What do 'believers' 'theists' 'idealists' et al mean when they chastise atheists and/or materialists, etc by saying, in effect, that atheism / materialism entails "life has no meaning"? And do tell why that is an objection (bug) rather than an affirmation (feature). — 180 Proof
What is the secret to being happy in a foxhole? — Baker
One imagines that the theist - for all his inventions of sky daddies and karmic mysteries - has a lack of imagination so severe that he has to invent a whole 'mythos' to cover over their total inability to recognize 'meaning' seeping through every pore of the universe without all that trash. — StreetlightX
What is important about religion is finding the source of what Christians call agapé, unconditional compassion, and what Buddhists call bodhicitta, buried behind all the ruins of the ancient faiths. It is both the easiest and most elusive thing in the world. To turn your back on that because of religion is the cruelest irony. — Wayfarer
This is all I'm trying to say. — BitconnectCarlos
Because their commitment to saving lives at all costs ("cutting off the leg to save the body") led them to collaborate and actively assist in the deportation (death) of one part of the community to save the other parts.
Does this make sense to you? — BitconnectCarlos
... Judaism isn't primarily a religious faith. It's really not a faith at all. — BitconnectCarlos
I read that as Tantric books :razz: — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I simply mean that being only in the grocery store, I will refrain from telling the farmer his business. — tim wood
I shan't participate and accordingly abstain from voting. — tim wood
If words were able to form concepts in the minds of people we would understand a foreign language simply by reading or hearing it. — NOS4A2
In a sense, the mind shapes the language, not the other way about. — NOS4A2
Well yes, a young child who associates McDonalds Happy Meals with tasty food and toys will no doubt see an advertisement and remind himself of the association. But one who cannot associate it, perhaps because he does not know what McDonalds is or how their Happy Meals taste, will be unable to make that association. In each case the cause of these different effects is the child, not the words. — NOS4A2

In that respect, since there is obvious mystery, paradox and contradiction in life, how does the typical Atheist reconcile their belief system, logically? — 3017amen
It is better to have something to philosophize about than to have nothing. — Apollodorus
first there was theism and then a-theism, which suggests the primacy of theism over a-theism. — Apollodorus
When a man sees an advertisement that is the end of the interaction. Everything after that—whether he decides to buy the product or forgets about it—is caused by the man. — NOS4A2
It was on account of you and other posters like Trinidad being targeted on account of speaking to me. — skyblack

@Foghorn and @Trinidad
… i have be careful who i speak with. — skyblack
Anselm's "proof," — tim wood
Everything he said was posturing, my guess is he was hoping to barf out enough words that he could have plenty of weeds to hide in when he inevitably evaded addressing the actual topic of debate. — DingoJones
Here's the classic ontological argument based upon the same logico-deductive reasoning:
1.By definition, God is a being than which none greater can be imagined.
2.A being that necessarily exists in reality is greater than a being that does not necessarily exist.
3.Thus, by definition, if God exists as an idea in the mind but does not necessarily exist in reality, then we can imagine something that is greater than God.
4.But we cannot imagine something that is greater than God.
5.Thus, if God exists in the mind as an idea, then God necessarily exists in reality.
6.God exists in the mind as an idea.
7.Therefore, God necessarily exists in reality. — 3017
