No true scotsman puts sugar on his porridge.
No true theist believe that scriptures are metaphorical.
You can believe there is a divine being without believe scriptures are literal or factual. There is absolutely, absolutely no reason that those two beliefs have to be interdependent. Except that you are forcing it to be so. — Pantagruel
You literally used the term "no actual theist" in exactly the paradigmatic sense of the fallacy's "no true Scotsman." — Pantagruel
You have just committed the no true Scotsman fallacy. — Pantagruel
Right, I meant that one would take the idea that there is a God literally, and that one can have a relationship with that God, and that the commandments will be of aid in being a Good person, say, and that Jesus' teaching are also an aid in both being good and being close to God and perhaps adding in taking the parts about Heaven literally. IOW the core theist positions. I actually think this is fairly common. — Coben
Weren't you just warning against the No True Scotsman fallacy yourself? — WerMaat
Belief in the existence of a god or gods, specifically of a creator who intervenes in the universe.
Religions don't make claims; people make claims. — Janus
So, within the class of the religious who make, or appear to make, factual claims based on scripture, there is a diversity of interpretation of scripture that exists on spectrum from completely metaphorical to completely literal, and hence there is a diversity of claims, more or less compatible or incompatible with science.. — Janus
Just because a person is a scientist does not make all of his or her actions scientific. Any more than claiming to be religious makes all of one's actions spiritual. I interpret the question are religion and science compatible to mean could they be compatible, not "are they currently playing well together, as currently practiced today." — Pantagruel
That fact that things are a certain way is descriptive. The fact that they ought to be another way is normative. That's basic stuff. — Pantagruel
So has science. I'm sorry, but if your best response is to ignore when science is not scientific and religion is not spiritual you're not going to be persuaded by anything I have to say (or anyone else for that matter). It's called a preconception or, more accurately in this case, a prejudice. Cheers! — Pantagruel
I am saying that things like the length of time the earth has been here and the universe has been here, iow areas of scripture where religion contradicts theory, are taken as metaphorical. But one still believes there is a God and that there was some guy, for example, Jesus, whose teachings can help one be a good person, come closer to God and so on. — Coben
I am afraid you are missing the point of that. It is NOT the business of science to make normative claims. — Pantagruel
If you are a theist in one of these religions who took much of the scriptures as metaphorical attempts to describe spiritual values and processes, this could be compatible with science. And then if you were not bound to scripture, it could also be compatible. IOW consider these culture bound and historically bound texts, but still ones with facets of truth. And then if one is not in one of the Abrahamic religions and none of one's beliefs contradict scientific models. — Coben
I was careful to say if each is true to its essence. Anything can be bastardized. Science that is true to scientific principles and religion that is not in a state of self-contradiction, two things as the ideally should be, are applicable to different domains of things. — Pantagruel
As such, [religions] should have nothing to say about science, or other factual domains. — Pantagruel
So science and religion are or should be fully reconcilable. — Pantagruel
As it stands, with his predecessor as a benchmark, Trump isn't really that bad.
— frank
I will note my disagreement on this and leave it there. — Fooloso4
Why should an individual matter when there are so many different people in this world? Like a giant anthill swarming with unimportant individuals that will soon fade into nothingness. — DanielPhil
You seem to be using the word "meaning" in at least three different senses:
Meaning as the definition of a word
Meaning as the interpretation of a set of ideas
Meaning as significance.
They all seem to get mashed up together. I think things would have been clearer if you had defined your term better at the beginning. — T Clark
“He is destroying the rule of law and the constitutionally established separation of powers.”
Evidence, please. — Reshuffle
Yet it's something to go against what the entire world disagrees with. If you were an ISIS soldier, you'd be hunted down across the entire globe. If you were a Nazi, no one would spare you and no one would give a damn about you. If you were a Japanese, you'd already have honor with the Bushido code, even though it was taken too far. It's very bold to against the world, and these men did it. It's something to consider. — MomokoBandori
A Nazi and a Japanese soldier is an example. But I don't hold them in high regards. I don't like them, but the thing I respect about them is them fighting for what they believe in. Even though it's cruel and even though they have been blinded by propaganda, they still fought in battlefields and they still fought against thousands of men. But that's the only thing that deserves respect among them. The rest of the deeds like rapes, torture, etc. Do not absolutely deserve respect at all. — MomokoBandori
Why so? — MomokoBandori
Care to explain? — SethRy
Are Soldiers, of whom fuel the scope of war, responsible for immoral actions that occur without the central guidance of the law? Furthermore, are soldiers different people in different places? Should they be responsible, would they no longer be responsible if peace is acclaimed? — SethRy
Now, if the morality and identity of a soldier is totally subjective, we would be the total arbiters of right and wrong (which shouldn't be a surprise). And that as an entirety, is every soldier entitled to respect of today's people, for attending war, despite of any immoral action they could've done? — SethRy
moreover, he purged well over 10 million of his glorious proletariat, whom he duped into putting him in charge... — Reshuffle
How so? — Wallows
I can throw labels too. — Wallows
Stay away from sex, autoerotica, and self-actualization;
Stay away from fatty food, from carbs, from proteins, from opioioioioids, from salt, from natural and artificial sweeteners, colouring and spices; from dairy prodcts, (they are full of dihydrogen monoxide, you know), from insecticides, from genicides, from pesticides; stay away from sleeping, from sitting, from standing, walking and running; stay away from people (they are a deadly bunch), and stay away from animals and plants, rocks, sand, grass, etc. — god must be atheist
Corbyn is a Marxist, he’s going to nationalise the banks and ruin the economy. — Wayfarer
Vote Lib Dem — Michael
Philosophy doesn't need evidence... — Anthony
However, S would say that I am a wishful thinker. — Noah Te Stroete
So am I, obviously. Something about his personality strikes me as defective, though. This from someone who knows personal defects. He’s absolutely pathological. I hope he seeks professional help. — Noah Te Stroete
However I think that when it comes to the nature of consciousness, the afterlife,morality and gods these are important unknowns. — Andrew4Handel
I call myself a general agnostic because there are things I can't know and so I live without factoring in certainty in these issues. — Andrew4Handel
Also I can't pretend as if I know. Some people try and argue with you such as saying gods are really implausible or there is no afterlife etc. I don't think you can entirely prove something by argument but only evidence resolves things. (I think this is why philosophy struggles because arguments don't trump evidence or aren't as compelling). — Andrew4Handel