True atheism has nothing to do with the materialistic. And as I mentioned, putting value into the only life that we have and thinking about our moral legacy can produce a much deeper moral thinking than believing your consciousness just continues.
You can easily apply a nihilism to such afterlife ideals as well since if there's an afterlife, then this life doesn't matter that much. These are the same principles that much of the islamic extremists operate under, enforcing a deep and soul crushing nihilism to the actions in this life, in order to reach paradise.
If people viewed their existence in this life as the only thing that will exist for them and that the moral legacy of their life will be the only thing people remember them by, then the drive for better moral behavior can increase since the life right now must be the one to be good and if all treat others well, then all will benefit from this only life.
It's the lack of correlation between a lack of an afterlife and good morals that I find is the problem here. And that the materialistic is a nihilistic behavior, when it's rather operating on another type of belief system. — Christoffer
The materialistic lifestyle is a lifestyle that appears throughout society, regardless of religion. — Christoffer
My working definition is caring about someone’s well being, and wanting to see them flourish. — Mikie
I'm not sure if utopianism is synonymous with laissez-faire materialism though — Pantagruel
The belief in "progress" that says things are always getting better. When that is getting less true every day. — Pantagruel
I see a lot of materialism consuming, polluting, and destroying. — Pantagruel
Hopefully an newly enlightened social consciousness is awakening, in the collective-ecological spirit championed by many indigenous groups. — Pantagruel
The world needs some kind of fundamental change, because every indication is that we have been on a collision course with disaster since industrialization. — Pantagruel
I see a lot of materialism consuming, polluting, and destroying.
— Pantagruel
Can you provide an example that connects directly the lack of belief in superphysicalism and this? — Tom Storm
Anyone who believes that personal responsibility transcends the limits of material life perhaps is not fundamentally a materialist then. :wink: — Pantagruel
I see a lot of materialism consuming, polluting, and destroying. I don't see a lot of "materialist conservation." I do see a lot of spiritually motivated conservation efforts, people who are aware of the significance of the health of natural systems in a cosmic sense. — Pantagruel
I see a lot of materialism consuming, polluting, and destroying. — Pantagruel
I think great leaders ride on a wave that is created by the circumstances of the moment. I think we should be paying more attention to the masses and what is driving them. Why are so many clinging to a tribe, instead of their own comprehension of the good? — Athena
We are totally confused and screaming for a great leader who can put an end to this chaos. — Athena
I can imagine a Transcendentalist who doesn't care about the future because we reap our benefits in heaven, and a materialist who does because they realize that those are their family members and they are committed to family.
But the important part is whether or not they believe they are responsible for the future or not. The metaphysics is just a dressing to that. — Moliere
All things being equal, would you rather trust the ethic of someone whose actions are premised around the belief that, when you're dead you're gone. Or someone who believes in the idea of an ongoing responsibility for deeds? — Pantagruel
Are we great because of a few great men such as Cyrus the Great, Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan, Nietzsche, George Washington, or Donald Trump or are we great because we are united and socialized so that together we can imagine and manifest great things? — Athena
It would have taken longer for us to get the kind of "anything goes" media we have now that has evolved even more since social media, and the echo chamber. Technology also has a huge influence of course. Movies and tv would have possibly continued to be a kind of restricted, less grit, sarcasm, violence, sex, realism perhaps. It would have been more gradual. — schopenhauer1
Especially with the assassination of JFK, there is this underlying idea that if JFK wouldn't have been assassinated, then everything would have been better. — ssu
My broader question was not about foreign affairs as much as culture — schopenhauer1
Is nirvana or moksha even a worthwhile goal ? — Sirius
How many of us would give up good food, beautiful women, a big library and a great music collection for a life in the monastery ? — Sirius
Maybe hedonism represents best of all the worst ways you can live your life. But no one wants to hear this. — Sirius
Can you define searing here? Like having a searing critique? — schopenhauer1
I also found it ironic that you couldn't understand the bit of trolling that political satire functions as when lampooning people's beliefs regarding political matters, yet, all you do is lampoon people's posts, trying to find some sort of ad hominem weakness. — schopenhauer1
The thing is that you're not distinguishing between my words and your interpretation of my words. You're conflating the two. — baker
If I want to insult someone, I make that clear. — baker
The whole of Christian existentialism is about you and God alone. The other persons religious beliefs, if any at all, shouldn't matter. — Dermot Griffin
I don't think Christianity has this idea that if you pick the wrong church you'll burn forever. — Dermot Griffin
I wanted to ask: why is this question given such low priority? The arts are filled with references to love. — Count Timothy von Icarus
It seems to me that we might love someone, but not love everything about them. So, to some extent, Plato and Augustine seem to get something right. At the same time, we love people for who they are, in spite of their flaws, and so it seems like the personalist account also gets something right as well. To me, love seems to be about wanting the best for a person, but also a sharing in that goodness through a transcendent union. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I sort of tried to in the OP. Did this cursory attempt fail? Essentially, the distrust in government, the ramping of the draft, the free drugs and sex movement amongst the youth increased exponentially from 1964 onwards — schopenhauer1
The Free Speech movements, and the X rights movements, the libertine youth culture of the 60s and beyond to today, seemed to start very soon after his assassination... — schopenhauer1
I thought his using the word "ailing" in his reply was not a good manner in public writing. — Corvus
Ok fair enough. Quite disappointed on your "vulgar" nature of response in hysterical tone. Enjoy your own recommended readings yourself. — Corvus
It seems near (if not totally impossible) to conceive of a reality where there is no consciousness at any point in it's development. — Benj96
Does that elevate the significance of the state to some fundamental level somehow? Why might any given universe demand, if not absolutely fundamentally need, conscious beings to work or "happen". — Benj96
How important should we make consciousness when we consider physics? This is sort of a hard problem question of a nuanced format. — Benj96
This is why a musician will claim that music provides the most primordial access to truth, a poet will insist that poetry is the most sublime art, a scientist will extoll their seemingly privileged access to what is truly there, and a philosopher will try to usurp all of these domains within their own. — Joshs
I was thinking of the rather primitive versions, Pascal's Wager in particular. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If "sticking your head in the sand" works well enough, then you never have an incentive to go out and try to learn more. People tend to be, in economic parlance, utility satisfiers, not maximizers. They look for "good enough" in a lot of things. — Count Timothy von Icarus
And you are the boss, you define all the terms, right. — baker
Critics of Trump & co. often become exactly like those they criticize. Don't you see the danger in that? — baker
As opposed to the condescension you accuse me of. — baker
And what does this have to do with our discussion?
I'm telling you my reasons for what I'm telling you. — baker
Oh Jesus. I have simply identified a boundary. Identifying a boundary is not "sneering and insinuating". — baker
It is, because it means you're not open to discussion of this topic. And it's predictable that it probably won't go well. — baker
It's mostly irrelevant, until someone claims to be a representative of a religion or claims to have been such a representative in the past, and that as such, deserves special recognition and respect.
It's in the nature of religiosity that different people will have varying degrees of knowledge of and involvement in their religion.
But the extent of their knowledge of and involvement in their religion becomes relevant if they claim to deserve some kind of special recognition and respect. — baker
Heaven knows I'm no fan of religion. But I think many atheists, agnostics, and humanists grossly understimate it. As far as I'm concerned, these atheists etc. have nothing helpful to offer me as far as dealing with a religious problem is concerned. — baker
I think we need our bodies to experience life and that every cell in our body is part of our consciousness, so if our consciousness were transferred to a different body we would have a problem identifying that different body as who we are. — Athena
But the OP is not about the actual existence of the world itself, but it is more about our reasoning for believing in the existence of the world. — Corvus
My belief in the existence of the old house was proved wrong. I thought to myself, well I should have no ground in believing what I am not perceiving in the world, and that is a rational and coherent way to think. — Corvus