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Betterave
Guest
Ever heard of irony?I agree. Working on your communication skills in this regard would be a positive thing for you.
Ever heard of irony?I agree. Working on your communication skills in this regard would be a positive thing for you.
I guess that’s possible, but I doubt it. Care to share and defend your ‘understanding’?Exaclty but i understand why the uneducated and people with an IQ of 95 believe in god.
You thought it was clear… You’re still not understanding how it works though. We believe the Bible is a history of God and man. It’s not a fairy tale, where everything is set up to be neat and tidy. It’s a real historical document. Now you may be one of those particularly philistine-minded individuals who believes that if a historical document was not written after, say, 1830 or so, then it has no rational merit, since the principles informing its writing are not the same as those used in contemporary historiography. But what can you do with such people? They’re hopeless. They need conversion, not argument, they need to learn to be less narrow-minded, otherwise they will be stubbornly, incorrigibly ignorant and unteachable. Further, they don’t understand the use of ancient documents in contemporary historiography.Betterave: I thought it was pretty clear from the context that you are asserting that there are places where the human authors corrupt god’s message or get it wrong in some way – like, for example, the passage where god apparently sanctions his chosen people brutally exterminating others and enslaving foreign women as objects for their amusement.
This sub-discussion began when I pointed out that your book has passages that make the values of your god look monstrous. Your defense, essentially, is that those monstrous passages are places where the human authors are not depicting god accurately.
Right, and it was in response to this that I pointed out that it never occurred to you to think about the collection of writings found in the book as a whole. When one does this, it is perfectly obvious that we cannot take everything at “face value” - indeed, the suggestion that that should have been something we should expect in the first place shows the depth of your naivete.So you are saying that there are places in the text that we cannot take at face value and other places – like, for example, the story of the resurrection – that you are saying that we should take at face value.
I’m asking how you know the difference between the two. Again, appeals to “divine inspiration” are useless because people who have entirely different interpretations also rely on divine inspiration, thus demonstrating that divine inspiration is highly unreliable.
If someone came along and claimed, on the basis of divine inspiration, that the monstrous passages should be taken at face value and that other passages – like the resurrection story – should be taken as mistakes of the human authors or symbols not be taken literally…on what grounds could you possibly disagree?
If you still have fundamental difficulties with your other queries here, please just say and I will elaborate further. (Hopefully you can reread my last post and think about the point I made there about the interpretation of secular history (of law and morality), which is analogous to the case before us.)You appear to have missed the entire point I’m making. I can’t say that I’m particularly surprised.
I do not claim knowledge about the which is not demonstrable/verifiable. I do not form beliefs without verifiable evidence. What would you like me to defend?I guess that’s possible, but I doubt it. Care to share and defend your ‘understanding’?
Actually if anything they support my case.Hooding Trees
Actually atheism and the evolution of cooperative societies not only makes far more sense when it comes to morality, but is actually the only way to make sense of the complexity of morals withing society.
This fallacy is easily exposed by examining atheist rule in the 20th century. China, Russia, East Germany (80% atheist), North Korea, etc. The worst possible societies to live in.
Learn some history!![]()
We again encounter a complete and miserable failure to understand what atheism actually is, a failure probably predicated on false assumptions.Atheism is useless in building a moral system that can hold a consensus.
Since I’m such a nice person, I’m going to give you a useful lesson in communicating with others.Now here’s the specific point you’re missing. If human authors wrote things that consisted in misunderstandings of God, then obviously, if God inspired those authors, the authors did not corrupt God’s message. But your conclusion that everything that God willed for the human authors of scripture to write must be a mature expression of theological truths does not follow. Can you see why?
We’ve been through this.AntiTheist
*Similarly, “atheism” cannot be used to “build” a moral system, as atheism is utterly unconnected to moral systems. *
I have said this earlier. We agree. But it is for this very reason that atheism is flawed. …] one need not believe in absolute morals
I guess you didn’t re-read my post. Where did i say that “atheism produces moral societies”?Hooding Trees
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Actually if anything they support my case.*
In what way do those societies support your case? Please be specific.
In what way does atheism produce moral societies when atheists are never obliged to agree on what is moral and what is immoral except at the point of a gun? Why is a gun superior to the Gospels?
Exactly. It is not hard to see why atheism increases with education. As harsh as it sound so many people religious beliefs are contingent on lack of education/lack of intelligence.We again encounter a complete and miserable failure to understand what atheism actually is, a failure probably predicated on false assumptions.
Atheism is not a belief or a “building block” or a system of any kind – it’s a position on a single question (“Do gods exist?”). Since it is not a belief, it cannot be used as justification for an action, nor can it be used as the basis of a philosophical system.
For example, let’s say there’s a crazy atheist who burns down a church. Did his atheism cause him to do that? Logically, it cannot have caused the action: there is no logical way to get from, “I do not accept the claim that gods exist” to “I should burn down churches.”
However, there is a logical way to get there if we start from something that the individual does believe. Probably, such an individual believes something ridiculous like “religion is intrinsically evil.” And further, he probably believes something like “It’s good to destroy intrinsically evil things.” So the thought process would go like this: “Religion is intrinsically evil; it is good to destroy intrinsically evil things; destroying a church is the closest I can get to destroying a religion; therefore, I should destroy a church.”
This example also has the benefit of demonstrating how belief in an absolute morality (nonsense ideas like “instrinsically good” and “intrinsically evil”) can lead to atrocity. It’s beliefs that cause actions, not non-beliefs.
Similarly, “atheism” cannot be used to “build” a moral system, as atheism is utterly unconnected to moral systems. An atheist can be a Kantian, a utilitarian, an error theorist, a moral skeptic, a moral nihilist, or any of zillions of other philosophical positions on the question of morality. The moral system that he accepts will be influenced by the things he believes, not the things he doesn’t believe.
Similarly, atrocities committed by “atheist regimes” were driven not by atheism but by specific political ideologies – and while those ideologies are consistent with atheism, it’s a logical error to say that atheism leads to them. Atheism is also consistent with the decision to eat a banana, but atheism doesn’t “lead to eating bananas.”
Such logical errors are the height of sloppy thinking.
People with higher IQ’s tend to be more arrogant and less humble. They are “above” the rest. What makes them so fortunate? Evolution of course.Exactly. It is not hard to see why atheism increases with education. As harsh as it sound so many people religious beliefs are contingent on lack of education/lack of intelligence.
You haven’t understood a single work he said have you?AntiTheist
*Similarly, “atheism” cannot be used to “build” a moral system, as atheism is utterly unconnected to moral systems. *
I have said this earlier. We agree. But it is for this very reason that atheism is flawed. The consequences of atheism are many and varied. One consequence is that one need not believe in absolute morals, just as one need not believe in an absolute Being. As Dostoevsky said, “If there is no God, everything is permitted.” The atheist Nietzsche said, “There is no God.” Then Hitler, another atheist, said “Everything is permitted.”
Including the Jewish Holocaust.![]()
What you call humble one might call gullible.People with higher IQ’s tend to be more arrogant and less humble. They are “above” the rest. What makes them so fortunate? Evolution of course.
One has to be humble to open their mind and heart to God.
Well, given the fact that there are intelligent theists, I would put it like this: religious beliefs are contingent on not subjecting religious claims to the same kind of scrutiny that one would subject to any other claims.As harsh as it sound so many people religious beliefs are contingent on lack of education/lack of intelligence.
Gullible is not in the dictionary.What you call humble one might call gullible.
Give me a break. All the atheists do here is challenge. Give me evidence and I will believe. St Paul tells us to test all things. There is a lot of energy spent trying to knock down God, to no avail after so many years. At least the atheists past had an intellectual foundation, long proven wrong. The new atheists lack that and are just shrill.Well, given the fact that there are intelligent theists, I would put it like this: religious beliefs are contingent on not subjecting religious claims to the same kind of scrutiny that one would subject to any other claims.