Nothing imbued me with a shirt. I'm still wearing one; it's not an illusion. — Kenosha Kid
We are survival machines – robot vehicles blindly programmed to preserve the selfish molecules known as genes. This is a truth which still fills me with astonishment. — Richard Dawkins
But in the absence of that, it doesn't come naturally, I don't think. — Wayfarer
It is a pathetically simplistic statement. — Wayfarer
if what materialism says is true - if we are a kind of 'rogue chemical reaction', the outcome of a 'collocation of atoms', as Bertrand Russell put it- then any idea of meaning is basically an illusion. — Wayfarer
The point about philosophical materialism is that any notion of meaning is at best a biological adaptation. — Wayfarer
Strictly speaking, of course, ‘astonishment’ is itself simply a byproduct of adrenaline and ought to be given no especial significance (unless, of course, it’s an unconscious echo of Dawkin’s Anglican ancestry which might be mined for a bit of irony.) But that’s what the scientifically-literate atheists are seeking to persuade us of. If you feel that they’re wrong by all means feel free to correct them. — Wayfarer
This is of course, built into religious strategy - paint the human as a wretched, fallen creature, all the more in need of saving. It's cult mechanics, employed by abusers everywhere to foster a sense of dependency - writ large by religion. — StreetlightX
So if materialism says we're not given meaning by a creator, and let's assume we're not given meaning by our genetics (unless you don't want to assume that), we're still not necessarily deprived of meaning. — Kenosha Kid
We also have evolved to have empathy (how else could we rear our young?). — Tom Storm
I can't wrap my head around one thing. God, according to theists, imbues our lives with meaning.
— TheMadFool
It's more that: if what materialism says is true - if we are a kind of 'rogue chemical reaction', the outcome of a 'collocation of atoms', as Bertrand Russell put it- then any idea of meaning is basically an illusion. — Wayfarer
The whole is greater than the sum of its parts. — Aristotle
If ...free will is important ...it's more reasonable to assume that God would grant us full self-determination which means we're at liberty to pick n choose our own purpose, our very own meaning, suited to our tastes and temperament.
— TheMadFool
That is actually what mainstream Christianity believes.
let God dictate your life's choices
— TheMadFool
And that isn't. — Wayfarer
Hopefully this isn't a pile on Wayfarer thing. :smile: — Tom Storm
I think the atheists would argue that meaning exists because we are meaning making animals who endlessly invent things - a range of loose, shared meanings being amongst these inventions, which include mores and morals. — Tom Storm
It's a matter of underwriting meaning - not simply 'making it up'. Buddhists don't believe they are 'given meaning by a Creator' but they nevertheless accept there is dharma, that is, moral law. — Wayfarer
if what materialism says is true - if we are a kind of 'rogue chemical reaction', the outcome of a 'collocation of atoms', as Bertrand Russell put it- then any meaning is not underwritten. — Wayfarer
Given people do precisely this, it must be true. I think for all the lofty talk about meaning requiring some transcendent foundation, I believe people obtain meaning from being in the world, interacting and doing things. Possessions, nature, music, food, friends, family, home, whatever you are into is where your meaning comes from. I believe this is true for theists and atheists alike. — Tom Storm
you just can't handle people pointing out where you're wrong. — Kenosha Kid
If you want to defend the point, great, but like you say this is a philosophy forum and posts like your last aren't going to cut it: that's just tantrum-throwing. — Kenosha Kid
If you don't feel inclined to defend the point, just have some dignity and move on peacefully. If you're just trying to pick a moronic fight, well carry on as you are I guess. I'm here to discuss the matter, including the finer details. For the record, I considered the matter closed several posts ago. — Kenosha Kid
But in the absence of that, it doesn't come naturally, I don't think. — Wayfarer
then any idea of meaning is basically an illusion. — Wayfarer
Also since evolution is not about identifying truth, only what works for survival, then anything that comes out of an evolutionary perspective (e.g., anything by Dawkins) has no truth value. — Tom Storm
I'm an atheist who finds meaning in the usual things, probably not much differently from theists and other non-believers. I think that's just what humans do. Calling any values 'underwritten' is just a labelling exercise - like having a brand of marmalade that is sold by 'appointment to her Majesty Queen Elizabeth' (reference for Commonwealth country folk). — Tom Storm
Let's start with everyone else supporting their counter-argument first, please. I can either roll my thumbs waiting or just continue to ask for something substantial. — Christoffer
I can see how you'd like that to work, but that's not how it works. Claims aren't true until proven otherwise. Since you are unwilling to defend your point, no one else is obliged to disprove it. — Kenosha Kid
It was infantile tantrum-throwing and nothing more, quite obstructive to the sorts of detail you now claim to want. — Kenosha Kid
If you have anything to counterargue what I just wrote in the previous post, please do that, because I'm tired of infantile belief arguments that would never pass basic philosophical scrutiny or believers just saying I'm wrong without any further elaboration. I'm still waiting for anything substantial. — Christoffer
But claims like 'most wars in human history have been religious wars' need to rest on more than having atheism in common. — Kenosha Kid
In no sense have you supported your claim, and this shouldn't be too surprising given a) your unnecessary hostility toward disagreement, b) your preference for expansive complaints over a single sentence of justification, and c) your inconstant attitude to whether the problem is that people are focusing too much on this one thing or aren't going into enough detail. — Kenosha Kid
Let's take what should be an easy example for you: jihad. On the one hand, nothing could be a better example of the warlike nature of religiosity than something that calls itself Holy War and whose Cyberman-like message is 'convert or die/be raped'. It's written there in their primary text, so no escaping it.
And yet, for the most part, Islam has been and remains a particularly peaceful, sophisticated religion. If 1001 people read the same book, 1000 think "peace" and 1 thinks "kill", is the religion accounting for the war, or the difference between that 1 and the other 1000? — Kenosha Kid
The common denominator in all war is definitely not religion, and the common denominator of all religions is not war. — Kenosha Kid
But the meaninglessness of the game may be the very meaning that you are searching for. A Dadaesque rejection of reason and logic for irrationality and intuition, a Continental rather than analytic approach.
As Duchamp wrote: "All this twaddle, the existence of God, atheism, determinism, liberation, societies, death, etc., are pieces of a chess game called language, and they are amusing only if one does not preoccupy oneself with 'winning or losing this game of chess.” — RussellA
My issue with atheism is that it's a fairweather friend. Atheism, and along with it, hedonism, nihilism, pessimism are all fine and well -- as long as health and wealth last. But they are not conducive to living a productive life, and they are especially not conducive to rebuilding one's life once health and wealth are lost.I would add that philosophically, I find atheism barren, because the implications are that life is an absurdity - a thought Camus was very familiar with. — Wayfarer
Why do you think this is important?What is important about religion is finding the source of what Christians call agapé, unconditional compassion, and what Buddhists call bodhicitta
Okay then. X is not given to us by a creator. We are not born with X. Does it follow that X is, at best, an illusion? — Kenosha Kid
When I got home a friend asked if I'm religious now. I replied sincerely: fuck off. — Christoffer
We're at a philosophy forum, where critical thinking shall reign supreme!EDIT: I seem to be largely defending religion atm. I have no explanation for that. — Kenosha Kid
It's so interesting to see you all focusing on this out of the entirety of my argument. It's like you don't get my point whatsoever. — Christoffer
But is this really a fact?On topic, I'd never really considered the fact that the whole notion of 'no atheists in foxholes' is a comment less about atheists than it is about religion - the fact that religion is what one turns to when one is in a desperate, base situation of immanent death. — StreetlightX
I don't see religion that way at all. I grew in a monoreligious monoculture. From what I've seen, religious people don't care about the religious teachings at all; it's all just for show and keeping up appearances, apparently for the purpose of playing power games and maintaining social order. These people live artfully crafted double lives: with an official, public face, and a private one that is quite unaffected by the public one. Those who end up troubled and traumatized are the ones who weren't able to build and maintain this dichotomy.As far as life being an absurdity without religion, I find the opposite to the case - that religion appeals to the fascist in all of us, who wants to be told what to do by way of some prior cosmic ordering. It is a trembling before freedom, rooted in fear, expressed in the arrogation of tribal campfire stories to cosmic proportion. — StreetlightX
That's true but you can have religious empires so the question is where to draw the line between the empire building and the religion as the source.
I think its a worthwhile distinction to make. — DingoJones
Sure, but whence this desire to build an empire, whence the motivation for it, whence the justification for the killing, raping, and pillaging?Looking at the list in Wikipedia, it seems to me that most wars are caused by empire building — T Clark
But the religious can actually say the same thing!The game is played using one's free play of imagination and understanding, one's reason and logic in harmony with one's irrationality and intuition. In this foxhole of sometimes crisis and chaos, rather than timorously looking outwards for imagined support and consolation, to look courageously inwards in order to find the strength in the reality of one's own existence.
IE, meaning comes from playing the game using the human spirit of imagination and understanding. — RussellA
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