One can't know with hard evidence that a superior being does not exist; — Lone Wolf
hence, atheism is proclaiming with certainty something that is unknowable. — Lone Wolf
It is not something that is obviously not there, as many offer convincing arguments in proof of a god. — Lone Wolf
The people in your story were not deceived, but chose to act as though they were convinced. — Lone Wolf
What is superior? Clearly, you cannot control me (although you could delete my posts >:O ). You can't control what I think or do, so are you really superior? :PThat you and I exist is proof that a superior being does exist. (I am that superior being). — Sapientia
Yes, of course there are different types. Atheism in general declare there to be no god, just as theism generally must declare there to be a god. Agnosticism is in the middle, where one realizes that there could be a god, but there could also not be a god.No, not atheism, atheism of the strongest sort. Just as there are different sorts of theism, there are different sorts of atheism. — Sapientia
That some people are convinced by such arguments is not that they're good arguments, which is what matters. Besides, atheists don't find them convincing enough, and most theists are already convinced - and, of those who accept the arguments, many merely do so due to confirmation bias. There's also nonconformity amongst theists in which arguments are accepted, if any, and which are rejected. — Sapientia
What is superior? Clearly, you cannot control me (although you could delete my posts >:O ). You can't control what I think or do, so are you really superior? :P — Lone Wolf
Yes, of course there are different types. Atheism in general declare there to be no god, just as theism generally must declare there to be a god. Agnosticism is in the middle, where one realizes that there could be a god, but there could also not be a god. — Lone Wolf
If what you say is correct, then it would place an atheist at the same level of "irrationality" as a theist. — Lone Wolf
One who believes there to be a god could say that atheists are already convinced that there is no superior being, and accept all arguments against a god to be confirming their bias. — Lone Wolf
Well, I could try to explain it to you, but an inferior being such as yourself couldn't possibly understand. — Sapientia
No, atheism in general is a rejection of theism, the belief that there's a god. It's a specific type of atheism which declares there to be no god. There's a large overlap between atheists and agnostics. — Sapientia
No it wouldn't. — Sapientia
Of course, one could say that, but what matters is whether it's true. I think with most atheists, it's not so much about arguments against a god, but about arguments for god, and the large holes in them. — Sapientia
I suppose just the same as the emperor couldn't explain why no one could see his new "clothes"... I am just too silly to understand that. I am a mere child, no? — Lone Wolf
What you are saying is essentially the same as what I was saying. Atheists deny the existence of any god. If theism is the belief of a god, and atheists deny theism, then they deny the existence of a god. — Lone Wolf
Why? Because you said it wouldn't? Is logic dependent on you? — Lone Wolf
So you are saying atheists have no structure, no real purpose for not believing; they just pull down whatever they can? — Lone Wolf
What if one found many faults and holes in the rebuttals against arguments for a god? — Lone Wolf
How do you know what is true? — Lone Wolf
No Dostoevsky was zero percent atheist. Here was a man who died with the Bible in his lap... Although neither was he an exemplary Christian in his life, to be fair. But he did seek to be a Christian.Dostoevsky (who was 50 percent atheist) — Beebert
I don't think Blake is a Christian for that matter.William Blake — Beebert
:s Compared to Aquinas for example, Nietzsche is just a confused man.Especially since the depth of the missunderstood Nietzsche and his thought so far surpasses that of most of the greatest Christian thinkers that it is almost laughable. — Beebert
William Blake
— Beebert
I don't think Blake is a Christian for that matter.
Especially since the depth of the missunderstood Nietzsche and his thought so far surpasses that of most of the greatest Christian thinkers that it is almost laughable.
— Beebert
:s Compared to Aquinas for example, Nietzsche is just a confused man.
In the late 1780s and early 1790s, when Blake sought out Swedenborg and other mystical and occult sources, he was also a radical in politics. Most noticeably, he wrote a eulogy to The French Revolution (1791), which was originally planned in seven books, and celebrated the liberation of the thirteen colonies in America: A Prophecy (1793). Traditionally, scholarship has separated Blake’s interest in occultism from his political radicalism. One branch of Blake studies (originating with another great poet of the occult, W.B. Yeats, and reaching its apex in Kathleen Raine), sees Blake primarily as a researcher of mystical sources; whereas a line fathered by David Erdman glosses over the mystical influences in order to draw a picture of a political Blake, whose writings reflect directly on contemporary events in a straightforward manner. However, studies by E.P. Thompson, Jon Mee and Marsha Keith Schuchard have encouraged us to bring these two lines together. [4] The essay at hand proceeds from the historical precepts brought to light by these scholars and aims to show that the rationalistic ideologies of Voltaire or Thomas Paine were not alone in fuelling radical or revolutionary programmes. What I intend below is a historical investigation of how the reception of how Swedenborg’s esoteric teaching was absorbed into the socio-cultural matrix of the late eighteenth century to become a platform for opposition politics. This, in turn, will give us cause to re-evaluate the motivation behind the “radical” Blake’s affiliation with the Swedenborgians in the New Jerusalem Church.
↪Thanatos Sand "You're really both wrong here. Nietzsche neither surpassed Christian thinkers nor was a confused man. His project was decidedly different from the Aristotelian Aquinas, but not that different from the more mystical theologians like Anselm, Augustine and Eckhart."
Then you and I agree. I try constantly to tell Agustino that Nietzsche resembles many Christians and have many times mentioned thinkers such as Kierkegaard, Blake, Dostoevsky, Pascal, Eckehart etc. And if you read my whole post you would see that I never claimed Nietzsche was superior in depth to all Christian thinkers, and I mentioned like 5-7 examples of Christian thinkers that reached basically the same heights as Nietzsche.
You should read Blake's Works instead. He rejected Swedenborg in the end. By the time he wrote his most influential works it is true that he was INFLUENCED by Swedenborg, but he rejected his thought claiming that Swedenborg just repeated the same old lies as those that had always been told.
No, it wasn't, so there is semantic room for argument based on what someone sees as the prerequisites for being a follower. He certainly wasn't a Catholic like Tolkien or an Anglican like Lewis.↪Thanatos Sand Sorry, my mistake, it is true he did attend a Swedenborg Church, but was it regular attendance over a long period of time?
More like a pup. A lone pup, surrounded by other lone pups, feebly crawling around and bumping into things, whilst an owl looks down on them, perched on a branch in a nearby tree. — Sapientia
No, that's not what I'm saying. These are positions about belief. Why make theism about belief but not atheism? If theism is the belief that there's a god, then atheism is the rejection of that belief. Atheism needn't make the claim specific to strong atheism that there's no god, it can instead just be the position that there's not good enough reason to believe that there is a god. You say that you know that there are different types of atheism, yet you haven't demonstrated that you've grasped this key distinction, and seem to want to turn atheism into strong atheism. — Sapientia
>:OYes. All things are dependent on me, the supreme being. — Sapientia
No, that's clearly not what I'm saying. That's you twisting what I'm saying out of all proportion. — Sapientia
No, that's not what I'm saying. These are positions about belief. Why make theism about belief but not atheism? If theism is the belief that there's a god, then atheism is the rejection of that belief. Atheism needn't make the claim specific to strong atheism that there's no god, it can instead just be the position that there's not good enough reason to believe that there is a god. You say that you know that there are different types of atheism, yet you haven't demonstrated that you've grasped this key distinction, and seem to want to turn atheism into strong atheism. — Sapientia
That some people are convinced by such arguments is not that they're good arguments, which is what matters. Besides, atheists don't find them convincing enough, and most theists are already convinced - and, of those who accept the arguments, many merely do so due to confirmation bias. There's also nonconformity amongst theists in which arguments are accepted, if any, and which are rejected. — Sapientia
What of it? Maybe one would change one's mind. I don't know. Why ask me? That's not a situation that I've found myself in. The classical arguments are clearly flawed. — Sapientia
Don't then. :PThat's a big question which I won't attempt to answer here — Sapientia
A lone pup surrounded by other lone pups? :s >:O >:O If I didn't know better, I would think that the owl may have had a bit too much to drink if it was seeing things like that... I advise that owl to not fly for awhile, just in case it would falter and fall into the pups, who may or may not be so feeble. — Lone Wolf
That would be like a theist saying s/he didn't believe there to be a god for an atheist to believe a god. — Lone Wolf
Definition of atheism:
a : a lack of belief or a strong disbelief in the existence of a god or any gods — Lone Wolf
The statement that atheists merely have disbelief proves my statement that atheists do not have any of their own structure, it is only disbelief of someone else's structure. — Lone Wolf
Do you even know what you are saying? — Lone Wolf
Either you believe there is a god, or you don't. If there is a god, then the atheist denies it. If there is not a god, then the atheist merely expresses this. — Lone Wolf
No, it does not. You're confusing atheism and atheists. Atheists are mostly normal guys and gals who have the normal structure and beliefs that normal people normally have. Atheism, on the other hand, by that definition, is indeed a negative position about theism. It's about destruction rather than construction. — Sapientia
Yes, one of many talents which you seem to lack. Do you think that gathering together those quotes of me demonstrates that I've somehow managed to shoot myself in the foot? It only demonstrates your own failing. — Sapientia
No, you still don't get it. The denial that there's a god is not necessary, and is secondary. Like I've been saying, primarily, atheism is a position about belief, and your definition is testament to this. You only need the first part about whether you believe that there's a god or you don't. The rest will depend on the strength of your position, as in how far you're willing to take it. As I explained before, an atheist could go only as far as claiming that there isn't good enough reason to believe that there's a god without actually denying that there's a god. Alternatively, one could go further than that, and deny that there's a god. That's a distinction between weak and strong atheism. Do you get it now? — Sapientia
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