As far as I'm concerned, life is worth living because it is superior to the alternative. — Reformed Nihilist
Do you think you would have to defend yourself against the gun-toting Christians? — Lone Wolf
Is that even a good representation of Christianity, or is it more of a culture stereotype of some places in the United States? — Lone Wolf
Indeed, the meme for faith exhibits frequency-dependent fitness: it flourishes particularly in the company of rationalistic memes. In a skeptic-poor world, the meme for faith does not attract much attention, and hence tends to go dormant in minds, and hence is seldom reintroduced into the infosphere. (Can we demonstrate classic predator-prey population boom-and-bust cycles between memes for faith and memes for reason? Probably not, but it might be instructive to look, and ask why not.) — Denett, D. Darwin's Dangerous Idea: Invasion of the Body Snatchers, pg. 349
And why is atheism seen as stronger and more able to protect in a government situation than another religion? — Lone Wolf
Which is what? Non-existence? That has no value and you've never experienced it, so you can't compare it to existence. The only way to find out would be to commit suicide, but even then, you'd have to assume that there is no afterlife before committing the act. — Thorongil
you can't choose to believe or not believe - it's a function of your genetic make-up and your life experiences. — CasKev
I currently don't believe in a higher power or an afterlife. That won't change until I am presented with strong evidence of such, or at least a very convincing argument. — CasKev
Well, I guess some Christians are gun-toting, but some aren't, such as the Amish denomination who do not believe in any kind of violence. — Lone Wolf
I judge life to be preferable to the alternative — Reformed Nihilist
Why are those deemed "religious" considered weak and inferior to those proclaimed irreligious and/or atheistic? — Lone Wolf
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity. — William Butler Yeats
They are two different states. — Reformed Nihilist
Why are those deemed "religious" considered weak and inferior to those proclaimed irreligious and/or atheistic? — Lone Wolf
It doesn't really matter to me how you answer that — Reformed Nihilist
but I will disagree with you that I can't choose which case is preferable to another. — Reformed Nihilist
The point being that people make apple pie from scratch all the time. People also demonstrate points all the time without litigating the definition of existence — Reformed Nihilist
Without the hope of salvation, which religion provides, life is demonstrably not worth living. Your typical atheist, like Dawkins, seems to realize this on some level, but the fact is clearly too much for him to bear, as shown above. — Thorongil
Why are those deemed "religious" considered weak and inferior to those proclaimed irreligious and/or atheistic? — Lone Wolf
Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. But he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me. That is why, for Christ’s sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong. — 2 Cor. 12:7-10
Why are those deemed "religious" considered weak and inferior to those proclaimed irreligious and/or atheistic? — Lone Wolf
Couldn't that be accredited to personality, which is in part genetic? I still don't see how one's personality would force you to believe something or not believe something.If you were to take two infants and expose them to the exact same experiences, there would still be at minimum subtle differences in behavior, emotions, beliefs, and thought processes. If not attributable to external factors, the differences must be due to genetic make-up. — CasKev
So you are saying you need an emotional experience in order to prove that God exists?If there were a being powerful enough to create us, I imagine it would have the ability to communicate directly with us. So I suppose I would need to see and hear such a being to believe in it. — CasKev
Oh, ok. Sorry.I don't believe I said that... I did say that believing in a higher power could make a person mentally stronger.
No, I have no biases, I am perfect. :P( Just kidding) But yeah, that makes sense.I think most people think that whomever agrees with their position is better in some way, and whomever doesn't is worse in some way. That's human nature.
Although I'm subject to the same biases as anyone (including, I presume, you). I don't think these things. I just think they hold as true things that are not true. Maybe this is a flawed premise. — Reformed Nihilist
I am pretty sure I wrote this with a mostly objective perspective. I equally criticized the religious as that they seem to be overly emotional.Again, it's human nature to justify your beliefs by trivializing those held by people who disagree, and negatively characterizing them. That's why strawman and ad hominum fallacies exist. Are you sure you aren't also engaging in this? — Reformed Nihilist
Hmm...never seen that show before. But I think you are right by saying it is what society makes them out to be, not necessarily that it is the truth.There is an interesting medieval portrayal of Christian priests in Netflix's new Castlevania anime. The choice to burn a supposed witch sets of an ironic chain of events. One sees in such a world that behavior has been constructed around certain ideas (faith) and the people who are empowered by them. Science, as with Cavaca's cartoon, only survives in areas and inviduals designated by the church as evil. — Nils Loc
Why?Self acknowledged atheists might be better apt at separating church and state from a policy point of view, if that is at all important or good for a supposed democratic society composed of diverse faiths. — Nils Loc
True, it is more of an individual choice rather than one that can be safely generalized.So it is probably the case that many Christians are gun toters, and many are not. And that would apply to non-believers as well -- many are, many are not. — Bitter Crank
That is very interesting. Seems like some would be angry if God controlled everything and took away free will, but then they are angry that God let them make their own choices. What do people want from God? Free will to do bad things or to be completely controlled by him so that they can't do bad things?WWI and WWII can not have helped but undermine the bedrock beliefs of Christianity and Judaism. If an all-powerful God keeps watch, why did so many die? Where was God? For many, the distasteful but unavoidable conclusion is that God is absent. — Bitter Crank
Do you mean the different translations and scholar's interpretations?A third influence is the scholarship which led to a critical examination of biblical texts that began in the 19th century. What critical Biblical scholarship revealed was that biblical texts had a complex structure and history (though it isn't the case that nobody noticed some of this before). These studies undermined the formerly secure confidence in texts. These studies were one of the causes of the rise of fundamentalism -- a reaction to this scholarship. What put the wind in the sails of fundamentalism was Charles Darwin. — Bitter Crank
True, I see it too in many churches. They preach a sugar-coated version that doesn't make sense.I think it is safe to say that what many Americans (can't speak for Europeans) saw at Sunday morning services was too often kind of weak, weepy, and sentimentally soft. Certainly there were pastors, priests, nuns, monks, and laity who were tough, hard, dry-eyed, and unsentimental. But... not the majority. — Bitter Crank
Yes, that which society has taught them to believe. I guess many don't see just how hard it is to actually be "religious".It should be obvious that atheists see religious folks as believing myths, superstitions, etc.; believing things that atheists take to be clearly false. Atheists often see religious believers as some combination of gullible/easily suckered, not very bright, and/or as people who need an emotional crutch to an extent where they're willing to buy into nonsense and reject reason for it. — Terrapin Station
Oh, but we are made strong in Christ. :PStay weak, brother. ;) — lambda
Hmm...that is a much different experience than what I had. I turned away from atheism because I couldn't see the logic in it. I couldn't figure out how something could come from nothing, since that is scientifically impossible. I didn't see how chance could possibly form something so complex as what we see today. I am considered religious, but rarely believe something without a lot of facts pointing to it. No one can logically nor scientifically prove or disprove there is a God, but one can come up with a probability and the rest is trust that those speculations are correct. So I do not think that atheism appeals entirely to reason, nor theism to emotion. I can see your point though with superstitions that have been proven false. I don't believe in fairies or ghosts either. :PI think that's a miconception. Theism and Atheism appeal to two different qualities of the human psyche.
Religion appeals to intuition and feelings. I think it's wise to entertain possibilities, no matter how unreasonable because the universe-man relationship is not an equilibrium - while we're obliged to fit our theories to facts, the universe is not likewise obliged.
Atheism appeals to reason. It reins in our voluptuous imagination which otherwise would lead to full blown imaginary worlds of ghosts, spirits, demons, fairies, etc. This isn't good because such thinking is, as has been demonstrated, dangerous. Just think of the time when disease was attributed to evil spirits.
There's an undeniable contradiction between the two (god exists and god doesn't) but...there's wisdom in both reason and intuition. — TheMadFool
I am pretty sure I wrote this with a mostly objective perspective. I equally criticized the religious as that they seem to be overly emotional. — Lone Wolf
It seems odd to claim that these atheists you refer to do not enjoy living. — jorndoe
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