…a blind, purposeless phenomenon which does not account for our insight and power to choose!
Hardly a rational approach! Once you say there is no need to account for something you are taking refuge in obscurity…
It is not my response but the logical consequence of a life which ultimately leads to nothing.
No. You are simply speaking from fear and defeatism. Just because death ends all does not mean, logically, that one should not try to do good. That is preposterous logic, based on lack of imagination and lack of fortitude. Many many people try at things that they have no chance of succeeding in. But there is no RULE of logic that states, because I will die eventually and all will end, then nothing matters now.
You are putting words into my mouth. I did not say nor do I believe “one should not try to do good” nor “nothing matters now”. You have not refuted any of my statements - which do not cease to be true in the context of your view of life:
- If you live in hope it is certainly not hope of an afterlife when death wipes out everything.
- If you love others you are doomed to be separated from them forever.
- If you fight against injustice you know you will never succeed because there is no answer to the bomb or the bullet.
- Evil is bound to triumph in this world because those who are unscrupulous will do anything whereas those with principles prefer to die rather than degrade themselves.
It does not make sense to construct meaning from that which is meaningless. What you mean is “invent” meaning!
Yes, ALL meaning is invented.
If all meaning is invented the meaning of your statement is also invented! Truth disappears utterly…
That is what religion does, too, and turns the trick pretty well. But this invented meaning is respectable, and I value it, even though I think that it is a false faith. But the meaning is not false. What is, is valued, over what is not.
Then you value something religion has “invented” even though it is false! You are trying to separate faith from meaning and value - which is a desperate enterprise. Either religion is true and life is ultimately valuable or religion is false and life is ultimately valueless.
Existence is the essence of meaning. Simply that.
Can you explain what you mean?
Again, you are defeatist and negative! Even a common criminal has values and understands the meaning and logic of rules. Because one breaks the rules does not mean that one does not understand their value. Do you think that atheists are all beating their wives, raping their children, and robbing and murdering their neighbors? Are you claiming that all atheists are anarchist monsters?
Once again you are putting words into my mouth! Obviously a criminal has values and understands rules but he breaks them if it is in his interest - not necessarily all of them. I’m afraid your questions are motivated by emotion rather than logic…
You falsely ascribe to me a view I do not share! I don’t have to imagine morality without God because I know it exists. What I am pointing out is that humanism is merely a matter of preference.
Religion, too, is a matter of cultural preference.
I did not say humanism is merely a matter of **cultural **preference. If every belief is a matter of cultural preference we do not choose any of our beliefs. Are you a humanist because of your cultural background? Are you compelled to believe what you believe? Of course not. It is a matter of **individual **preference
Knowing what we know from comparative religious studies and history, I don’t see how you can claim anything accept that cultures, through human history, made up their own gods.
Cultures have made up their own **godless **societies too! Individuals are not just cogs in a machine but have reasons for what they believe. In the Old Testament God is described as “He Who Is” - a remarkable insight for a primitive people…
It is a good thing that cultures tend to retain their wisdom, that cultures tend to enact laws, that families tend to enact rules, and that humans tend to be social animals that need each other to survive.
Their wisdom has been restricted to those in
their own society - like those who are cannibalistic - and does not extend to the entire human race.
That is the price of our free will. It cannot be otherwise if we are to have control of our destiny.
I couldn’t agree more. And existentialists depict us as freer than theists do. And I value freedom most highly. We are free, even, from the fetters of false faith and the gods we project onto the sky.
You value it but you cannot explain it because in your scheme of things we are biological machines. If you have convinced yourself you are free from the fetters of false faith it shows you regard yourself as infallible in your interpretation of reality. Could it not be that you are chained within the dark dungeon of your own opinion and material objects?
Silence on earth. Hamlet also said “There are more things in heaven and earth…”
It is very likely that Shakespeare was not Catholic. But it can’t be ruled out… If you would like to add to Hamlet’s dying words, “except for all the words said in heaven” and ruin the beautiful poetry of his end, by all means go ahead.
I don’t need to add anything! Shakespeare’s entire work is within the context of a struggle between good and evil, heaven and hell, which is not “invented” by human beings…
Incidentally Archdeacon Richard Davies, a 17th century Anglican cleric, wrote of Shakespeare: “He dyed a Papyst”. More evidence is given in The Catholicism of Shakespeare’s Plays by Peter Milward.