I'm not "leaving it out." It's not relevant. — T Clark
Another reason it's irrelevant. — T Clark
Theists can also have a Platonic, Buddhist, or animistic world view.An atheist simply lacks a theistic worldview. S/he might, however, have a 'Platonic worldview' or 'Buddhistic worldview' or 'animistic worldview' ... Just as bald is not a hair color, atheism is not a belief about g/G (color) but about theism (hair). — 180 Proof
But then what do you call someone who claims to know or believe in God but rejects religion? — HarryHarry
An atheist simply lacks a theistic worldview. S/he might, however, have a 'Platonic worldview' or 'Buddhistic worldview' or 'animistic worldview' ... Just as bald is not a hair color, atheism is not a belief about g/G (color) but about theism (hair). — 180 Proof
If atheists and theists are both naturally equally good people — T Clark
Nature doesn't create good and bad people; it creates biological strategies, which are then moulded by social contexts and judged through ideological lenses. — Baden
Wherever I turn, the popular media, scientists and even fellow philosophers are telling me that I’m a machine or a beast. My ethics can be illuminated by the behavior of termites. My brain is a sloppy computer with a flicker of consciousness and the illusion of free will. I’m anything but human.
I'm saying atheism amounts to a belief about theism – that 'beliefs about god/s' are not true – and is not itself a 'god-belief'.Ergo, atheism can't say of itself that it's a lack of belief, oui? — Agent Smith
But what is a naturally good person? Nature doesn't create good and bad people; it creates biological strategies, which are then moulded by social contexts and judged through ideological lenses. — Baden
You're obviously deeply invested in equating theism and atheism, have at it. — DingoJones
Im beginning to understand this isnt a discussion for you, but rather some adversarial trolling. — DingoJones
I'm assuming you mean here a god that can't be pleased by any human actions or gestures? I guess the debate would have no where to go. — Tom Storm
Those who think god's favour is dependent on our actions will have quite different attitudes towards what we ought do, to those who suppose god uninvolved.
Again, the issue is ethics rather than metaphysics. — Banno
Your case to make. — DingoJones
State religions aka "autocracies" (e.g. China, Russia, North Korea) are manifestly indistinguishable from theocracies (e.g. Saudi Arabia, Iran, Afghanistan) also with purges, inquisitions / show trials, invisible enemies, leader-cults, official scapegoats, etc. Secular states, in fact, are anathema to "religious oppression" as policy, unlike sectarian / one party states.You can't complain about religious oppression by theocracies and not complain about religious oppressions by atheistic governments. — Hanover
Some would say unless you subscribe to classical theism, you are an atheist. — HarryHarry
State religions aka "autocracies" (e.g. China, Russia, North Korea) are manifestly indistinguishable from theocracies (e.g. Saudi Arabia, Iran, Afghanistan) also with purges, inquisitions / show trials, invisible enemies, leader-cults, official scapegoats, etc. Secular states, in fact, are anathema to "religious oppression" as policy, unlike sectarian / one party states. — 180 Proof
And there are dozens more. Hundreds. — T Clark
in the USA, where 96 percent of the population is a devout Christian? — god must be atheist
If my recent experience with you is representative, your response to posts you don't like is to question the motives and good will of those you disagree with. — T Clark
The point you are missing is that an atheist government doesnt do anything based on its atheism. — DingoJones
To which of course you will reply with a reference to the lack of theism being the source of any immorality. — DingoJones
we ought to partake of or participate in the Sacraments. But I doubt it would consider doing so to be a matter of ethics. — Ciceronianus
Of course they do. It's part of their ideology and it's why the offer restrictions on religion. The atheism you find in communist countries isn't just an innocuous mission statement, but it informs the way they control their people and beliefs, and it's also part of their fundamental Marxist ideology. — Hanover
It is therefore possible (and quite common) for a theist and an atheist to be secularists, meaning they have whatever beliefs they might have, but they don't believe government should involve itself in enforcing those beliefs.
What this means is that I disagree with your comment I quoted above, where you assume what my response to you would be. That is, I do not believe a theocracy can be secular because that is a self-contradictory statement. If a nation has a religious belief system and they use it as law, that would not be secularist, but would be theocratic, and it would be immoral. — Hanover
the same token, a government that has taken a formal stance on the issue and determined itself atheistic and then attempted to impose those beliefs on others would be as immoral as the theocracy I described above. — Hanover
That is, I have provided you the very example you were looking for, which was that of an oppressive atheist. What you are trying to say, which is simply false, is that the communist nations cited just happen to be atheist, just like they may happen to have red flags, and those two facts have nothing to do with their immorality. What I am saying is that I fully understand your distinction between relevant and irrelevant causes of the oppression, and I am saying that the atheism factor looms large as one factor among many in informing the cause of communistic oppression. — Hanover
:100:Atheism has no ideology. Thats why you always have to mention communism and marxism etc along with the atheism. Atheism alone has no edicts, no rules, no goals…its merely a position on theism. — DingoJones
If you are generally tolerant of the views of those who have found personal existential meaning and you have no concern trying to proselytize others to your views, it would seem no one should have any reason to object to that kind of person. — Hanover
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