It seems you do have a tendency to ask bullshit questions. I'm sure you could research this yourself if you actually cared. — Agustino
I'm sure you would make your own arguments if you actually cared. And then I might actually respond to them. As it stands though, I'm not at all interested in being sent around the internet at the speed of your google searches; read your own source material and compose an actual argument... Please...
— VagabondSpectre
The connection was a religious one, unlike the connection other animals had with the land and the creatures they hunted. — Agustino
So you say it's a religious connection. That's your conclusion. What are your premises and evidence?
Nope, that's absolutely not what I said. I said humans had a connection with the transcendent and a desire for the divine. I'm sure Buddhists and Jainists have that too, no concept of a supreme God needed. — Agustino
Alright well now you're going to need to rigorously define "divine" and "transcendent". I thought you were talking about god but I guess you were talking about something even more vague...
You have any proof for this nonsense? Religions have not generally aimed at conquering and converting, especially in the very ancient times. — Agustino
Actually religions, at least the successful one's, did tend to aim for conquest and conversion. The Religions that were successful at this tend to be the most popular religions of today. I'm sure you know that Islam was "spread by the sword" during a certain period of time, but how do you feel about the Christian crusades or evangelical missionary works? In
very ancient times there was no conquering monotheistic god to speak of, that shit came after the end of paganism in Rome.
Study human history. Compare it to animal history. You can clearly see that whatever other differences, one clear difference is that humans have a NATURAL drive towards the divine, while animals don't. — Agustino
Strictly speaking, non-human animals aren't capable of thought sophisticated enough to entertain the idea of a creator god. Maybe if they were smart enough some of them would become god-obsessed, and maybe some wouldn't. But just because some humans do claim to have
a drive towards the divine doesn't mean that it's innate, hard wired, or common to all humans. Some humans have a drive to smear feces on the walls, but it's not a natural human drive.
If you want to describe a natural human drive, try something that is actually common to all humans or demonstrably inherent in human psychology.
First of all that comparison is inadequate, because each country/region has a different culture/tradition and some of the poorest countries are badly affected by diseases and wars. So their GDP/capita isn't the only factor playing a role in their happiness. Moreso, if you look at Latin America, they are generally poorer, but happier. What accounts for that happiness is largely their traditional orientation, including religion, because yes, Latin Americans are on the whole quite religious, especially when compared to the West. — Agustino
What's that? There are these magical things called "other factors"!? HOLY CAUSATION BATMAN!
You start by saying correlation based on a single factor doesn't amount to causation, but then you go right ahead and state that the single factor of religiosity is the causative force behind the raised cluster of Hispanic countries.
Who would have thought that there was more than a single factor in the world? POMO and sex will end civilization. Irreligion leads to unhappiness, and the singular and universal human need for "the divine" is the reason why; other factors be damned.
I don't see any reason why your haphazard interpretation of the graph should be any more worthy of consideration than my haphazard interpretation (except that mine boasts a tighter correlation). But this was my whole point. Throwing a graph in someone's face amounts to a rhetorical game unless you're able and willing to make a strong conclusion from it through actual analysis, explanation, and argumentation. I call it "rhetorical" because without dissection it amounts to a persuasive tool that appeals only to authority of the publisher and not the strength of the evidence.
The three links you posted about cave paintings for instance: The wiki article talks mostly about burial ceremonies, shamans, and animism (are these things transcendent or divine?) and describes how these tendencies began to emerge maybe around 300,000 years ago. It doesn't say that everyone was religious, it says that this is when the first behaviors even describable as religious started to emerge. We might have worried about fertility and hunting, but it doesn't say we were all concerned with a next life or a string-pulling god or an experience of "the transcendent".
The wiki description of paleo-religious setting is exactly what I described though; there were groups of people who A), bury the dead, and B), may have had a shaman (who most likely gets them high) and would have been the arbiter of whatever the fuck it is they might have believed. Not all tribes would have believed the same or even necessarily similar things though. Some of them might have had no sophisticated metaphysical beliefs pertaining to "the transcendent and the divine" of any kind. This is why I refuse to investigate a source you yourself won't take the time to quote (to provide your argument in a concise manner). In this case it backs up what I've previously said while not at all backing up what you have said (that "desire for the transcendent or divine is natural to all humans").
-- Just because we dig up one ancient cave-shaman doesn't mean we should then go ahead and conclude "the desire for the divine was inherent at the beginning". What's equally likely is that something about being incredibly superstitious confers some kind of survival/reproduction advantage, and so superstition wielding groups tended to spread (just like how a vigorous policy of conversion (I.E: christian missionary work) is beneficial for the spread of the religion), and so that's why superstitiousness is a common (but not universal) human trait.--
The second link from "historytoday.com" is behind some kind of subscription wall...
The third link shows the existence of an animistic python worshiping cult and shaman from 70k years ago. What did it mean to them though? Was the snake divine? Was the snake their transcendent link to something? Maybe they hoped the python would devour their enemies or help to ensure a good crop harvest. Who knows? It's just another shaman preaching random beliefs, and we don't even know what they were. Not every group had a shaman and not ever shaman would have preached metaphysical truth (some of them would have been primarily medicine men who share wisdom and provide leadership, which might be important in some harsh environments).
If you want to hold it in your head that religious belief is somehow an important aspect of human cognition, I won't actually hold it against you. Not all humans have the same desires or think in similar ways. Religious belief might actually be intrinsic to your mind and if that's what makes you happy then go for it. But I must disagree on the strongest possible grounds that "desire for the transcendent or divine" is common to all humans, or that "it was there from the beginning".
In my eyes, that's not an increase in freedom. That's an increase in freedom to not be committed and devoted, an increase in freedom to be a selfish snitch. I don't want that kind of freedom, you can keep it for yourself. Your kids will pay the price by their broken family. — Agustino
What do you mean "snitch"? Is that like, where the woman or the man complains to the judge that their spouse cheated on them?
LOL! Who needs personal rights and freedoms if they can't even enjoy them? If you can't even have a family because divorce rates are so high, who needs this freedom? What will we do with it? Wipe our buttoms? You're talking as if freedom was a good in itself. — Agustino
You're talking about marriage as if it's good in itself. Sometimes marriage is not good and in the old world where divorce rates were low, spousal abuse was prevalent.
If two people get married and then get divorced, it's not the fault of some societal divorce rate that demanded they be separated. You're griping about the behavior of free humans as it's some terrible force that is going to destroy you. I really don't get it: the freedom to divorce is actually the un-freedom to stay married???????
There's no law that says a certain number of people must be divorced, that's just a behavioral trend....
Well leave me out of discussion, I'm a smart guy. Let's talk about your average man, who isn't that well-educated, isn't aware of all the social trends, doesn't know what kind of women to look for, etc. He's the one who will pay the price, not people like me. And if you tell him that he's absolutely free to get married and stay married, that's like telling a black slave 100 years ago he's absolutely free to run away and live on his own! It's fucking bullshit, and we both know it's bullshit. The social environment isn't conducive, on the whole, towards life-long marriage. Most people cannot escape their social environment, nor should it be expected of them to do so. — Agustino
O.K, so, the whole "that's like telling a slave" argument is beyond ridiculous. If you're legally a slave and are physically restrained from doing something, this is different then being free to try something and to fail.
If we apply this brand of logic to, for example, your economic views, then we can see that statistically most people are not wealthy or well off. Telling someone that they're free to get rich in the free market is like telling a slave that they're free to escape, because statistically they will fail..... Right?
Yes, if he dies while trying to escape, the slave can thank his inability to run faster or his inability to live up to whatever standards he set for himself. Great one mate >:O — Agustino
Each to his need, each to his ability? Is that what you're trying to say?
Define abusive. If, for example, your wife doesn't want to have as much sex as you do, that doesn't count as abusive. Please remember that. — Agustino
Abusive would be forcing your spouse to have sex when they don't want to. Uh... Please remember that?
No, I mean introducing the local religion to children in school, and discussing the concepts involved, whether they be moral, about the afterlife, or otherwise. It seems that the only kind of religious education you can think of is one where people are told "This is what you have to believe. Now believe it". Your imagination is quite poor. — Agustino
What if the class decides that the local religion is irrational and immoral?
And does it seem to you we have achieved that much? Man does not live on bread alone. — Agustino
Yes we have achieved that much. See: modernity.
Also, arguments do not live on vague metaphors alone. The bread bit does nothing for me.
Nope, that's not what I said. Again, get your facts straight mate. Seems like you can't even understand what I'm telling you. — Agustino
Forgive me for not being able to keep your meaningless terms straight. You have yet to define the transcendent or the divine. I thought we were talking about desire for god.
This is false. — Agustino
It's just as plausible as your assertion that all humans have "an innate desire for the divine" (did I get that right?).
That's according to whom? According to you? Because as far as I know, most people who believe in spiritual enlightenment (take Wayfarer on this forum) would disagree with you. — Agustino
Yes that's according to me. (Sorry Wayfarer!). It's by your own words that I reason this though; you speak of a coming desire for the divine or the transcendent where hedonic pleasure won't be sufficient. You even referred to it as a natural human drive; something psychological. So even by your own admission and description, you are just following the natural drives that your mind is geared toward, and following what it is geared toward makes you happy.
Happiness and pleasure are not the same. — Agustino
Happiness is different for different people, but we can all agree that pain and pleasure have at least some relationship with it.
:s Riiiiiight, a bunch of (mostly) Christians mentioned that freedom is given to man by a God of NATURE! I don't know where you're making this stuff up from, but you may like to provide some sources. — Agustino
The declaration of independence states "When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.". But the constitution of America (the thing that founds and grounds the legal framework of the entire state) does not mention god and establishes freedom from religion in the 1st amendment. My sources are the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of America.
Why did they explicitly make it so that no religion could ever become a state religion (or gain favored legal status over another religion) if America was to be founded on Christianity?
Right, so I suppose if someone at a party jokes about how he'd like to fuck your wife, that's alright no? He was just joking! Or even better, your wife jokes about giving them a blowjob. That's very "decent". Or your mother jokes about giving a blowjob to a random guy. That's certainly what people should be doing, so long as they're just joking right? — Agustino
Do you know what a false moral equivalence is? It's when you try to compare two things and say that one is just as bad as the other when in reality the two things are entirely different. Joking about fucking someone's wife is different than joking about offering blowjobs, which is also different than your wife joking about offering blowjobs. You make it sound like any joke which is vaguely offensive to anyone's sensibilities is a bad joke. You sure you haven't been drinking that political correctness cool-aid?
Society should discourage vice and sin, even if only for the bad social effects it has (including by the way rising divorce rates). — Agustino
What exactly do you mean by "discourage"? Are you really just saying that society should adopt and promote your own moral standards?
In short, who determines what "sin" is?
I don't know who taught you this bullshit, but no. We like our women strong, decent, moral, and upstanding, not running around promising blowjobs. — Agustino
So you like your women with successful professional careers, the ability to choose if and when they have children, and the freedom to marry another woman if they so choose?
No you're right... How dare that woman offer blowjobs... The end is nigh.
Yes, I wouldn't deceive people with a carrot like you seem to like doing. A carrot that never satisfies them and just makes them hungrier. — Agustino
That's because I sell actual carrots. You just allude to this magical invisible carrot that will satisfy you forever. You peddle the promise of ultimate gratification, ultimate fulfillment, while I offer a basic but genuine staple of human life: enjoyment.
If you want to beat me in sales, it's not too late to change products...
No, I don't have to satisfy your laziness and inability to read a source provided to you because you think it's not good without even reading it. :-} — Agustino
It's very amusing how you're able to turn "please selectively quote or reference your own sources to compose an argument" into "
you're too lazy to read any and all sources i provide and construct my argument for me? Pshaw I say! PSHAW!"
No, it was a British position, not a Christian one. The law was written by the British government, not the Church. — Agustino
The law was written by the British government but it was informed by prevailing religious views amongst it's people. The bible describes homosexuality as abominable and would have definitely contributed to why Christians have had such lasting negative positions towards homosexuals (we can look at the lynching of gays in America as an anecdotal starting point).
One value of democracy is not that it absolutely prevents arbitrary (and wrongful) religious moral standards from holding sway in society, it's more so that it permits us to escape those religious moral standards, as a society, as the people change and progress more quickly than their religious doctrines.
Actually, again you are bullshitting. The part in Leviticus that you're quoting is part of God's Mosaic Covenant with the Jews at one particular time in history. What does this have to do with Christianity today? The Mosaic Covenant wasn't just a religion, but a state as well. Jewish religious leaders would prescribe the laws as well. Us Christians read that as instructive history (for example you can understand from that that homosexual sex is sinful, and the punishment for sin is death). — Agustino
I mean, this is a
nice try disturbing mental back-flip and all, but Jesus himself stated that the ancient laws were still good. And it's not as if it makes much sense that god went into extraordinary detail about the moral standards expected of the Jews but then later on changed his mind about what is moral. You might not be sent to hell for it thanks to Jesus, but sin is sin right?
What I don't get is what you mean by "instructive history". I know you believe homosexuality is sinful, but do you also believe that they should be put to death for it?
What does that have to do with the virtue of Charity again? — Agustino
You suggested we've abandoned charity. We clearly have not.
To live virtuously in a way that honours God. — Agustino
If only there was a God to be found that we could waste time honoring...
One second you say courage hasn't gone anywhere, the other you talk about the millions of teens who can't do anything better but stay glued to social media. Makes much sense. — Agustino
You're going to have to be a bit more specific. Teens glued to social media has nothing to do with courage. Perhaps you think yourself courageous for not being glued to social media, or for living the good Christian life-style, and maybe in some ways you are, but teens glued to social media vs being religious is not what comes to mind when I think of the kind of courage it takes to perpetuate human society...
Well serve is the wrong word. Women are there to help men, among other things. — Agustino
HA! Why can't women just be there without some necessary role of subservience to men? You do realize that most modern Christians side with me on this right?
Seriously? By destroying families? By making children suffer? By increasing conflicts? By increasing harmful emotions like jealousy, anger, hatred? — Agustino
Sometimes divorce is easier on the children than the destructive relationship of the parents were it to be maintained.
Regarding promiscuity, how often is it the cause of divorce? I wonder if something like a rise in the cost of living (which subsequently now on average has both parents working full-time jobs to make ends meet) might have an effect on their relationship or if the subsequent time spent apart might even be a factor contributing to promiscuity itself.... I wonder...
It seems to me you don't understand what charity is. — Agustino
It seems you no longer understand your own point here: you tried to say that we've abandoned these values (selflessness and charity among others) and that's why the west will collapse. Me pointing out that we still have these things contradicts your premise that we've abandoned them.
P.S, if you are truly selfless then give away all of your posessions. W.W.J.D?
Right, you want to remain stuck in your narrow self-chosen prison. I see. — Agustino
Actually I refuse to enter the fun-house maze of corridors and distorted mirrors you've tried to beckon me into. All you need to do is quote the bit in the source material that you think makes your point. It's so easy, you don't even need to paraphrase it.
If you're going to be lazy, there's no point in having a conversation. — Agustino
That's how I feel when you hurl a link at me and say "read it" as your only argument or rebuttal to a specific point.
No, we aren't. Again, man does not live on bread alone. More bread doesn't mean more prosperous. — Agustino
Yes because according to you prosperity is a function of religiosity.
Man actually needs something other than bread to live on. I agree: they need a circus;
games.
Bread and circuses kept the roman masses appeased for centuries, long after they'd lost their precious republic.
"Already long ago, from when we sold our vote to no man, the People have abdicated our duties; for the People who once upon a time handed out military command, high civil office, legions — everything, now restrains itself and anxiously hopes for just two things: bread and circuses".
It wasn't religion that they'd lost, it was a sound grasp of the fundamental principles of democracy and why it's important to participate in it, and their ability to do so. Circuses and games then became the highlights of roman life.
When the bread train slowed, and the now poor masses then felt the extreme squeeze of poverty and societal neglect, Christianity was born.
Had there been more bread and better circuses, nobody would have noticed the crucifixion of one carpenter.