The fact that you, Agustino, and your ilk are so afraid of Islam shows the emptiness of your ideas. You just want to keep what's yours and make sure no one else gets their share. — T Clark
What rules the world? Money – military - politics – religion – movies – art – literature - ? What is common to all these things? Ideas. Ideas rule the world – always have and always will. Ideas breathe life into any institution. Civilization is only an idea. Ideas are our life’s blood. The philosopher's job is paramount and profound - one that is needed now more than ever. — Thinker
Right mate. First, I'm totally not afraid of Islam. What's there to be afraid of, at the moment Christianity is still holding sway. However, this doesn't mean that we should neglect a threat and let it grow to levels where it actually becomes dangerous. That's the reason behind the loss of many great powers in history - neglecting "little" insignificant threats.The fact that you, Agustino, and your ilk are so afraid of Islam shows the emptiness of your ideas. You just want to keep what's yours and make sure no one else gets their share. — T Clark
Economic factors will have a much bigger impact on how things go in the future than religion. It's happening now. As poor countries become wealthier, Western countries' share of the wealth goes down, even if their standard of living does not. Formerly poor countries will take on a greater power role in the world. We will have less of a say in how things go. In terms of overall humanity, it's a good thing. — T Clark
Argue that Muhammad was an upstanding and moral man. If you can't do that, there should be an x in the top of right of your screen which you could perhaps click. — Heister Eggcart
Right mate. First, I'm totally not afraid of Islam. — Agustino
... you're not very much self-motivated, by your own previous admissions on the forums. Maybe that explains your lack of understanding of history and your totally unrealistic opinion... — Agustino
That's correct. But so what?I thought you might say that, but you're not Catholic. — Heister Eggcart
It is a curious thing. From afar, protestants (thinking here of evangelicals mainly) seem a lot more into their religion, at least superficially, than many lay Orthodox believers (or Catholic) that I know personally. But obviously I don't have as much acquaintance with protestants as you do. So what's your general take on Protestantism from within the belly of the beast?And it was my suggestion earlier that the preying of Protestantism on the uneducated and poor is not a good thing, as that "Church" won't, post-conversion, actually educate them. — Heister Eggcart
I'm very promiscuous, definitely. But you know what? Most of the females I've been promiscuous with were religious. Most people in general are still religious. A couple of the wildest females I've known seemed to be the most religious--one was a minister's daughter, one was at church more days of the week than not, etc. — Terrapin Station
Right, so now we know that you don't own a Mac ;) ;) ;)there should be an x in the top of right of your screen which you could perhaps click. — Heister Eggcart
The semblance is of your own making, it's a creation of your mind which has misjudged. Have you taken that possibility into account?You certainly seem to be afraid of something. — T Clark
No.Is that correct? — T Clark
If you used your mind I'm sure you could figure it out. Because I'm self-motivated I have studied the development, growth and decay of civilisations, which you, not being self-motivated and needing someone to prod you to do this and that, didn't. — Agustino
For the simple reason that there is no evidence that as poor countries become wealthier, the share of the wealth of Western countries becomes lower. The GDP of the US relative to the GDP of the world was at roughly 25% in 1980 and it is at roughly 25% today, 40 years later.Is my statement incorrect? Show me why. — T Clark
That's why the statement you made is hardly worth refuting. It's purely nonsense - a fantasy. You may believe that fantasy because it sounds nice for the world or some bullshit, but it doesn't make it true. — Agustino
Well since 2008-2009 was the period of the financial crisis, those years marked a decrease for US/Western world. After that, if we use IMF statistics for 2016, the US is back at 25% of the world's GDP. US -> 18.5 trillion, World -> 75 trillion.I look at the charts you provided and they show a fairly constant decrease in the US's share of world GDP since 1950. Other Western countries also show something of a decrease. China shows a dramatic increase. This data is only through 2008. How have things changed since then? — T Clark
I fully agree with your sentiments, and commend you for making this post.Christianity may grow in the rest of the world, but it is on a steady decline in the West. Which is very unfortunate, as more and more people stumble upon a worldview that is a cancer on Western society - postmodernism. And all that it encompasses. Existentialist thought, nihilism, moral relativism, all of it is causing the West to decay. It truly is a sad sight, what once was the bastion of human civilization, has been reduced to nothing more than a fraction of what it once was. Nuclear Families are now a rarity, hope is a commodity, individuality and responsibility are downplayed. You cannot expect Western values to remain afloat when you tear apart the very institutions, ideas, and beliefs that they stand on. You can't have the West without God, it is as simple as that. — Gust
Money is the best way to make money, and power is the best way to make power. However intelligence often does find ways to beat even those advantages, so they are never certain. But yes, due to the magic of compound interest, people who spend conservatively and have a lot of money are likely to remain rich for many generations to come.And, chances are it will stay that way, because that much wealth controlled by a few people, the wealth can hardly avoid increasing at a generous rate. Poor farmers just can't generate new wealth for themselves quickly, unless they unearth a gold mine. And if they do unearth a gold mine, chances are that it will be taken away from them. — Bitter Crank
What do you think? What's the future of religions looking to be on the Earth? Which religions will be popular 100 years from now and why? — Agustino
>:O My IQ is quite high, believe me on that, there's no problem with it. And I totally see a need for religion. But forget myself, many of the brightest minds in history have been theists - Leibniz, Newton, etc.our societal intellect matures and the need for it is lessened. — VagabondSpectre
I have no opinion about Muhammad's character. — T Clark
He died 1,400 years ago.
It's not relevant to what we are discussing.
Thousands, tens of thousands, of Catholic priests have raped tens of thousands of children, in many cases destroying their lives. Does that justify rejecting Christianity out of hand? Actually, maybe it does. That's not the only stain on the robe of Christianity.
Have you not read what I said? Atheists aren't reproducing. They will be gone as fast as they have appeared. Religion is currently in that watered down form, but that's not going to be forever. As I've said, if you look at the young population, you'll see many religious "revolutionaries", myself included. — Agustino
Christianity may grow in the rest of the world, but it is on a steady decline in the West. Which is very unfortunate, as more and more people stumble upon a worldview that is a cancer toward Western society - postmodernism. And all that it encompasses. Existentialist thought, nihilism, moral relativism, all of it is causing the West to decay. It truly is a sad sight, what once was the bastion of human civilization, has been reduced to nothing more than a fraction of what it once was. Nuclear Families are now a rarity, hope is a commodity, individuality and responsibility are downplayed. You cannot expect Western values to remain afloat when you tear apart the very institutions, ideas, and beliefs that they stand on. You can't have the West without God, it is as simple as that. — Gust
That's correct. But so what? — Agustino
It is a curious thing. From afar, protestants (thinking here of evangelicals mainly) seem a lot more into their religion, at least superficially, than many lay Orthodox believers (or Catholic) that I know personally. But obviously I don't have as much acquaintance with protestants as you do. So what's your general take on Protestantism from within the belly of the beast? — Agustino
Is a common experience with Protestant believers? — Agustino
Right, so now we know that you don't own a Mac — Agustino
>:O My IQ is quite high, believe me on that, there's no problem with it. And I totally see a need for religion. But forget myself, many of the brightest minds in history have been theists - Leibniz, Newton, etc. — Agustino
Atheists don't need to reproduce! All babies are atheists — VagabondSpectre
They're as rotten and sinful as everyone else, so there's definitely an outward, superficial aspect there that you had best not get lured in by. — Heister Eggcart
I also think that Lutherans and Methodists and all other bland ass, more leftist Protestant denominations are as fake as the evangelicals. — Heister Eggcart
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