• tim wood
    9.3k
    Question to so-called theists, simple question needing only a yes or no answer, and not even a need to post your answer. Can you tell the difference between what does and does not exist? And if you do not understand the question, nothing wrong with reading it several times.
    ---------
    Difficulty in answering suggests to me a failure to understand "exist." And yet it must seem that pretty much everyone understands "exist." Of course the question that vexes so-called theists is that non-theists do not agree with them that god exists. I say so-called theists because real theists I've known simply do not formally speak of god in terms of existence, excepting in qualified ways.

    And the theists' qualified "existence" is always in terms of belief, and that belief as a founding presupposition of their faith. I.e., a faith and belief that neither seeks nor would even accept evidence of the existence of god, not least because existence would destroy the faith. And this worked out a long time ago. People who do not understand this sometimes call themselves Christian, but they are not Christian because in insisting on a reality, they deny faith. In a way, insistence on a real god is very Pagan.

    Back to existence. Existence and evidence/proof of existence have a peculiar quality: they must co-exist, and for obvious reasons! It would seem that nothing exists without also being provably existing. But the quality of the existence then depends on the quality of the evidence/proof. Unicorns certainly exist, but only as ideas, there existing no physical evidence/proof of the existence, now or ever, of unicorns. My chair certainly exists, and there are many proofs of its existence.

    Some things exist conjecturally, as ideas to be sure, but evidence/proof lacking but conjecturally existing. and so forth. Ad this covering experimental sciences.

    But God is claimed to exist, but without evidence. And those who claim it are not interested in God as idea. Nor will conjectural existence do. But the evidence of my life is that such claims are made by incoherent people, though themselves being in other ways reasonable. Why or how incoherent? Because of the impossibility of making it coherent, yet insisting on it anyway. By making it coherent I mean simply connecting the idea of an existing God with anything else one knows about the world as a place of evidence/proof based existence.

    Which all comes back to a basic point. To my way of thinking, if you believe in God, good for you and for the good it will do you. If you want Him to be real, then make him real. Give evidence/proof of that existence.

    But that the faithful will never do because they understand their faith, and the ones making the claims will never do, because they cannot.
  • Kinglord1090
    137

    I have mentioned it, wait did I? Yes, I did.
    I mentioned that theists and atheists alike share their opinions and sometimes force them, and sharing is fine, but forcing isnt.
    Flat earthers force other people to have the same belief as them.
    Thats why they are wrong in the given situation.
  • SteveMinjares
    89
    In Philosophy, we must ask and argue about anything in doubt and unclear. When we keep silence, Philosophy ceased to be Philosophy.Corvus

    I am far from being religious in fact I am probably the worst Christian around. What I am advocating is civil liberty. And how philosophy can be warped to justify oppression and excuse intolerant thinking.

    My fear is not about my faith but warning you all about extremism ideology in any shape and form. And we should be preaching about open mindedness and not this arrogant thinking of I’m right your wrong or vice versa.

    Is this sentiment that we need to expelle so we can all evolve as a civilization. If you reduce your self by calling faith as a fairytale than your just throwing out disrespectful babble and no one will take you serious as an intellectual.
  • DingoJones
    2.8k


    Flat earthers are wrong because the earth isn't flat, forcing a belief on someone has no bearing on whether or not that belief is true.
  • Kinglord1090
    137

    Same could be said for religion as well, if we only talk about it from the 'existence of God' point of view.
    If we also look at social welfare and happiness, of course its not as bad as flat earthers.
  • DingoJones
    2.8k


    What if the person actually is wrong, and their wrong belief causes harm?
    Isnt it important to correct peoples incorrect beliefs? Of course it is. The question is why should we make an exception for incorrect beliefs being held to account just in the case of religious or spiritual thinking? They should be held to the same standard as everyone else.
  • Corvus
    3.4k
    Is this sentiment that we need to expelle so we can all evolve as a civilization. If you reduce your self by calling faith as a fairytale than your just throwing out disrespectful babble and no one will take you serious as an intellectualSteveMinjares

    My motto in philosophy is - "All I know is that, I know nothing." Does it sound intellectual?


    What I am advocating is civil liberty. And how philosophy can be warped to justify oppression and excuse intolerant thinking.

    My fear is not about my faith but warning you all about extremism ideology in any shape and form. And we should be preaching about open mindedness and not this arrogant thinking of I’m right your wrong or vice versa.
    SteveMinjares

    By the way, bringing in the phrases like "civil liberty ... intolerant thinking and warnings", etc sound like power hungry political threats. No thank you.
  • Apollodorus
    3.4k
    What is the point?SteveMinjares

    Good question. I guess if it's an atheist forum then there would be a natural tendency to keep reinforcing the atheist position?

    I think philosophical discussions on belief vs atheism should be conducted from a neutral position but that isn't going to happen as people tend to get worked up over things and it tends to descend into mud-slinging and insult-trading.

    Personally, I think this is a shame because it is a topic that seems to be of interest to many people (obviously, in some parts of the world more than in others) and both sides can learn from one another.

    Finding another forum is probably the best option, depending on what exactly it is that you want to discuss, etc.
  • DingoJones
    2.8k


    Ya, it depends on what the specific religious claim is being made,
    My point was that forcing someone to face the truth isnt always a bad thing and though we should have an open mind it shouldn't be so open it falls out. If someone isnt making sense or believes nonsense we should correct them, and if the nonsense is religious then that should offer no special protection from correction. Bad ideas are bad ideas.
  • MAYAEL
    239
    I don't think that's the obsession I think the obsession is trying to get people to prove that God does exist because you can't proven nothing to be nothing but you can try to prove nothing to be something which has yet to be done .
  • Tom Storm
    9.2k
    What is the point?SteveMinjares

    Because religion keeps trying to change politics, social policy, legislation and morals in its own interests and against the freedoms of others. For instance, 80 % of Evangelicals supported Trump. The High Court has been stacked with Christian conservatives. The role of women and the status of gay people and other minorities all around the world is made worse by harmful God beliefs. This idea of a magic man who created the world and who commands us is very dangerous. It leads to fundamentalism in almost every country where there is God belief. People who think they know what God wants are amongst the most dangerous people on earth. That's the point.
  • Gregory
    4.7k




    Since nearly every Christian alive has a guilt complex and uses the religion for childish tingling sensations that make they feel as if they are actually good people, I would say they have nothing to teach anyone about ethics or religion
  • PoeticUniverse
    1.3k
    This idea of a magic man who created the world and who commands us is very dangerous. It leads to fundamentalism in almost every country where there is God belief. People who think they know what God wants are amongst the most dangerous people on earth. That's the point.Tom Storm

    :up:
  • Valentinus
    1.6k
    The High Court has been staked with Christian conservatives.Tom Storm

    I figure you meant "stocked" but your version gives a Kafka flavor to the milkshake.
  • Tom Storm
    9.2k
    Kafka might help. I meant stacked.
  • PoeticUniverse
    1.3k
    This idea of a magic man who created the world and who commands us is very dangerous.Tom Storm

    I next encountered all the individual Ones,
    The specialized ‘Gods’ of all the Religions.

    They didn’t get along at all, not even for an instant,
    For all they had in common was their intolerance
    Of the others’ greatly erroneous and unjustifiable beliefs
    That clashed with their own, for tolerance as a relief
    Was truly Not an attitude the jealous ‘Gods’ endorsed.

    The followers of each ‘God’ thought that their own
    Irrational embrace of myth trumped the others’ known,
    And so this led to many of the religious groans.

    I watched the ‘Gods’ battling for a while, steadfast,
    In the present, as well as in the distant past,
    Their followers’ beliefs scripting the actions,
    Conflicts leading to dying for untestable propositions
    About where everyone came from and was going to:

    Metaphysical Martyrdoms
    Conflicted with the Divine Book of Revelations.

    Deuteronomy 13:7-11
    Stoned those disbelieving in Yahweh,
    Killing them, while the Koran eliminated some infidels.

    India and Pakistan, different countries domiciled,
    Because the beliefs of Islam could not be reconciled
    With those of Hinduism, were poised at the brink
    Of nuclear war merely because they disagreed, rife,
    Over some supernatural ‘facts’ concerning the afterlife.

    Karmas ran over Dogmas.

    Musharraf suspended Pakistan’s constitution,
    To stamp out the growing Islamic militant coalition.

    Palestine’s Jews and Muslims scuffled on;
    Balkan Orthodox Serbians dueled
    With the Catholic Croatians,
    As well as with the Bosnian
    Albanian Muslims;

    Northern Ireland Protestants
    Warred with Catholics;

    Sudan Muslims discorded
    With the Christians;
    Sri Lankas’s Sinhalese Buddhists
    Went against the Tamil Hindus;

    Caucasus Orthodox Russians
    And Chechen Muslims
    Exterminated each other and their kin;

    Iraq’s Sunnis and Shites massacred each other
    For some very slight dogmatic differences.

    I interrupted their skirmishing and said in haste,
    “What about tolerance and respect for other faiths?”

    They all answered at once and said, in unison’s beef,

    “That’s just political talk. If we tolerated other beliefs,
    That would be akin to recognizing them readily
    As having some credibility, which they certainly do not.
    We are saved and they are all doomed, in peril;
    We can’t have them exerting influence in the world.”

    “So,” I said, trying to make some small talk,
    “I’ve heard that You’ve each written a book
    That makes an exclusive claim as to its infallibility.

    “Congratulations to each of You on being published.
    All have made the bestseller list;
    However, I have respectfully shelved all of them
    Next to the ‘Egyptian Book of the Dead’
    And Ovid’s ‘Metamorphoses’,
    In the contradictory book and bible section.

    “Hey, how about getting modern and making a film?
    I know that a book was a great thing way back,
    But a moving picture is worth 10,000 still pictures
    Which are in turn each worth a thousand words.”

    “Indeed, we will each be divinely inspiring a movie
    That will soon be playing in a theater near you.”

    “Wait, Guys, I take it back,” I said with alarm,
    “Are not all your children doing enough harm
    By fighting over your books and morality plays?

    “Will people now die for another media—the movies?”

    They ignored me and fought on, with their kind,
    Unable to see but through their own ‘right’ minds,
    Doing the opposite of their teachings of love,
    Which they were especially and paradoxically out of.

    Unfortunately, they now represented the largest threat
    That human kind has ever imposed against itself—
    All due to differences regarding some very improbable
    And differing notions about the nature of the universe.
  • Banno
    25.3k



    Have a look at this: Folk think that they are enacting god's will. And the results are irrational and immoral.

    Sewing a little doubt is a moral obligation.
  • Apollodorus
    3.4k


    I think guilt is something that all people experience in some form or other. As for "tingling sensations", I somehow find it difficult to see what could be harmful about them.
  • Valentinus
    1.6k

    Stacking the deck. Now that is more Hunter S Thompson territory.
  • ssu
    8.7k
    Yes, but not umm...me. :yikes:

    I guess many political parties will say that they are doing Gods work. Although believing in “The laws of nature and nature’s God” sounds rather peculiar. I wonder what kind of debate has gotten a result like that.
  • SteveMinjares
    89
    When the mystic is more logical and rational than the realist you know humanity is screwed.

    I am not even preaching about God or faith. I am talking about open mindedness, human decency and respecting your fell peers to think for themselves.

    There is this I don’t know, this over analytical weirdness like your trying to find a loop hole in some contract.

    I know I am the The only believer here but even I know this is not atheistic thinking but some warp ego trip of desiring to be right.
  • EricH
    611

    I haven't seen you in a while - enjoy your stuff. :smile:
  • Banno
    25.3k
    I am talking about open mindedness, human decency and respecting your fell peers to think for themselves.SteveMinjares

    Belief in god is used to excuse immorality.

    Hence disrupting that believe is a moral act.
  • Yohan
    679
    though we should have an open mind it shouldn't be so open it falls outDingoJones
    God forbid anyone should open their mind completely up, and thereby have full capacity to use it.
  • Fooloso4
    6.2k
    I am far less concerned with the question of a god's existence than with appeals to the authority of a god and abdication of responsibility in the name of a god.
  • Gregory
    4.7k


    Not everybody has guilt problems because you can clean up your karma if you desire. Christianity is all about religious tingles designed by their art and writings to (temporarily) ease guilt. The guilt comes back worse because Christian "joy" is a type of sinful wallowing in one's own perceived specialness
  • Apollodorus
    3.4k
    God forbid anyone should open their mind completely up, and thereby have full capacity to use it.Yohan

    Absolutely right.

    And what shall we say of those whose mind is so small that it can easily "fall out" and, God forbid, become lost without trace? :wink:
  • DingoJones
    2.8k


    My point was that you shouodnt be so open minded that you believe anything. Skepticism is just as valuable as an open mind, finding a balance between them is key to not believing in nonsense and/or incorrect things.
  • Gregory
    4.7k




    Atheists think rationally while Christians juice up their minds with their emotional minds so that they can't see when they have no argument which could defend their faith and their behavior in matters of religion and philosophy. Their narcissistic beliefs get them so drunk that they don't know a good argument from a bad one and common sense becomes impossible ("Jesus is coming out of the sky on a white horse. I KNOW this is true")
  • Apollodorus
    3.4k
    "Jesus is coming out of the sky on a white horse. I KNOW this is true")Gregory

    Sure. But there are some who might think "Marx or Stalin is coming out of the sky on a white horse. I KNOW this is true". Same difference, no?

    Incidentally, on the occasion of the 1945 victory parade in Moscow, Stalin had intended to ride through the parade himself, but he fell from the horse during the rehearsal:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moscow_Victory_Parade_of_1945

    He nearly almost made it only that he didn't quite make it. Apparently, he couldn't even ride.

    But I'm sure someday soon he will come down in a tank or something. And a tinfoil hat. Providing he is sober enough, that is.

    But definitely something to look forward to, I figure :grin:
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.