http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_terrorismMy first thoughts? WTF. Second thoughts, how does this article end up there?
9/19/2006 12:43:35 AM
Aren't those the same assholes trying to boogeyman us into being horrified at the prospect of terrorism--to the extent we'll sign up and work for the Pentagon to meet their struggling (but adequately met) recruitment goals--instead of boogeymanning us into being more horrified at the prospect of people dying in automobile accidents?The same folks we ideologically insulate from skepticism who recently declassified proof that they bullshitted the public into believing in the Gulf of Tonkin Myth in order to escalate a conflict on morally ambiguous grounds?The same assholes who want us to believe Water was magically turned to Wine by a historical magician? That there's something inherently untasty about one food, and so we ought to eat brand X for dinner instead of any other?Yes. The same ones who when election time comes around, have to look for a way to explain Iraq to you. Of every political persuasion.What does that mean?How we believe people act plays a lot more importantly in the world than we like to admit.Science has also proven many other inconvenient facts on your behalf, like the one about humans being unable to properly discern relative lengths between a set of lines in which only one stands out as being of different length. This study was conducted by good scientists, and its theories are a lot less challengeable than Darwin's. Their implications are, purely scientifically speaking, no less dramatic than his. But why do so few people take it into account when viewing history? Or themselves?Likewise, science is receiving very harsh treatment in other nations of the world. We all agree to this point. I'd speculate beyond the data by saying this is a common element between the United States and many of her enemies abroad. The free flow of scientifically establishable truth, is a healthy element of any society. Any society that lacks proper disclosure gives the appearance of favoring an autocratic secrecy over a truly, philosophically democratic openness.This is why the son of a scientist never trusts the government, or governors, of any society that seeks to bury (or sustain a policy based on a lack of) accurate information through illegal, unethical, illogical, or other irrational means.Governments like to claim the advancements of science. So do corporations. Even religions do it. I'd argue few are as trustworthy as peer-reviewed journals. And even other scientists like to "stand on the shoulders" of other scientists, often to their own scientifically-oriented ideological peril. But nonetheless, everyone claims their work, but none stand up for how its work is perverted.This is what led even Einstein to worry about the atomic bomb. Even try and be hippie-like, banning the bomb and all that ideological dogma. All due to the brainchild that escaped his control. A literal Frankenstein in this man's conscience. Look it up. I'll freely speculate that his fear of a deterministic universe colored his perceptions in such a way that he literally could not accept a non-deterministic view of the world. With slightly less certainty, I'd say he was afraid--as are most--that the nuclear bomb might be the proverbial chance event that ends Life on Earth.So? Smart People Believe Bullshit SometimesThat is fundamentally my point.Can you imagine living the life of a man of science, not of politics, who believed he'd actually given birth to the atomic bomb, if he actually could accept a deterministic view of the world? He would've gone insane. He'd have seen, as Oppenheimer did, that what the technology built on his genius had unleashed was nothing short of the End Game of Human History. Many people form belief systems that center largely around denying the validity of this idea. Few are less speculative than religions, frankly.Remember that I recently unearthed a study showing you that people's views of God largely color their beliefs. Moreso than any other perception they measured. This study was conducted on members of a random sample of Americans. Ideologically, its conclusions should be cross-cultural. In other terms, no less true in Afghanistan, or Iraq, or America, or France, or anywhere than it is to scientists. Or politicians. Keep this in mind when you determine who you go around trusting when they offer speculations to you about phenomena you do not understand.Especially in November.I'd like to create my own ideological dichotomy to discern types of people. Since so many other social institutions find it convenient to do so, so will I:Magicians and LogiciansMagicians, or as we know them now, politicians and religious figures, who ask us to accept basic premises based on our ignorance about the future.And Logicians, or as we know them now, scientists and ideologically netural people (or anyone, technically, who can tell you something about "The Truth" that we live within, that of experience).Magicians can be disguised as clever Logicians sometimes. I'll argue that within history, it becomes pretty obvious when you look at it, that most of them are. But usually Logicians we refer to as "Scientists" shy away from being labelled Magicians because of this principle known as "refusing to speculate beyond the data." If we asked them, or asked their psychologists, I'll bet we could find out why.Most of this is born out of the underlying premises of Werner Von Heisenberg, who proved that we affect our understandings of science as much as the science itself does. This is why most scientists are required at the end of their papers to state how much or how little they believe their hypothesis was correct when applied to the problem stated as a "given" in the beginning.This is why I argue we ought to extend the premise to the Soap Box. And effectively, into our own society and those of the rest of the world. Only methods of arriving at truth that have been filtered through similar non-ethnocentric paradigms ought to be the ones we export through violent means, if ever such a thing be justified. Otherwise we run the risk of being simply less violent forms of our ancestors than the ones who some Native Americans in South America mistook for Gods upon their arrival.[Edited on September 19, 2006 at 12:59 AM. Reason : ...]
9/19/2006 12:44:03 AM
OH MY GODSO MANY WORDS
9/19/2006 12:48:07 AM
quod erat demonstrandumOnly civil debate below please.
9/19/2006 12:50:04 AM
Ignore it if you want to.I consider the fear of complexity to be a sign of intellectual weakness. This might as well be considered a thread about that idea.
9/19/2006 12:50:25 AM
^
9/19/2006 12:52:10 AM
This was the first time I actually read a post in TSB.I hope you haven't wasted your time.
9/19/2006 12:55:39 AM
If you convince more people that this is worth reading, and I convince enough of them that such a concept is worth reading about, I think it wouldn't be a waste of my time.In other words, I'll go ahead and self-FroshKiller.I'm not that stupid fucking college freshman faggot. I'm even worse. I'm that same kid who never did resolve the conflict, or claim to, despite the ramblings and balance of argument in the Soap Box. And I'm no closer to really having a stone-cut hypothesis on how to solve the world's problems than religion, or any intellectually-retarded college freshman who can create a radical idea based on people's uncertainties about the world.We need a society of freer disclosure, and better dissemination of accurate information. Whoever has the wheels of power needs to get on that...[Edited on September 19, 2006 at 1:03 AM. Reason : ...]
9/19/2006 1:00:13 AM
kkknazisetcetcetc
9/19/2006 1:08:07 AM
No need to ideologically illustrate it by naming names until people want to cry over the analogy.
9/19/2006 1:10:06 AM
Froshkiller uses double spacing =P
9/19/2006 7:47:21 AM
You need to clearly state what you are claiming n the beginning... it takes to long to figure out where the fuck you are going with this so it comes across as rambling/driftng thoughts.
9/19/2006 10:22:46 AM
a lot of those just happen to be christians whose motivations werent religion[Edited on September 19, 2006 at 10:25 AM. Reason : and jim jones wasnt a christian]
9/19/2006 10:24:37 AM
Watch this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=co1_9lR9EpM
9/19/2006 10:37:15 AM
So? Its not something specific to only Christianity. I hate seeing these sort of actions regardless of the faith or ideology pushing it. Personally, I think the way I was raised in a moderate home with good principles and allowed to exlpore beliefs on my own gave me a much stronger foundation for faith. Going from Atheist for the first 20+ years to Christian gives a mch needed perspective that I think so many "lifers" fail to understand (which explains their complete lack of perception and understandiung for society in general).
9/19/2006 11:10:48 AM
Bad grammar and run-on sentences make it difficult to grasp the point youre trying to make.
9/19/2006 11:14:10 AM
9/19/2006 11:31:30 AM
so you want us to be liberal.WHY DIDN'T YOU JUST SAY SO
9/19/2006 12:45:21 PM
youd think being so thoughful as to write all that, youd think it would hit you, thats not an acceptable post length for tww.[Edited on September 19, 2006 at 12:55 PM. Reason : 34]
9/19/2006 12:55:29 PM
9/19/2006 12:56:19 PM
9/19/2006 12:57:53 PM
interesting threadsimilar to what we talked about
9/19/2006 1:22:02 PM
9/19/2006 2:34:08 PM
I'd like to see you edit the original post some -- if you had a clearer structure to it, I think it'd have a lot more impact. This is not due to some inability on my part to comprehend what I read -- I'm accustomed to reading remarkably dense philosophical papers. This is an issue of presentation.However, I am having a question pop-up over some of the content as well -- What about determinism suggests that the atomic bomb will be the end of life on earth?Edit: Or rather -- how does the existence of the atomic bomb somehow suggest, under a deterministic interpretation, that life on earth will end as a result?[Edited on September 19, 2006 at 4:15 PM. Reason : .]
9/19/2006 4:14:30 PM
9/19/2006 6:38:41 PM
^ That's why I've been forced to appeal to bullshit. Everyone understands the people believe in someone else's bullshit. Whether it's the government's bullshit, corporate bullshit, academic bullshit, and religious bullshit.Why we simplify one another within the context of extremism of philosophies is, I'd qualify, a problem. Whoever examines such things, if you feel it's you--it is, needs to get on that.Oh, and scientific dogmatism exists in a very real way outlined by Intelligent Designers. I've had to fundamentally grant that on several occasions within debate. What you're saying is that it's less susceptible to maligning "absolute truth" over people than other organizational strucutres.More on this some other time. It's dinnertime.
9/19/2006 6:51:56 PM
9/19/2006 7:19:49 PM
That in no way incapacitates them from arriving at philosophical truth. It's not like their idea that God sits in heaven impairs their ability to see you on the street, or "know in some sense" that it's better to live than die.
9/19/2006 10:25:36 PM
Huh?I separate IDers from other religious people. IDers (people who believe in Young Earth Creationism) are willfully dissonant about science and religion. I've never met someone like this (i've actually only corresponded with 1 single person that actually believed in YEC, and that was over the internet, i've never met a person IRL that I know of that really believed in YEC).I don't disagree that just because someone may be religious, they can still find philosophical truths. It may even be a required stop along the way on the road to enlightenment. It's just that YEC-IDers are delusional.[Edited on September 19, 2006 at 10:55 PM. Reason : ]
9/19/2006 10:53:48 PM