10/18/2006 12:31:46 PM
hmm.interesting.
10/18/2006 12:52:49 PM
I find it interesting that anyone still reads a thread started by Amsterdamsorry if this is trolling, but that is my honest thought
10/18/2006 1:08:05 PM
before you post that religion thread...
10/18/2006 1:24:05 PM
^^It's people like him that in large part elected the current leader of the free world. So yeah I read and respond to that.And every day in the technician I read about how people hate the sin of being gay & that being gay is wrong. I don't want people abandon their faith, but it wouldn't hurt people to see that christianity isn't so cut and dry and absolute.I spend my days working at a vet clinic helping animals, and my free time lately helping my fraternity raise money for charities & a music scholarship, and trying to get my philosophy paper published in the undergraduate research journal. And that people think there is an equivalent to a Satyr/Goatman/Serpent in Hades getting his kicks out of the evilness of me being gay is ridiculous.Apollo is a good of healing (associated with the Staff of Aesculapius- who is his half god son- which is the greek equivalent to the christian’s cross in many ways), and is a slayer of Serpents & Goatmen.I don’t want people to see me as a militant agonistic, but I’ll never know what its like to be married because too many people in this country are worried that it would make a Satyr in Hades happy, so I feel a need occasionally to point out how ridiculous a lot of religion is when you change the names in the stories to their earlier versions that aren’t the ones you grew up learning about in Sunday school.The compassion aspect of religion is nice, but the plot to the bible was played out long before Christ came around, and the rules in it are man made from thousands with some editing & translating as the years have gone by (in the same way that edits and changes happened to the ancient Greco-roman texts).
10/18/2006 7:21:35 PM
http://www.campusblender.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=243396&page=1Just for kicks, I started the same discussion on our sister site.I mean we trash our own soapbox sometimes for being place full of useless argument, but its not as bad as"anybody can come up with some long explantion in their head as to why they aren't going to believe in God if they want to"or"I have come to a belief in Him. I'm not trying to offend anybody just giving my opinion."That not trying to offend part is funny, since he started out his response with an insult.
10/19/2006 10:01:37 AM
10/19/2006 11:00:37 AM
Many of the most popular adventures of Jesus, had already been said to have been done by other demi-gods several times before Jesus was born. I think its more likely that its a stock character type in literature, rather than the ancient greeks borrowing from supernatural prophecies from other lands, completely intertwining it with their own religious and historical beliefs, and then erasing the part about it being stolen from prophecy about Jesus who wouldnt be born for a thousand years.For stuff like the great flood that several ancient religions talk about, I can buy that maybe there was one big flood that affected several cultures, and everyone represents it a little different even though they are all talking about the same event. But that would still mean that none of them has completely right, that none of it is absolute. Although I think flooding, which happens to any ancient culture that needed to be near water to survive/grow food, is probably a common enough occurrence that whatever flood, if there was one specific one, that created the noah myth is probably a different occurrence than the one that created the Deucalion myth.
10/19/2006 1:02:32 PM
Supplanter's examples aren't wrong, but I think it's too often that people confuse them for arguments against Christianity. They don't really offer much in the way of that. People have told a lot of stories about a lot of things through the ages, and so it stands to reason that they would occasionally line up. That, in and of itself, does not demonstrate any one of those stories to be false. It's good to help open up your view of anythings, but alone it isn't much of a justification for believing or disbelieving anything.Still, some theologians and thinkers feel compelled to respond such examples by saying that it certainly appears there are certain images, certain archetypes, certain themes that people seem predisposed to accepting. Resurrection is certainly one of these, as it appears in several religions, as does ascent into the heavens. The question they will pose is, "Why is it so easy for us to come up with and cling to these ideas?" And the answer they suggest, of course, is that we came pre-programmed with them so we'd be better able to understand and accept Jesus (or Isaiah, or whoever) when He showed up. It is simply a side effect that other religions used them differently.
10/19/2006 5:06:30 PM
"And the answer they suggest, of course, is that we came pre-programmed"That’s where you lose me. I think the reason it’s easy to accept ideas like resurrection & afterlife is because dieing is scary.And those who don't accept it do so for the same reason they don't think Hippolytus was resurrected, and for the same reason they don't think of King Arthur as a future king. More scientific world views easily win out when it’s not the names you learned growing up in Sunday school.
10/19/2006 6:59:19 PM
we need a forum for atheism.
10/19/2006 8:07:40 PM
But then why is dying scary?Because natural selection and all mean that you only survive when you have a sense of self-preservation.Why is mortal terror the only way to make us focus on self-preservation?Because it's the best way.Why?I dunno.---There, I just finished the rest of our debate for us.
10/19/2006 9:14:55 PM
Death ony seems scary to those who believe this is their only life. (And I am not specifically refering to the Christian afterlife )
10/19/2006 9:26:10 PM
But then why is dying scary?You could have gone with fear of the unknown. Either way, I still don't buy the pre-programming as a better explanation than stock character type. I mean its starting to sound like Socrates definition of anamnesis.
10/19/2006 9:35:56 PM
I've always been interested in effects of culture in relation to the concept of "free will". On the micro scale, of course, people make decisions about their actions. But on the macro scale people are greatly affected by culture. The truth of the matter is that if you were born in India chances are 90% that you would be Hindu. How is that free will? They say that God does not play dice, but He sure sets the odds ...
10/19/2006 9:39:34 PM
Sure, but which is a stronger testiment of faith, taking the time to examine other religious beliefs and finding what best suits you, or blindly following the herd into religion x just because everyone you know belongs to it?
10/20/2006 1:06:20 AM
NIGGERNIGGERJEW
10/20/2006 1:18:52 AM
10/20/2006 7:24:54 AM
The effects of culture on free will is interesting. If the only way to get to heaven is to be Christian, why does God stack the odds so badly against those born in other cultures? And why make it almost a default for Western countries.Generally, culture defines your thought processes. That's what I find so interesting. On the micro scale you can choose anything you want. But on the macro scale, culture very much influences the range of your choices, statistically speaking.
10/20/2006 7:32:55 AM
Yes, I would agree that culture has a great influence on the decisions a person makes. Even on the micro level. How many decisions do you make that you otherwise wouldn't simply because you are with a friend that wants to make that decision.I just wanted to make the distinction that culture influences free will and decision making but doesn't remove free will or the decision making process entirely.
10/20/2006 7:46:31 AM
Now if only we encouraged Shinto priests and priestesses from Japan to come and "spread the good word" to us here in America. /sigh.
10/20/2006 10:32:27 AM
The point is that it doesn't matter how many missionaries go out to spread the word, the existance of culture stacks the deck against them. The will have some success but, as HockeyRoman points out, it will happen at about the same rate as Shinto priests or Islam coming over here to convert. Culture is God's way of stacking the deck against change ...
10/20/2006 1:16:33 PM
"anybody can come up with some long explantion in their head as to why they aren't going to believe in God if they want to"If that’s one's only reason for believing in Yahweh, then they have equal justification for believing in Zeus, & Allah.
10/20/2006 8:44:17 PM
art went backwards for a little while after the romans
10/20/2006 9:11:46 PM
10/21/2006 5:31:09 PM
Supplanter started one of these in chit-chat and couldn't handle it, so he ran away like a good girl.
10/21/2006 9:59:22 PM
Keep that shit out of the soap box, please.[Edited on October 21, 2006 at 10:16 PM. Reason : ^]
10/21/2006 10:13:19 PM
in chit chat? when?http://thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=438940http://thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=437548http://thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=437079http://thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=436133[Edited on October 21, 2006 at 10:25 PM. Reason : here's a few of my recent chit chat threads]
10/21/2006 10:24:11 PM
The son of the Almighty God, and one associated with resurrection. Apollo.[Edited on October 22, 2006 at 8:39 AM. Reason : .]
10/22/2006 8:33:37 AM
Dude, we get itApollo and Jesus have a lot in commonNobody here is denying that
10/22/2006 2:36:18 PM
we would reply except mythology screams "huge dorky dork" and we dont want to call ourselves out
10/22/2006 3:27:28 PM
Knowing much about the early religion’s of western civilization/the first democracy might be dorky, but it illustrates my point.And there is more to it than Apollo & Jesus have a lot in common; I hope you realize my point was more than just that. It’s Apollo, and many other figures like that were stock types in literature first, and Jesus continues the trend, which probably means a lot of what is attributed to Jesus isn’t true. I doubt you would say no body is denying that, but that is what my actual point was. Another point was that many elements of the supernatural stories only represent nature events. Like the Dionysus & Athena water to wine type stories are only accounting for the cultures development of preservation of consumables (since wine was technological advancement allowing for the storing of fruits), rather than being true supernatural tales.I know you think it was because the greek’s were programmed to create Apollo in their culture, literature, art, and religion because Jesus is just so plausible that every culture would come up with his life stories whether he had come around yet or not, but I don’t buy it.I have also heard people suggest that the devil planted copies of the life of Jesus in earlier culture’s to create doubt in believers, but I don’t buy that one either. (I’m not throwing a straw man at anyone its one I have heard before on tdub, but not in this thread. I'm throwing in this disclaimer b/c I feel like I've shifted alot between specific you's and general you's in this post.)I feel sometimes people just want to think their religion’s myths don’t have to stand up to the scrutiny that other culture’s or past culture’s myth’s do. Probably the same people that would say “Hippocratic Corpus,” but wouldn’t say “Pauline Corpus.” But you can’t be equally justified in saying one demi-god didn’t return from the dead thousands of years ago, but another one did b/c it’s the demi-god in my religion.
10/22/2006 9:44:22 PM
Methinks Jesus would be cooler to grab a beer with.And that's what counts.
10/23/2006 3:19:50 AM
10/23/2006 9:08:43 AM
That seems like a wholly inadequate discussion of religion though, how many different ways can someone say "Yay for Yahweh."
10/24/2006 10:32:29 AM
10/24/2006 10:35:15 AM
10/24/2006 12:46:18 PM
10/24/2006 2:03:49 PM
Perhaps Amsterdam invisioned a forum where a topic related to a specific religion or religion as a whole could be discussed without attempts to disprove it or petty schoolyard namecalling from the self-proclaimed enlightened progressive.It's a nice thought, but I don't think it will happen.
10/25/2006 1:11:31 AM
Forgive me for being a party pooper, but in the first quote, nowhere is the word "forum" used. Rather, the word "thread" is used. I don't know the context of the quote, and I don't feel like looking it up, but to me, this seems like a drastic case of strawman...
10/25/2006 3:01:20 AM
^ If we have freewill then, then how does God interfere at all? What is the practical reason for even believing and following a god's supposed teachings, if that god can't do anything to help you out in this life (a big reason why most religious people are religious)?
10/25/2006 3:22:13 AM
what says that this god can't interfere? surely he could if he wanted to, being as how he created everything, right? (I'm following the assumption that this god is a creator being) No, I'm saying that the Christian God clearly gives free will to people in order to allow them to make their own choices. Allowing people to make their own choices is distinctly different from being unable to affect the course of events.
10/25/2006 3:29:47 AM
10/25/2006 5:04:44 AM
I've heard many times the believe just in case argument. That you have a lot to lose if god is real and you don't believe, and a lot to gain if you do believe just in case. Wanting to avoid a the lake of fire seems like it could get people to try to work their way into heaven, even if they aren't promised rewards for their work.
10/25/2006 6:52:01 AM
10/25/2006 7:51:44 AM
10/25/2006 3:29:04 PM
I've yet to hear a good, rational account of free will.But then again, I'm all ears.
10/25/2006 3:29:59 PM
forgive me for being so blunt, McDanger, but you are far from all ears.
10/25/2006 3:30:48 PM
Oh really? I'd prefer a Universe with free will, but I'm still undecided on the matter.On one hand, it appears as if there's a necessity for it (due to the illusion of it we SURELY have).On the other hand, it appears as if there's no physical possibility for it. Mental causation is a tough thing to sell, or spiritual causation, when you take the various conservation principles of physics into account.
10/25/2006 3:35:37 PM
ahhhh, so you want a metaphysical description of free will. no wonder you can't get an explanation
10/25/2006 9:33:36 PM