So, as I said above, either the bible is a philosophical text, in which case it needs to be examined as such (i.e what is meant by the various acts of genocide?), or it is a work of meaningless fiction, in which case the discussion (from a philosophical point of view) would be why so many people in philosophy consider it relevant to refer to it. — Pseudonym
I was referencing your response to Erik, and the quotes about hunter-gatherers, not the Bible. — Bitter Crank
His assertion, initially, was that Christianity was responsible for teaching us things like equality and compassion for the less fortunate. The investigations of anthropologists have clearly shown this assertion to be false. — Pseudonym
As I've asked in two posts so far, what point is the scientific philosopher trying to make? What are the implications of the terrible things he says the church has done? Why can't he, or you, answer my question. — T Clark
So, you've gone back and checked my posts since I joined in April? — T Clark
Third option - As many Christians believe, it is the revealed word of God. The fact that you don't even mention that says a lot about where you are coming from. — T Clark
I have answered your question. I wrote "If we're going to do the latter (as it seems we are here), then the first thing we look for is consistency, that's pretty much philosophy's number one tool to interrogate any theory. The fact that the bible/Christians advocate a system which simultaneously preaches both love and genocide then becomes extremely relevant to any philosophical interrogation of its ideas." That is the point. The Bible is inconsistent, ironing out inconsistency is a purpose of philosophy, this is a philosophical forum. — Pseudonym
With regards to the suggestion that your comment was directly aimed at the fact that the OP had not specified what his point was, rather than an assertion that there could be no point (which is how I read it), then I can only apologise profusely for missing the point. You are entirely correct hat the OP's failure to specify what exactly he wanted to discuss is remiss, as is his failure to engage further. None of this changes the fact that an interesting discussion can nonetheless be had on this topic. — Pseudonym
That Christians might believe this is irrelevant philosophically and this is a philosophy forum. On a forum about politics, or theology, that option might be relevant, but I don't see how if figures here. I am intrigued though as to what it would have 'said' about where I'm coming from. — Pseudonym
Your intent is to discredit Christianity. — T Clark
There is no way it can be legitimately discussed without including the fact it is the primary document founding and guiding the Christian religion. The fact you don't recognize or aren't willing to acknowledge that undermines the credibility of your argument and, in my opinion, shows you aren't willing to address the issues we're discussing directly with an open mind. — T Clark
no one should believe in the Christian God.
no one should believe in any God.
religion should be outlawed.
Christians should be put in jail.
people shouldn't give their money to religious institutions.
the Christian church is evil.
the clergy should be put in jail.
we should stop giving tax breaks to religious institutions. — T Clark
I've tentatively concluded that Christianity has discredited itself by having such massive inconsistencies in it's guiding book. I'm not sure it's fair to conclude that must therefore be what I set out to do. If everyone had their conclusions seen as prejudiced simply because they are negative we would be quite restricted in our judgments would we not? — Pseudonym
So, if we, as non-religious people are to counter an argument from religion, how may we do so objectively? We cannot simply defer to whatever the proponent says their religion is. That would deny us any right to present our own subjective view of the world. So if someone brings religion into an argument that involves people who are not religious, it is unfair to expect that we only examine their claims on their terms. — Pseudonym
So, as I said above, either the bible is a philosophical text, in which case it needs to be examined as such (i.e what is meant by the various acts of genocide?), or it is a work of meaningless fiction, in which case the discussion (from a philosophical point of view) would be why so many people in philosophy consider it relevant to refer to it. — Pseudonym
Similarly, what our hunting and gathering forebears knew didn't get passed down along with their genes. — Bitter Crank
Just because you don't agree with that, doesn't mean it can reasonably be left out of the discussion. — T Clark
You still haven't answered my question regarding this. What exactly does allowing that some people think it's the word of God look like? Apart from the fact that I didn't specifically mention that option in my list (which I considered to be included in 'philosophical texts'), what else have I not done to take account of this? — Pseudonym
We will pass over in silence the fact that sometimes "feet" were a euphemism for "penis" — Bitter Crank
Compassion is a most worthy thing, honored all over the world since time immemorial, more in the breach than in the observance. — Bitter Crank
So every reminder helps. — Bitter Crank
obedience to God? — Pseudonym
using fear of retribution is damaging to children — Pseudonym
The child's brain is wired to make a connection between the limbic system, where fear is felt, and the pre-frontal cortex where we make decisions about right and wrong. "Fear" doesn't require harsh discipline, but enough punishment (which may be nothing more than disapproving expressions and gestures, or being sat in the corner for 5 minutes) for the child to feel that he has something to lose by behaving badly. — Bitter Crank
I'd also imagine that advocating universal compassion - beyond the narrow confines of the tribe, race, or nation - is something uniquely Christian. — Erik
We have only one history, it is retrospective determinism to say that because Christianity preached compassion (along with it's justifications for holy wars, inquisitions, witch hunts and child abuse) we could not have arrived at the same point some other way had Christianity not done so. — Pseudonym
People who worry about the sky god behave because this god knows all their secrets, their comings, goings, and various wicked acts if they had performed any. — Bitter Crank
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