Well, I'm happy for you if you find comfort and meaning in your belief. I just wouldn't base my economic and industrial strategy on it! — karl stone
Absudism is a philosophy most notably made popular by Camus - What is says in a sentence or two is, men seem to have a need to seek meaning for their existence. But there is no meaning to be found. This paradox of a need to find meaning where there is none is absurd. — Rank Amateur
Jake - do see this as a kind of restatement of Absurdism ? — Rank Amateur
In those cases where ignorance is inevitable and abundant (such as the God debate), the rational act is to embrace ignorance, and mine this abundant resource for every value which it can provide. — Baba Jake
I think the software side has a long way to go. — Devans99
And I think it's the emotional investment of both theists and atheists that keep them from settling on the rationally agnostic mid point. — karl stone
Trust me, I'm open to anything. — Nasir Shuja
So if the problem is that we are social animals and but other people are frustrating, how does one resolve this tension? — schopenhauer1
So if the problem is that we are social animals and but other people are frustrating, how does one resolve this tension? — schopenhauer1
But we are just machines. We have inputs and outputs, memory and a CPU. It's just we are so much more complex than current computers that we class ourselves apart when we are basically the same. — Devans99
Is pleasure and convenience is worth the death of innocent sentient beings? — chatterbears
Your view also reminds me of negative theology in the revelation of the possibility of a not-knowing and a not-needing-to-know. — sign
But when 'reason' is appealed to as a kind of fixed object that doesn't divide and interrogate itself, is this still reason, or an idol named 'reason'? — sign
I would be happy to. He is an interesting, flawed, and complicated man. Very much the type of person one should look to to understand Catholicism. — Rank Amateur
n this form and hosted as it is, yes it's just a service from PlushForums. But I believe it's a fork of VanillaForums, which is open source and available to run yourself. — jamalrob
“Reason is in fact the path to faith, and faith takes over when reason can say no more.” — Merton
On many (most? all?) subjects, reason leads to a clear minded recognition of our ignorance. — Pattern-chaser
We could move if necessary, say if it became too expensive, but it would mean starting from scratch unless we had control over the source code and database of the new forum. So if I hosted the new forum and could change the code, access the database directly, and so on, then I could conceivably run a script to import the data from the PlushForums JSON export. — jamalrob
We back up your content every hour, so it is perfectly safe.
and my interest in this debate is more about the is belief in anything an active act - than in any kind of theist - non theist debate. — Rank Amateur
But I completely agree that both science and reason - have been elevated to a religion based on faith by many - and many of those are completely blind to this. — Rank Amateur
I am not sure that is it Jake - I think it is tactic. And I think that was Russels objective. And the purpose is, there is a do loop in the argument if it is not there. IMO he did like the fact that by the application of reason alone the Atheist position was and is no more valid than the theist position. He was looking for a superior atheist position - and his solution was to relieve the atheist from any responsibility of supporting their position and solely basing their position that there is no god until the theist can support their argument to their satisfaction. It is an attempt to move the "there is no god" belief to the status quo - the given - until proved otherwise. — Rank Amateur
The problem with this approach is that you seem to be using reason to determine that those who take the application of reason for granted have a blind faith. — Ciaran
Is it only the lack of belief in god that is an active act or does it work that way for all lack of belief? — DingoJones
However I believe the statement " there is no God" is also a positive assertion, that also has a burden of proof. — Rank Amateur
Science is agnostic with regard to hypotheses lacking conclusive evidence. — karl stone
Agree completely - furthermore the entire reason for this semantic difference is purely tactical. Which is fine, if your objective is to win an argument - useless if your objective is some exchange of reasonable ideas in an honest search for a truth. — Rank Amateur
The thing is that with respect to whether atheism obtains or not, where/how the lack of belief arrives is irrelevant. — Terrapin Station
Hilariously flawed, you are talking right out your ass.
First, you tell me im trusting an authority called reasoning and therefore my view is no more or less justified than the view of the one not based on reason but ancient books written by primitives and what is your basis for doing that? Reason!
Spectacular failure. Not to mention I just got through explaining exactly why your assertion here is wrong.
Cherry on the cake? You dont even know what intellectual dishonesty means!
Congratulations sir, you have the proud distinction of the single, most profoundly ignorant post I have ever bothered to respond to. What can I say, i had a good long laugh.
We are done here, you go ahead and have the last word. — DingoJones
Their is an ecstasy in enlightenment talk. — sign
The anti-guru approach might be summed up as a pointing at the seeking as the very thing it seeks and yet flees. — sign
Well, it is a sort of semantic game but I think it is the believer who makes it that way, by calling “disbelief” a belief. The goal is to create a false equivalence so the believer doesnt have to support their position. — DingoJones
Imho, unity is the reality, and that what is being discussed are various techniques for overcoming the perception of division. — Jake
Exactly. I couldn't have said it better. — BrianW
this definition from "American Atheist"
"Atheism is one thing: A lack of belief in gods. Atheism is not an affirmative belief that there is no god nor does it answer any other question about what a person believes. It is simply a rejection of the assertion that there are gods" — Rank Amateur
One doesn't require authority to lack belief in something, although one would perhaps require evidence to otherwise make positive claims. — VoidDetector
I think, first, one transcends the relative. That is achieved by directing the consciousness to that which is constant. — BrianW
What is the source of the illusion of division? — Jake
I think it is confounding the absolute with the relative. — BrianW
I think enlightenment is where the consciousness is fixed in the state of absoluteness because in that state one is all and all is one. — BrianW