The problem is that "such ideas" are arguably, the foundation of society; and here's where the atheist must falter - short of an alternate higher power in which to invest ultimate authority. — counterpunch
science doesn't actually rule out the existence of God. — counterpunch
Any method which declines to challenge it's own fundamental assumptions is not philosophy, but instead merely ideology. It's not reason and logic to refuse to examine and challenge the qualifications of reason and logic. — Foghorn
In atheism the core (blind faith in reason) is very rarely touched. Most atheists don't even know it's there. There's typically far more doubt honestly expressed in theism than in atheism. — Foghorn
religion is more realistic than atheism about the human condition, and more compassionate in serving that reality. This not because theists are smarter, but only because they've been doing their thing far longer. — Foghorn
Here's the evidence...
To this day, religion continues to thrive in every time and place. It's been doing so for thousands of years. That is, religion is a "creature" very well adapted to it's environment, the human mind. Natural selection is demonstrating the power of religion to anyone willing to listen to the evidence. — Foghorn
In my view you make a common mistake by trying to include a whole world view under the rubric of atheism. It only pertains to theism, nothing more. Over 30 years I've certainly met more than my share of atheists who believe in fortune telling and astrology. The idea that logic or reason is involved is a myth. It pertains to those atheists who are theorised. — Tom Storm
Where is the logic and reason to prove that logic and reason are better than experience and belief — Trinidad
And most atheists do not live their lives purely by logic and reason. That's impossible. — Trinidad
And the believers in rationality just assume rationality can explain everything. Whence and why this faith? — Trinidad
Whatever these people say about themselves, they are not atheists. — Christoffer
Many theists are blinded by the idea that religion and God is a foundation for which a fragile society is built upon. — Christoffer
I have no problem living my life based on logic and reason. — Christoffer
Epistemology you say? Is there any agreement or conclusions in that field of philosophy?
If not,your whole post is moot.
And to be honest,you sound just as dogmatic and ill informed as a fundamentalist. — Trinidad
You are committing the no true Scotsman fallacy. — Tom Storm
Atheism is without theism. It says nothing about any other irrational beliefs the person might hold. — Tom Storm
The ideal atheist may well be someone who privileges reason and holds to no superstition but that is a wholly separate matter. — Tom Storm
Most of the critiques of religion arise right out of a moralism which was given to western culture by the Jews. The Christians then became the leading salesmen of such moralism (not to be confused with being morally superior). So many atheists think they can just pull the plug and walk away from these thousands of years of history. It doesn't work that way. — Foghorn
But I can't stop thinking like a Catholic, that is, being interested in the kinds of things Catholics are interested in (thus my comments here) because that doesn't arise from my personal choice, but from many centuries of Catholic DNA up my family tree. That's built in. We don't just turn it off with the flip of a switch. — Foghorn
Except, if you are an atheist, your life is not based on logic and reason. At least not that part of it.
Atheism is not reason. Atheism is an ideology which competes with religious ideology. — Foghorn
Epistemology has no foundations,no conclusions. So you just have faith in reason.
In reality you are worshipping the ideological biographies of dead philosophers. — Trinidad
Where is the epistemological justification for rationality? — Trinidad
Where is the logic and reason to prove that logic and reason are better than experience and belief — Trinidad
Have you not read your plato? The meno? — Trinidad
Many theists are blinded by the idea that religion and God is a foundation for which a fragile society is built upon. It's the Nietzchian fear of nihilism. — Christoffer
The only people who think that a society can't exist without a religious foundation, are the ones within such a religious framework. It's a usual theist argument that society needs religion and faith, but every time we have true atheism as the foundation in society, it's actually a lot more peaceful and rational. The common counterargument from theists then points out Leninist and Stalinist communism as an example of atheistic societies, but this is just false. Not only is it a simplification of Marxism, since Lenin and Stalin corrupted those ideas, but the key factor is that both Stalin and Lenin replaced God as a religious figure. — Christoffer
As I've said, atheism is about logical reasoning as a foundation, not proving God's lack of existence. If anything, in philosophy, the burden of proof is on the theist side and has been forever. — Christoffer
God debates are like dancing. There's a series of steps that everyone has memorized, and it's fun to get together on the dance floor and do the dance yet again.
There's no crime in it. Life is short and fun is good. It's just not philosophy, that's all. — Foghorn
So any epistemological proofs for reason? — Trinidad
This was site of Nietzsche's 'inversion of values' - not the strong fooled by the weak, but a translation from morality inherent to the structural relations of the kinship tribe, to objectivised social values, attributed to God. Thus, the natural obligation upon anyone hacking away at the pillars of moral authority is that they have some adequate alternative - and this politically correct secular relativism is neither one thing nor another. — counterpunch
I would raise Stalin and Mao as examples of atheist societies butchering their populations on a scale that make Hitler look like an amateur genocidal nutter! Exactly that, and they're actual examples - to compare to your purely hypothetical atheist societies, you claim are always more peaceful. Would you care to name these havens of veritable enlightenment? — counterpunch
Would you care to name these havens of veritable enlightenment? — counterpunch
As University of London professor Stephen Law has observed, “if declining levels of religiosity were the main cause of…social ills, we should expect those countries that are now the least religious to have the greatest problems. The reverse is true."
That's some myopic logic, don't you think? I cannot accept that's how this question presents itself to people. I think maybe, that's how you post-rationalise your deeper motives, but I cannot imagine someone becoming familiar with epistemology and logic, before encountering the concept of God, and so concluding "the burden proof is with the theist, and that shall be an end of the matter!" Well, it's not the end of the matter because God is a concept that serves a wider social and political purpose - and logic aside, it's probably not wise to undermine that concept without even understanding its function! — counterpunch
I cannot imagine someone becoming familiar with epistemology and logic, before encountering the concept of God — counterpunch
Well, it's not the end of the matter because God is a concept that serves a wider social and political purpose - and logic aside, it's probably not wise to undermine that concept without even understanding its function! — counterpunch
The burden of proof is on the one making the claim. — Christoffer
Please prove that human reason is qualified to meaningfully address the very largest of questions. Thank you. — Foghorn
The proof from epistemology that justifies reason as being true. — Trinidad
Where is the logic and reason to prove that logic and reason are better than experience and belief
Please prove that human reason is qualified to meaningfully address the very largest of questions. Thank you. — Foghorn
Human reason is how we know facts about the world and universe, the very reason you are able to write on a machine right now is because of this. — Christoffer
So, please disprove and then prove that religion does the same — Christoffer
I'm asking how you prove reason is true?
You haven't shown reason is superior to experience. You have just listed some assertions.
Logic rests on non provable axioms. Its just that you feel they are justified. Same as religion. From feelings. — Trinidad
This is basic stuff. — Christoffer
Nietzsche's inversion of values refers to how Christianity reverses the natural into the opposite. It stems from his contempt for Christianity. — Christoffer
God and religion is still irrelevant to humanity if we have good non-religious ethics system in place (which we have) and live our lives with self-reflection, skepticism, and a sense of logic and rational reasoning. — Christoffer
Another who hasn't understood epistemology. — Trinidad
I'm asking how you prove reason is true?
You haven't shown reason is superior to experience. You have just listed some assertions.
Logic rests on non provable axioms. Its just that you feel they are justified. Same as religion. From feelings. — Trinidad
Nietzsche was wrong. Nihilism is false. Man in a state of nature was not an amoral, self serving brute - and we can know this because our species survived, generation after generation, raising children - for millions of years. Homo sapiens is a moral creature. — counterpunch
Faith is required because of the social significance of the concept; not because of its apparent truth or eminent provability. Indeed, religion seems to go out of its way to stretch credulity! Why? Because belief serves a purpose - and arguably, it's an important purpose that's been displaced without being replaced. — counterpunch
It's not that I disagree; per se - but would just point out that humankind is barrelling toward extinction — counterpunch
Their way of life is sustainable, while ours isn't. And that unsustainability, I would argue - is the consequence of a mistaken relationship between religion and science, that is in turn the author of your mistaken relationship to God. — counterpunch
Given apparent design in nature, God is a credible hypothesis explaining existence; the first cause argument is about as reasonable as, and not exclusive of the big bang. — counterpunch
Epistemically, you'd be agnostic with regard to the validity of the hypothesis - whereas, you positively claim to know there's no God. — counterpunch
Given the affirmative stance you've taken with respect to the debate proposition, you must demonstrate that "my atheism" is not logical (i.e. not valid). On other hand, in order to defeat the proposition at issue, I must express "my atheism"s" logical form only to show its validity and not to demonstrate that its conclusions are also sound (i.e. true). It's not "my preference", 3017, but what the terms of the debate require. (180 Proof)
Strangely, I WAS raised in a religious family and it STILL took me by surprise some time during my growing-up when I realized that adults didn’t think of Jesus and Santa Claus the same way: stories you tell children as if they were true as a kind of game or moral lesson but not something grown-ups literally believe in.
My family gave me all kinds of religious fiction (as in, stories even the believers knew was fiction) that featured angels in modern times and prayer saving people via miracles, or events in ancient times featuring fantastic monsters defeated by righteous soldiers of God, that so far as I could tell was indistinguishable from urban or high fantasy respectively. So that probably (unintentionally on their part) helped me to categorize religious mythology in the same category as any avowedly fictional mythopoesis. — Pfhorrest
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