Well, this "atheist" certainly is "qualified to speak about what" theism "is not" – the sine qua non claims of theism¹ are demonstrably not true.Atheists, bytheir[your] own declaration, are really only qualified to speak about what god is not. — Pantagruel
sine qua non claims of theism — 180 Proof
Sorry, that's just plain ridiculous. — Pantagruel
This doesn't in any way shape or form contradict the generalized description I provided. — Pantagruel
So why should the concept of god not likewise be amenable to...refinement? — Pantagruel
If you claim not to believe in atoms, you are certainly the last person that someone should talk to who is interested in developing a theory of atoms. — Pantagruel
Ok, I challenge you to bring up any academic citing (not mentioning) another academic using the word "God" in a way that is not supernatural. — Lionino
The definition of mathematics doesn't contradict the definition of banana, and yet the two are not the same thing. — Lionino
What you are doing is not refining a concept but changing the meaning of a word completely — Lionino
Unintentional denial of the scientific method and proofs by contradiction right here. — Lionino
Ever hear of pantheism? — Pantagruel
This is a complete non-sequitur. I said that the description of the being(s) that I provided did not preclude them being consistently identified with the being(s) that conformed to the Cambridge definition that you supplied. — Pantagruel
Which isn't to say the Cambridge definition is authoritative, because it isn't. — Pantagruel
who denies the validity of the concept. — Pantagruel
You also should not comment on God, as what you understand by the word "God" is completely distinct from what God actually means. — Lionino
Based on Abrahamic, Hindi, pantheonic Greco-Roman-Egyptian-Babylonian-Persian-Mesoamerican-Aboriginal traditions, I understand theism as consisting of the following claims:As far as I know, there is no universal consensus that could legitimately be called the "sine qua non" of theism. i.e. you are making it up in order to then argue against it (as I have repeatedly pointed out). — Pantagruel
Sounds to me like made up woo-stuff :sparkle: just like e.g. "Flying Spaghetti Monsters" ... "The Great Old Ones" ... "The Force" ... nothing to do with any religious expression of theism as such.Mysine qua non theisticclaims are that there are greater-than-human conscious entities.
intervenes in – causes changes (which cannot be accounted for otherwise) to – the universe — 180 Proof
I’m just saying if I was an atheist, morality and truth talk would seem pointless. — Fire Ologist
if I was atheist I would be an anarchistic, hedonistic sociopath — Fire Ologist
Democracy and capitalism were once the greatest hopes we crafted as collaborations for the community, and today, many think they are evil and doomed to corruption. — Fire Ologist
To me, it’s because we collaborate at all about anything that we experience the possibility of God. God is in the collaboration. So you take God out of it, the collaboration falls with it. — Fire Ologist
All humans can do (whether theist or not) is develop a system and hold a conversation in collaboration with the community to work out what we think is reasonable in the space of morality. — Tom Storm
Free thinking, free living.No God, no hope for anything more than nature drawing its breath. — Fire Ologist
For starters, in order to flourish more than languish...Why be ethical at all?
Perhaps they "seem" so to a child.Seems philosophy and ethics would be annoying and tiresome.
No more "irrational" than an atheist reducing harm and correcting falsehoods.So maybe atheism is not only rational, but accurate, but if it is so, aren’t ethics and truth irrational?
Yeah, that's how lazy cynics "bullshit" themselves.It’s all bullshit we tell ourselves. — Fire Ologist
It’s all bullshit we tell ourselves. — Fire Ologist
if I was an atheist, morality and truth talk would seem pointless. — Fire Ologist
Free thinking, free living. — 180 Proof
In order to flourish more than languish. — 180 Proof
Seems philosophy and ethics would be annoying and tiresome.
Perhaps to a child ... — 180 Proof
correcting falsehoods. — 180 Proof
if I was an atheist, morality and truth talk would seem pointless.
— Fire Ologist
I'm unsure it would. Its just far less high-stakes, i think. — AmadeusD
I agree, that's why I said nothing about it.Lots of evidence there is no such thing as free will. — Fire Ologist
This statement doesn't make any senseIf there are no rules, we can’t languish in the anxiety of breaking the rules.
Well, that seems to me a "fairly adolescent" – unwarranted – "premise".The premise here is there is no god, no objective truth.
secular humanists have long plugged away at building ethical frameworks quite consistently and effectively, — Tom Storm
Where? When? Who? Effectively? — Fire Ologist
That’s the illogical part to me. If three people agree there is no god, there is no objective truth, there is no access to reality as it must be for all, then they should also agree that they have no idea whether each of them mean or agreed on the same thing - collaboration in philosophy and ethics becomes pointless. — Fire Ologist
I remarked on a previous nonsensical statement that 'without god, there are no objective truths'. — 180 Proof
IFF an Abrahamic God exists, then there we have objective facts from on high. — AmadeusD
I'm not sure about that. — Tom Storm
You have to remeber, we're playing by THEIR rules. You can't just question the Abrahamic God if we've established it exists - and not be wrong. — AmadeusD
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