The way I see it, you can believe that the universe just exists, that part of it is necessary and there’s no explanation why.
Or...
You can believe that the cosmos derives its existence from a sustaining reality beyond it, and, being beyond space and time, is necessarily immaterial, necessarily timeless, and since it has creative powers, necessarily conscious.
I choose the latter, because it better fits my experience of the world. — AJJ
As fashionable as it is to think the opposite, I think atheism should be counter-intuitive to anyone who hasn’t been misled by the overreaching claims of some scientists, and the gratuitous application of science’s materialism to a broader metaphysical perspective. — AJJ
As for religion and society, moral evils have been committed within religious societies, and moral goods have been too. Our evils are committed by us, not by “religion”, as are our goods. Perhaps you can point us to a society that isn’t guided by beliefs, where we do neither? — AJJ
On a side note, if one reaches a conclusion the tendency for further critical investigation slows, if not stops outright.
— Mayor of Simpleton
If I am missing your point, or if i am suffering from some hyper sensitivity to anti theist posts and read something into this point that was not intended - mea culpa. — Rank Amateur
If one concludes that god does exist, — Mayor of Simpleton
Well... if you had stopped there I'd simply say "OK... it's your life, it's your perception and it's your choice.", but you continued... — Mayor of Simpleton
However my main concern in both your posts is this. They leave me feeling as you believe that the theist conclusion is either "hasty" or not as thoughtfully investigated as buying a new car. Before I charge into attack on that position - all I have been trying to establish is, is that what your position actually is ? — Rank Amateur
Thanks, that’s very patronising of you. — AJJ
I find it difficult to decipher the precise points you make, — AJJ
I some cases the belief one has in the existence of a god is hasty. I could really say the very same for the rejection of the belief in god. — Mayor of Simpleton
I have many friends who are proper theologians. Indeed I do not reach the same conclusion as they do, but I cannot say that their investigations have been without thought or of a hasty nature. We have quality dialogs over many topics including existence of god and in spite of me rejecting their arguments, I can certainly respect them for their investigations. — Mayor of Simpleton
In addition to this I find that the vast majority of folks either don't make or more likely do have the time to go into such a critical analysis. In short they simply have other things to do.
To be fair to them critical debate over the existence of god is not really a common topic in everyday life. — Mayor of Simpleton
I encounter quite a few "atheists" who are really going through a process of being angered with religion or religious folks. This seems rather odd to me, as if one rejects the existence of god then one is an atheist, but simply rejecting religion makes one irreligious. It's as if they never addressed the issue of god existing and simply threw the baby out with the bath water. — Mayor of Simpleton
Can one be thoughtful and avoid a hasty generalized view and be theistic?
Certainly.
Do I believe every argument that is thoughtful and avoids hasty generalizations?
No. — Mayor of Simpleton
Agree - with the caveat - One has no need to be a proper theologian to have made a considered decision to be theistic. — Rank Amateur
agree - and with no basis at all I would add many's atheism is not much deeper than " smart people are atheists, I'm smart - so I'm and atheist too" — Rank Amateur
agree - thanks think we have an understanding — Rank Amateur
I'm not really into winning arguments (seriously what the hell is the prize anyway?), but rather collecting information from other perspective more in the hope to refine the questions being asked to become better questions. — Mayor of Simpleton
My intention was to get across that there’s nothing “hasty” about being a theist, which is what I thought your opinion to be. I gave more detail to the remarks you describe as “aggressive” in my last post. I was rhetorically turning the tables on those who consider atheism to be the default, sensible option, of which I thought you were one; my mistake if you aren’t. — AJJ
My mistake if you truly weren’t doing that and I played back at you without call. — AJJ
Why didn't humans stop at atheism? What went wrong? — VoidDetector
To just simply admit, "I don't know" was not enough for the myth makers in our civilization. — Josh Alfred
in any discussion on knowing, the first issue is some understanding of what the other party's understanding is, and what their basis is for saying what they know. I think that is the major issue in these discussions. — Rank Amateur
If one feel compelled to answer, than the issue is not the "I don't know" it is the "why are you compelled" that is the base of the disagreement. — Rank Amateur
It is the heart of many of these discussions, does faith exist, and if so, does it have any value, can it lead in any way to "knowing " — Rank Amateur
.becuase it has none of the traits that we use to determine what is true a — DingoJones
To perhaps put it a bit more precisely, the myth making machinery out competed the "I don't know" perspective in the social environment. — Jake
Party B believes that one can know something by fact, reason, or faith. — Rank Amateur
Depends how one defines true. How I would define it is a belief that underscores what one does. — Rank Amateur
Party B is wrong. You can't know anything by faith. Faith is a means of achieving peace of mind, not a means of obtaining knowledge. If you want truth, you have to search for it. — S
As we go through the green light in our car, we have faith that other drivers will stop at the red. It is not a matter of fact they will stop, it is reasonable to believe they will stop, it is reasonable to believe many will not. Going through the light is an act of faith. — Rank Amateur
I have never made a case that faith can be in conflict with fact or reason. That is not faith, that is a fool. — Rank Amateur
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