This isn't a parody thread. LeonIsPro has been gracious to explain (sorta ) his worldview in the Christian thread I figured I'd give the theists a chance to be the questioners.
7/5/2011 4:43:57 PM
Why do you hate America?
7/5/2011 7:17:44 PM
Why don't you believe in anything?
7/5/2011 7:18:34 PM
Do you cry yourself to sleep at night from the loneliness?
7/5/2011 7:21:49 PM
What's your favorite way to cook babies?
7/5/2011 7:26:34 PM
What happens when you are dead because God made black.
7/5/2011 7:51:12 PM
We go no meat land.
7/5/2011 8:02:39 PM
Why we go no meat land?
7/5/2011 8:08:45 PM
hehehe, I'm going to answer these legitimately.
7/5/2011 8:46:41 PM
Do you believe in the Omega Point Theory and/or the technological singularity? If so, does this reflect the fact that the foundations of religion or science are based on correct intuition?
7/5/2011 9:54:20 PM
Fuck the singularity theory.
7/5/2011 10:01:20 PM
^ Perhaps you would prefer the doomsday argument?
7/5/2011 10:29:50 PM
Was Jesus the only child of Mary?
7/5/2011 11:19:49 PM
^ being a purely factual question I find that a bit odd, but as I understand it the answer is quite simply "no"
7/5/2011 11:25:51 PM
Who would want to be Jerry, the brother of Christ. That's a tough gig.
7/5/2011 11:50:56 PM
7/6/2011 12:34:27 AM
7/6/2011 1:03:50 AM
7/6/2011 1:19:43 AM
I think that you either do believe a claim or you don't. There is no opt out. Opting out = "not believing, pending further evidence." Or it could mean "Tentatively believing, pending further evidence".
7/6/2011 1:35:57 AM
Why is atheism the default position for someone who has both been exposed to people preaching God and other people saying theres no God? I don't think there is as much of a venn diagram overlap between atheism and agnosticism as you're definingAnd as far as opting out, you might not consider there are people who take option C, "not pretending/caring/needing to believe, pending further evidence"Basically, your definitions seems to imply that people need to either believe or not believe even if hesitant and tentative...I'm telling you that there are people who are neither...and while its anecdotal (me), I doubt I'm the only person who feels this way]
7/6/2011 1:42:56 AM
7/6/2011 1:49:45 AM
7/6/2011 2:32:40 AM
you took my "Option C" quote pretty far out of context with your reply...you basically bolded the opposite of my pointi just think you don't realize that there are people who basically don't care to worry about if there is a god or not[Edited on July 6, 2011 at 3:15 AM. Reason : nighty night]
7/6/2011 3:07:17 AM
I think what TreeTwista is getting at is that there is a third option of Agnostic Fence-Sitters. You say that people either believe "There is God" or don't believe it. But if you think of belief as having a subjective probability of greater than 50%, lack of belief is a subjective probability of less than 50%. But that still leaves the possibility that someone could have a subjective probability equal to 50%, and TreeTwista is saying that if you're agnostic and don't believe you can know the truth about the existence of God, then the correct belief to hold is an equal likelihood of either.
7/6/2011 3:16:29 AM
are you a God?
7/6/2011 7:25:17 AM
Yes.I'll address TreeTwista and Shadowrunner in a bit when I get to work. Short answer: after some thought I think I understand what you mean about agnosticism (generally to the deistic concept of god) but not about specific god claims.
7/6/2011 7:53:22 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_and_positive_atheismhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apatheism
7/6/2011 8:53:46 AM
7/6/2011 9:03:26 AM
There are two different kinds of AtheismIt is used as a generic umbrella term for the lack of belief in gods - a lack of theism. This is called "Implicit Atheism" (also knwon as "Negative Atheism" or "Weak Atheism") and it includes more specific notions like Agnosticism.It also has a narrower definition: a subset of non-theism that rejects all spirituality. This is "Explicit Atheism" (also known as "Positive Atheism" and "Strong Atheism"). It is separate from Agnosticism and Skepticism, in that it asserts "no god could possibly exist".
7/6/2011 9:09:59 AM
Ok, here goes.I think that it is possible to be an apatheist or an agnostic without the baggage of a/theism.I don't think that it's possible if someone is at all skeptical about their beliefs. If you simply are not interested in whether a god claims are true, and don't believe that the rejection of claims is the default position, then fine. I honestly don't think it's logically tenable, given the infinite and contradictory potential god claims.Truth be told, you can call yourself whatever you want. The purpose of me going into it was to illustrate that modern atheism isn't "THERE IS NO GOD" so much as "Your god claims are unproven therefore it makes sense to reject them pending further evidence."
7/6/2011 9:13:54 AM
I don't think you're "rejecting" anything by having doubts. Disbelief is a lack of belief; it's not a rejection of belief, which, is itself a belief.
7/6/2011 9:20:07 AM
7/6/2011 9:21:05 AM
7/6/2011 9:21:38 AM
Its the single thing that separates atheists and agnostics. Call it what you will.
7/6/2011 9:37:49 AM
7/6/2011 9:42:30 AM
my god, its full of stars!
7/6/2011 10:00:36 AM
7/6/2011 10:02:50 AM
7/6/2011 10:35:33 AM
7/6/2011 10:59:55 AM
Here is another quote from Eagleman, via Wikipedia:
7/6/2011 11:07:09 AM
I have a hard time considering him as a productive force with junk like this.Look, I follow his stuff too. I come short of reading his books, which I admit I have no desire to read. I just think he's lacking something. Neil Degrasse Tyson has made most of the points I would make, with the addition that things like the advert above lacks a serious addressing of life purpose. Not only that, but when people like Tyson talk about possibilities like life on Earth coming from Mars, Dawkins is much more-so dragged along as opposed to integrating the beauty of the great unknown into his appreciation of nature.This isn't just about sensitivity, to me it's unfulfilling at best to see statements like "NOW STOP WORRYING AND ENJOY YOUR LIFE", and I feel like that very statement captures Dawkin's view of life-purpose very well. It almost feels condescending, and I openly admit to having an emotional reaction to such things. It's just... not trivial. We're not mindless robots that get some dopamine and then don't need any other purpose from life. I mean, disco said it pretty well
7/6/2011 11:53:44 AM
7/6/2011 12:28:16 PM
7/6/2011 12:37:54 PM
7/6/2011 12:44:36 PM
7/6/2011 12:53:03 PM
7/6/2011 12:54:26 PM
7/6/2011 1:06:30 PM
7/6/2011 1:24:24 PM
I take back what I wrote, I actually do think that book looks appealing.
7/6/2011 1:36:13 PM
7/6/2011 1:41:53 PM