheism / materialism entails "life has no meaning"? And do tell why that is an objection (bug) rather than an affirmation (feature). — 180 Proof
What is the secret to being happy in a foxhole? — Baker
This is a strawman.I think they believe that it's impossible to find meaning for yourself and that it must be spoon-fed to us by some robed authority figure. — praxis
Of course.My description is limited to the constraints in understanding how different ideas of life's meaning appear to different people. — Kenosha Kid
You're blocking the conversation from getting anywhere, it never develops into the directions I want it to go in.I'm hardly painting him as a placard-waving, abortionist-murdering, homophobe who loves his guns
The implication being that ...?just for pointing out that the only meaning he recognises isn't worth a damn to many of us.
You're blocking the conversation from getting anywhere, it never develops into the directions I want it to go in. — baker
The implication being that ...? — baker
One imagines that the theist - for all his inventions of sky daddies and karmic mysteries - has a lack of imagination so severe that he has to invent a whole 'mythos' to cover over their total inability to recognize 'meaning' seeping through every pore of the universe without all that trash. Theism is and will always be simply a hatred of the world, motivated by a deep existential impotence, projected outward as a defense mechanism, and then demanded of everyone else on pain of suffering that same complete failure of imagination as they have. — StreetlightX
You're creating a hostile discussion environment that is not conducive to discussing the topics I want to discuss.I'm doing no such thing. Everyone is free to try to take the conversation in an on-topic direction, although no one is obliged to follow them. I couldn't tempt WF to go my way, but there's nothing stopping you, fill your boots. Since my and WF's conversation died ages ago, the obvious blocker is that you're spending your time talking to me about my conversation instead of having yours. — Kenosha Kid
You're creating a hostile discussion environment that is not conducive to discussing the topics I want to discuss.
At the same time, what the vocal antireligionists are saying are clues for the topics I do want to discuss.
Hm. — baker
Of course. But what I see in this is braggartry. When people say or imply in any way that they "have it all figured out", I want to see how they actually hold up against life's hardships, regardless of whether they are theists, atheists, or whatever. I want to take them to Rhodes, to see how they jump there.Sorry, that it's no loss to an atheist/physicalist that we have no teleological meaning. — Kenosha Kid
For centuries, it was expected of soldiers to have courage under fire, hence the phrase.On the other hand, a foxhole denotes an active war context in which the cortisol response would make the notion of "happy" almost satirical in a neurotypical person. — Cheshire
Of course. But what I see in this is braggartry. When people say or imply in any way that they "have it all figured out", I want to see how they actually hold up against life's hardships, regardless of whether they are theists, atheists, or whatever. I want to take them to Rhodes, to see how they jump there. — baker
A good way of approaching the question imo is anthropologically: do humans tend to behave as if their life has meaning, not just value? There are people for whom this seems to be true, but they are likely exceptional. I doubt that I, being unexceptional, would live much of a different life whether it had meaning or not, which is as good an indicator as I can think of that it doesn't. — Kenosha Kid
But you speak with great confidence. This is enough of a clue.I haven't claimed to figure anything out. I've put forth no meaning of my own. — Kenosha Kid
But you speak with great confidence. This is enough of a clue. — baker
The sentence of yours I'm quoting is actually the kind of thing I've heard from religious people as well, when they say things like, "Think for yourself, look into various religions and then objectively, without bias, decide for yourself which one is the right one." — baker
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