What gives you that impression that truth doesn’t matter to some Catholics?
The idea that an opposing view entails solipsism, nihilism or some other necessary view that disables one from finding, developing and realizing value in meaning in their lives, goals, opportunities and challenges.
For some – not all – but many here, for example, the apologetic tells us much more about the apologist than it says anything about God, reality or the listener. It just signals a kind of fundamentalist mindset where the complexities and nuances of an alternative are too terrifying or nauseating to bear. If it’s true, and it’s hard, there’s an interest in avoiding the truth, for anyone. Fideistic religion caters to that interest, and nurtures it, apologetically in just the same way as we see from Mystic Banana, the conceit that says: *life without God is meaningless, futile, defeated.
*Give a choice between “true” and “my life has meaning”, many identify the latter as by far the more important. And it shows in their apologetic, a basic argument error – the “appeal to consequences”, That which I resist
must be false, because, well, think of how awful it would be if it’s true!!!
This seems to be a logical conclusion, yes?
Yes, valid syllogism, unsound argument due to the bogus premise (“a shallow might as well” is the best case scenario, in the alternative). It again, just signals conceit and ignorance of how humans can and do establish meaning – real, tangible meaning grounded in what actually happens, or doesn’t happen, in the real world. Catholics like that are welcome to their conceits, but it just shows how unable they are to think in terms of truth, how that gets trumped by emotional trauma and terror over cosmic meaning.
So, if you’re goal is “find the narrative with the most fabulous and ego-centric scope of meaning… the ‘tallest tale’ out there in terms of catering to my conceits regarding cosmic meaning for ME, ME, ME”, than yes, a logical, and I think inevitable way to proceed. If one is just trying to figure out what’s what, what is real and what is not FIRST, and then deal with the consequences of that as followup, it’s the wrong way to go.
And, yet, you’re proposing that atheism is the only theory that provides…
No. Atheism provides no “cosmic meaning”. There is no god in that view to cater to our conceits, to our desire to be “cosmically valued”, or anything like that at all. So far as can be reasoned out, when you die, that’s it, and there’s not god, no afterlife, no angels, no streets of gold, no final fixing up of every wrong that happened in the real world, etc. But that very denial of the theist delusion is a real-world basis for finding meaning and value and goals in the real world, to hold our life time and our relationships and the future we might bequeath to those who come after us
precious.
So the meaning is local, mortal, humble, finite, but real and visceral as compensation for the grand illusions that theism proclaims. Like the gaggle of hot models the big talker in 9th grade were his girlfriends, but were always “living in another state” and never available to meet, or even verify their existence, a real world relationship that you can see, watch, engage and verify, even if it’s just the nice girl next door and more of a friendship with aims to be something bigger someday, perhaps, as opposed to the torrid romances with the models-that-never-were, meaning and value in this life can’t compete in terms of hyperbole and flair, but what they lack in that, the meaning makes up for in being real, actual, present.
-TS