I’ve read Ehrman, he’s great. — Noble Dust
What's interesting about this case (at least according to this), is that he "has given Congress and the Intelligence Community Inspector General extensive classified information about deeply covert programs that he says possess retrieved intact and partially intact craft of non-human origin." — Michael
I'm highly skeptical. It seems impossible for something like this to have been covered up for so long. — Michael
So for me, there is justification for secular humanist education and some forms of assertive atheism. — Tom Storm
How exactly does an allegory work to provide sustenance to a believer, any suggestions? — Tom Storm
Give me examples from the torah or talmud OR ANY OTHER SCRIPTURAL SOURCE, that you use to guide your own life and the life of your progeny but make sure the example is theistic in content or in 'spirit' and let it be held up to critical assessment by others. — universeness
Author's intentions are transcended. — Tom Storm
Didn't you? If an interpretation does not prove the existence of an interpreter then I shall consent to be called a fool. — Vera Mont
Do you accept all of 'the story' as true? — universeness
How do you know which religious scripture it REALLY wants you to follow. — universeness
The book is holy, but the what the priest says, goes. — Vera Mont
Are the traditional Judaic scriptures any more reliable than the bible, as a guide to how a human should live their life?, in accordance with: — universeness
Nevertheless, in my own experience, I can't think of anything I have gained in wisdom from a work of fiction. — Tom Storm
Does it follow from this that the creator is created too? Anyway, as you might expect, I’d go a bit further and say that the creator is also a fiction. A meaningful one. — Jamal
It’s kind of frightening that the idea of artistic truth seems so alien to people now. Worthy of a separate discussion I’d think. — Jamal
History is broken and remade by - fiction? That much is undeniable. And that is worth consideration by any philosopher. — unenlightened
The optimist thinks it will happen, come what may, thus nothing already experienced matters at all. In contrast, the hoper wants it to happen, despite everything. — Jamal
Why waste it on those who have lived in a religious environment and rejected it? Very few people have been complete strangers to religious ideas and need to be informed. Most unbelievers came to their unbelief through experience and do know exactly what they're missing - what they often feel they have escaped from. In many cases I know of, atheists had simply stopped believing over time because they found the doctrine unconvincing. None of these people will be lured back into the fold by someone saying, "But it works for me." — Vera Mont
Optimism is often facile and banal. — Jamal
Sure, I'm an atheist and I don't have any particular need for religion, I just think a lot of people probably do. — ChatteringMonkey
In other words, religion was being lost, and without anything to take its place, bad things happen. — Jamal
Oh we have many many millions of years, not 5 more years (Hear D. Bowie below).
So how about a 100 year or thousand year or ...... year plan?
We just have to avoid extinction events and causing such ourselves. — universeness
"either the ball is green, or the ball is not green" is always true, regardless of the colour of the ball.
I don't care about your concern with logical tautologies. In REAL human life, ALL totalitarian dictators past and present are god wannabees, and you holding up an irrelevant shiney from propositional logic, in a futile attempt to dilute from the observed behaviour I am referring to, is part of why I claimed earlier that your theism manifests in you at times, in rather sinister ways. — universeness
The USSR, and China are just another two failed attempts to 'get it correct.' — universeness
WE MUST TRY TRY TRY and then ......... TRY AGAIN! Until we succeed, on a global scale. — universeness
BUT, this is a religious position! All totalitarian, cult of personality, autocratic control level of a large mass of people, are IDENTICAL imo, to the rule of a king or a messiah who claims to have gods sanction, (the so called, divine right of kings) to BE what they/he/she/hesh wants to be, ie, YOUR GOD! — universeness
Also keep in mind, some 95% of Nazi Germany were Christians. — jorndoe
I've often wondered if Mormons are protestants. They were born out of the early 1800's American rise in religion, but they were also ultimately driven out by protestants too. Accepting them back into the fold of Christianity, which does seem to have happened from my vantage now, is a relatively recent phenomena -- I recall Christians handing out anti-Mormon literature growing up. — Moliere
But there are some interesting associations in this space. — Tom Storm
In a way, the Holocaust was part of a wretchedly long (sub)culture, an abominable "tradition", that you could hope ended, though it doesn't quite seem like it. :/ — jorndoe
Take psychopathy. On the extreme end, you get arsonists, rapists, and bloody murderers who don't feel much. — BC
You're kidding right? — Darkneos
My point is should there be an option to cure it for people who have had it be nothing but trouble for them? — Darkneos
An interesting and paradoxical thing about many fundamentalists I have known is that they are not particularly familiar with the Bible - apart form a few frequently recycled quotes. Pastors may in theory have the same status as others in the congregation, but generally hold a degree of power over interpretation and the culture of their church, often through charisma or personality. — Tom Storm
This is Protestantism in general, not just fundamentalism. It’s why there are thousands of Protestant denominations. — Jamal
This is Protestantism in general, not just fundamentalism. It’s why there are thousands of Protestant denominations — Jamal
tradition. (Add extra negative epithets to taste.) I think it is clear that it is reactionary, and specifically reacting against science, particularly evolution. — unenlightened
The majority of negative events in human history can be traced back to religion. The current trend of homophobia for one, nazi Germany, etc. — Darkneos
You really do seem to be ignorant about human history. — Darkneos
This just sounds like making excuses for the text or religion. Never mind that the text itself contradicts itself multiple times and makes exceptions for followers that it doesn’t for others. Not to mention preach some awful things. — Darkneos
also the problem with interpretation of a text is that people can use it to justify just about anything they want to so you’re not really helping your cast but more illustrating a huge problem with religion. — Darkneos
This reminds me of my friend John (who is a priest) who says 'Forget Jesus, be Christlike!' Is this the kind of thing you mean? — Tom Storm
My grandma, who was born in the 1880's, was a typical European Christian of her time. In the 1970's she told me no one had ever gotten to the moon because God and heaven 'are in the sky and people can't get there until they die' — Tom Storm
The basic movement then would be from Religion/culture to science (as "religion") + religion + "culture". And from Selves to "selves". But "selves" always long to be Selves and in order to do that there must be a movement back to Religion/culture (fundamentalism). — Baden