11/21/2013 11:56:15 AM
11/21/2013 12:11:46 PM
11/21/2013 12:22:41 PM
What does it say about your stance that you want us to go respond to other peoples' arguments? Have you even read those links and processed them in a way that you understand them?Has any atheist in this or the other thread linked you to Hume, Decarte, Dawkins, or Sam Harris? Would you find it honest if I said in response to your problems with secular morality 'Go Read The Moral Landscape and refute his points and get back to me.'?
11/21/2013 1:22:11 PM
Descartes*. French people. Not that it matters. The point was make your own damned argument or STFU.[Edited on November 21, 2013 at 2:15 PM. Reason : .]
11/21/2013 2:14:35 PM
guys, stop trying to debate with an Ivy-Leaguer. He's at Columbia.
11/21/2013 7:14:41 PM
11/21/2013 10:43:34 PM
<shrug> You see coping, I see being deluded. Wishful thinking is worse than doing nothing at all; they have exact the same actual results and cloud understanding of where the results actually came from.Now that I think about it though, maybe humanity is better off with a vast majority of us being mindless drones stuck in our situation content to wait it out for an afterlife that doesn't exist.
11/22/2013 8:47:13 AM
If everyone is happy then no one is happy.[Edited on November 22, 2013 at 9:25 AM. Reason : E]
11/22/2013 9:24:34 AM
Opiate for the masses
11/22/2013 9:29:52 AM
11/22/2013 9:36:41 AM
I never suggested that being a theist precludes someone from doing anything useful, only that hope in the divine or the afterlife itself is completely not useful to humanity.Newton was an alchemist for fuck's sake.
11/22/2013 9:56:10 AM
but you did call them all deluded, mindless drones[Edited on November 22, 2013 at 10:09 AM. Reason : vv]
11/22/2013 9:59:32 AM
No I didn't.
11/22/2013 10:03:31 AM
i read that as some people, theists, are mindless dronesbut you meant to say that only some theists are mindless drones? whats the difference between a mindless drone theist and a non-mindless drone theist?
11/22/2013 10:07:42 AM
The vast majority of humanity is being held back by wishful thinking and irrationality. Some exceptional people are able to excel in spite of it.This isn't even exclusive to theists. Anti-vaxxers, homeopathy, reiki, truthers, birthers, the list goes on.
11/22/2013 10:12:29 AM
The list does go on:http://www.reddit.com/r/atheism
11/22/2013 10:15:17 AM
It's getting a little euphoric in here.
11/22/2013 10:18:49 AM
11/22/2013 11:04:21 AM
11/22/2013 11:55:04 PM
^i like that a lot[Edited on November 23, 2013 at 9:25 AM. Reason : .]
11/23/2013 9:08:14 AM
I like the shout out to Mithras.
11/23/2013 11:29:15 AM
11/23/2013 1:08:53 PM
11/23/2013 2:46:51 PM
Those piddling mysteries aren't piddling. The claims of Christianity? I'm about to take the bait and jump the gun here and talk some apparent crazy talk, but I'll try to shed light on why they are important and meaningful...They are a series of truths, illustrated through a grand metanarrative, one that should inform our every decision in life- the story of the universe, and of humanity, that exists for the glory of God. This is going to be a brief overview and will raise lots of questions. But for now...There are four basic chapters to this metanarrative- creation, fall, redemption, restoration. Creation. God created the universe to reflect his greatness. Robots wouldn't do that. He gave us free will.Fall. We thought ourselves to be gods instead. We rebelled against him and brought the ugliness of sin into the world. Everything is broken- our souls, our institutions, all of creation. God's heart was broken. Because he is just, the consequences of sin are real. Hell. Wrath. The destruction to ourselves and others that our personal and social sins bring into the word is all around us. Redemption. The good news. God is not content to sit by and do nothing. He has always been at work, redeeming the world. He has always called us to serve him and serve others, to look outward, not inward for joy and for purpose. He is active in the spirits and minds of people to bring us into alignment with these purposes. (What's not good news about that!? Even the pragmatist would have to agree if society aligned more with the teachings of Jesus, the world would be a much better place!) But we keep on looking inwards, seeking to satisfy ourselves before others and God. Even our best attempts at morality are so unholy by God's perfect standards, that they are filthy rags. We are helpless wretched men. So through Jesus' crucifixion, his own death, and the resurrection, the defeat of death, the wrath that we deserved due to the nature of a justice was satisfied. The selfless nature of God was embodied in the life of Christ. This was the way God provided for redemption. So we see both grace and justice satisfied. Those who look outward, in acknowledgment of our helplessness and depravity, are saved. God is more interested in just mere souls though. He's interested in restoring all of creation...Restoration. In the end, all of creation will be restored and sin and death will be no longer. God establishes a new heaven and a new earth. God wins. There's a whole lot more to it of course, but these are some of the essentials. Sin is everywhere, though, in the atheist and the Christian, and unfortunately we miss these truths and fail to live them out.People want to pin their agenda on truth, and so they take Scripture and twist it, maim it, and mold it to fit their agendas. With disastrous results- for the world and for the Christian faith. And the Bible talks a lot about this actually. For example, it warns repeatedly against the lures of power and politics. And shows repeatedly people trying to pin their agenda on the embodied truth- God himself in human form- Jesus. The pharisees (the powerful religious elites of the day) tried to do this, even citing isolated Scriptural truths that Jesus would agree with. But they weren't interested in submitting to the truth. They were interested in having the truth submit to themselves, in exploiting it, trying to have their way. And so Jesus often gave seemingly ambiguous answers, avoiding their traps, answering with questions, exposing their own hearts as wicked.The world tends to distance themselves from absolute truths, because so many institutions have used the notion as a means to exploit and oppress. Conform to the truth or be marginalized (happening now with the hardline materialist, secularist agenda towards the religious). So how do we govern in a pluralistic society? Obliterate the notions of absolute truths (obliterate the philosophies and liberal arts and things that don't fit the scientists' naturalistic perspective of what's immediately pragmatic and utilitarian at the expense of larger truths and larger holistic health). But this is hypocritical and postmodernism is beginning to be exposed for the sham it is (we'll see how long it takes).Logically, we must admit that there is some sort of universal metaphysical absolute truth or Tao or God or inherent morality that we should strive for. (The rational alternative is materialism -> pragmatism -> existential nihilism, which must admit despair and is not pragmatic at all for the human species. it's a self-destructive argument).The Christian Bible proposes an absolute truth, a moral law embodied in God, that we should strive to submit to. But here's where it differs from all belief systems that also claim an absolute truth. It's the only one that CANNOT be oppressive. History might seem to show otherwise with all of the "Christians" who have killed in the name of God, but those are the same sinful religious self-righteous exploiters of truth, that Jesus came to convict. True Christianity cannot be oppressive, because at its very core, is the truth embodied in Jesus Christ who DIES for his enemies, for those who disagree, for those who hate him. The Gospels and the writings of Paul are explicit in this. And Christians are called to the same.I see why that can all be reduced to pop psychology. But there's a lot of evidence for the philosophical failures of materialism and pragmatism that point to truths beyond our material existence. So if that takes you to spiritual things, then you must wonder which spiritual things are right (and not all religions can be true, law of noncontradiction), and there seems to be more evidence for Christianity- reliability of the four Gospels despite all the attempts to discredit them, spread of early Christianity (doubters turning to martyrs within the span of a few years), the claims of Christ, the lived lives and effects of those who embrace a full understanding of Scripture, among others."Errors" in Scripture: http://theresurgence.com/2012/05/28/what-to-say-when-someone-says-the-bible-has-errorsClaims of Christ (he can't just be a good moral teacher): http://www.calvin.edu/~pribeiro/DCM-Lewis-2009/Lewis/man-or-rabbit.pdfLives of Christians: anything on the early church history, get involved at a solid local church with loving Christians, or this book http://www.amazon.com/Seven-Men-Secret-Their-Greatness/dp/1480521221Resurrection: http://www.dartmouthapologia.org/articles/show/110This is the most concise and readable of the best arguments for God: http://www.amazon.com/Reason-God-Timothy-Keller-ebook/dp/B000XPNUZE/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1385240760&sr=1-1&keywords=reason+for+god+tim+kellerNone of those links are proof of anything. But they are evidence. Evidence that can rationally be considered in favor of God. You can also explain it away rationally, but I think then you will have more problems coming up with another logical worldview (as evidenced by the natural law/absolute truth argument I've been making). Few Christian apologists claim to offer irrefutable proof. But it seems to be the only worldview that provides a paradigm for consistently making sense of the world. More of them agree with C.S. Lewis:
11/23/2013 3:47:45 PM
whoops, 30 minutes is up, but...Why do these claims matter? Because all of the ills of the world could be resolved if we obeyed Jesus. (To be clear, because of the battle against and giving in to sin, Christians, including myself, don't listen and obey much of the time either. We're just as guilty as anyone.)
11/23/2013 4:24:38 PM
I was going to respond line by line but all of it is putting the cart before the horse.Before I take anything you say about the nature of God seriously I'm going to need you to prove he exists.And I find it completely ridiculous that you characterize me asking you to form your own argument instead of asking us to take a course "not wanting an honest conversation." You're a joke.
11/23/2013 8:14:01 PM
^Exactly.What a bunch of horse shit you have filled your mind with. You have been reading way too much Christian apologist crap. Read and watch Sam Harris, Dawkins, etc. and get back to us.
11/24/2013 3:00:41 AM
I have read Dawkins. He certainly didn't prove God does not exist. Nor have you.If you didn't read any of the links I posted and arguments I made about naturalism and pragmatism and existential nihilism, there's nothing else anyone can do for you.
11/24/2013 11:38:42 AM
Your god? Let's start with Genesis being completely debunked by Evolution. And every single supernatural claim ever put to the test has been debunked.Does that "prove" 100% without a doubt that Yahweh doesn't exist? No, it's entirely possible that your particular god inspired/wrote/whatever'd a book that's full of bigotry and historical/scientific inaccuracy and then just lets countless people suffer and die in an elaborate ruse to test us, but he really loves us or something.
11/24/2013 1:24:53 PM
11/24/2013 1:57:56 PM
^ Tell me a little about how you find meaning. Try to be intellectually honest.^^No, not my God. Just a God. "Reasonable arguments in favor of God" is the thread name.Hitchens razor applies to your worldview as well. What can be asserted without evidence (there is no God, because I don't see it- that's a huge leap of faith) can be dismissed without evidence. From a naturalist's perspective, that makes sense. But there's no logical reason to discount most of the human experience. Or to discount reason, and reduce all of our existence to atoms and synapses. (See previous posts on that)There's a reason we don't just study science in schools, as much as you wish we would. Even today's most liberal and elite schools have departments of philosophy, arts, and ethics, because they realize science can only tell us what's observable by sensory experience. But using reason and the mind, they've deduced there is more to being human than sensory experience.[Edited on November 24, 2013 at 2:16 PM. Reason : ]
11/24/2013 2:07:41 PM
I'm not going to get into what I find "the meaning of life" to be with you. Suffice it to say, I do not have to belief in a god, etc. to have meaning. As is true for millions of others. You badly need to stop with this reductio ad absurdum assertion that humanity will head towards nihilism without god, because it just doesn't hold up.
11/24/2013 2:37:15 PM
11/24/2013 2:40:38 PM
^^i rest my case an assume you won't give into it because the rational conclusion would be Nietzcshe's.^im not discounting science's conclusions. But science has no authority to discount what is outside its realm of study. If you're throwing my intellect in with that of Plato's and Alvin Plantinga's, thanks!!!
11/24/2013 3:08:56 PM
So let's be clear... What is exactly outside the realm of science? Why?
11/24/2013 3:18:10 PM
the rational conclusion of a materialist may be a type of pragmatism, but it most definitely will be, if it's intellectually honest, nihilism.but nihilism then contradicts earlier assumptions about the self-preservation of the species, because certainly all humans living in despair isn't very beneficial for the survival of the species. so we have to delude ourselves into thinking there is meaning (fight for human rights, a human utopia, etc...although none of those have any rational basis according to the materialists' preconceived conclusions). You can be a materialist then, and a pragmatist (the greater instinct is to work for the betterment of the collective, or to balance the needs of the individual and the collective, thus creating arbitrary moral frameworks), but you must admit you're concerned with what is useful, not what is true (again, truth -> despair -> seeing the flaws in your line of thinking). (Dostoyevsky illustrated what the rational implications of materialist pragmatism would look like in his novels by the way.)The theist has reason to believe meaning, purpose, and truth is outside of us, that essence precedes existence. The Bible's answer? "He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart; yet no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end."Sure you can say that's all pop psychobabble to make people feel better, opiate for the masses and all. (Even from a materialist pragmatist's standpoint, religion would be recommended as opposed to despair or deluding yourself into thinking you have meaning outside of atoms and instincts). But you still haven't addressed the fatal flaws in your own worldview.An atheist tries to create essence for himself all the time. That's why there are tons of happy atheists everywhere. Many happier than theists I admit. But they're borrowing from theism without admitting it. They're giving meaning to relationships or human rights or the collective or whatever keeps them alive, because to admit that those motivations are only synaptic reactions, to admit that they came from nothing, are nothing, and have nothing, would be too paralyzing. And the second they give any sort of value to anything, they are appealing to a supernatural, absolute, universal existence (Tao, God, Truth, whatever) beyond themselves- something their materialism makes no room for. There is no rational reason that they should favor one instinct (that of favoring the collective, or their survival within the collective) over another, without appealing to something beyond instincts.[Edited on November 24, 2013 at 4:02 PM. Reason : ]
11/24/2013 3:46:30 PM
Did that answer my question? I honestly can't follow your line of thinking.State it simply. What is it exactly that science can't measure with regards to the nature of reality. And why is that so?Then tell me why religion, (or Christianity specifically), is more practical description of nature.Please keep it brief. I don't really care enough about this argument to read walls of text that dance around rather than cutting to the meat of an argument.[Edited on November 24, 2013 at 4:02 PM. Reason : edit]
11/24/2013 3:59:13 PM
11/24/2013 4:03:06 PM
11/24/2013 4:29:34 PM
11/24/2013 4:43:59 PM
If you can't succinctly describe an argument, then you don't have one. Or at least you don't understand your argument well enough to put it succinctly.I refuse to read 30 minutes of nonsense where an apologist creates a strawman, argues against it and then says "...and that's where God comes in." I derive value for life and consciousness by it's nature of being finite. Time is precious and I don't have enough of it to waste on that shit.
11/24/2013 5:51:08 PM
11/24/2013 5:53:47 PM
11/24/2013 6:28:36 PM
11/24/2013 6:57:50 PM
11/24/2013 7:47:38 PM
Thank you, Columbia philosophy major, for the revelation that all of the things that give meaning and satisfaction to my life are a delusion, because Nietzsche. And thank you for keeping your head in the sand about every rebuttal you have gotten to any cogent apologist arguments you might have made.
11/24/2013 10:04:16 PM
God damn yes. He doesn't respond to shit and we responded to essentially every line and he's like "waaaa, you didn't rebut all my reasonable arguments.."The only lines I didn't respond to directly was the "Creation, Fall...etc" that was question begging, putting the cart before the horse, whatever you want to call it assuming the god of ancient hebrew savages.And yes, guy, if you read this thread again the "teachings" attributed to Jesus and especially Saul of Tarsus are some savage shit.
11/24/2013 10:30:59 PM
11/24/2013 10:34:16 PM
11/24/2013 10:46:12 PM