W
Windfish
Guest
To be honest, I also do not understand you, TS. I have to read your sentences more than once to somewhat understand what you are saying.
Evolutionary theory has more evidence and research material to crawl through than a a dozen people could get through in a lifetime, so there’s a lot of substance to draw on beyond “Evolution did it”. And the survival imperative is not an esoteric niche area of the theory. It’s basic evolution 101. The drive to survival affords benefits toward reproduction and gene propagation.Of course.
If you are a naturalist and you have to explain something that is hard to explain from a naturalist/materialist standpoint, just say ‘evolution did it!’ and you’re done. No evidence or further explanations needed.
I don’t think that’s the only driver, but like I said, just from your post, the therapeutic value for you is as extreme as it is obvious. You have contempt for life on the merits, and horror at the idea of a godless world, clearly; it’s futile, and without meaning. What deeper crisis can one face?You seem to think that Christians have no ground to hope for icecream, that we only have that hope out of some therapeutic need.
But that just underscores your contempt for this world and the life you do have. Those good things are humans showing kindness and charity and love as part of this world. You consign that to the “kingdom of God” to alleviate the dissonance of goodness in a world and life you despise. All the good comes from the Great Beyond, and all the bad, well because of Adam we labor on behind this veil of tears.But being Christian on earth means that you get glimpses of how eternal joy and the Presence of God will be. We get tastes of the icecream in the here and now, and I can assure you that it is good icecream. It’s these tastes that drive people to do good in this world, to love others and care for them.
Bigger purposes – like keeping it hidden away in a safe deposit box? You must be pulling my leg, here. If the the scarcity and limited supply of a resource that makes the “precious” in “precious resource” meaningful. Oy!That analogy is false. Gold is not precious because there is little of it, it is precious because we humans can use it for bigger purposes.
Well, yeah! And now, you’ve got more time than you could ever (literally) spend. Time is no object to you in your therapeutic shell, now. You have it made. You can’t even waste it, your consciousness still has an infinite supply of time left no matter what you do, you fortunate son of God!!That there is little only makes it more precious than other materials.
This is a very good example of what Nietzsche called “slave morality”, contempt for life as it is, the embrace of a death cult where the value and the real substance lie “beyond”. If life in a godless world is “absolutely meaningless”, I wouldn’t believe you if said you’d considered dealing with the world the way it is. You can’t. You really MUST have this delusion. Seriously, I would deny it to you. You should be a Christian.In the case of our lifes, if there is no more than this, if our lifes serve no bigger purpose, than our lifes and actions become absolutely meaningless and the fact that there is little of it doesn’t change that at all.
There is a need, because I desire such. My desires and values are mine only, which means they are subjective. If you can’t value your own life, and the precious time and capabilities you have for their own sake, you really are perfect for Christianity. There’s many I think can benefit from my criticisms here, possibly. You I would say should stay in the fold, your predicament are what Christianity has evolved to address.Yes it does. If there is no objective reason why we should value, enjoy and pursue life, and if there will be absolutely no consequence of or memory from our lifes once we’ve disappeared into oblivion, then there is no need to value, enjoy or pursue life. We might as well bet on the possibility of eternal life.
Which means there’s some meaning and value in what I’ve got now, as I wipe that last bit off my chin and relish it at my last. It’s not forever, it’s not valueless because I couldn’t waste it if I tried. I can waste it, I can’t make more when it’s gone, and it is therefore valuable and enjoyable and satisfying in a way you can’t know, because Christianity has corrupted your values, and time is just something to take for granted now. You’ll never perish into oblivion. You got all the ice cream you could ever want, all the time, over the top, so it’s nothing to mind. The infinitely rich man can burn his money in the fireplace to warm his feet, or light his pipe. He needn’t value it at all – he’s got no less after wasting all he can that when he started.Your icecream melts away once you’re dead. My icecream endures forever.
The Exodus supposes that “the true and the good are necessarily related terms, because they are modes of being”.To be honest, I also do not understand you, TS. I have to read your sentences more than once to somewhat understand what you are saying.
Well it’s a good thing I think that “true” and “good” are necessarily related then, or I’d be a hypocrite!Necessary based on what. What breaks if “true” and “good” are not synonymous
It doesn’t follow that, if Good were a mode of being, that statement would be an “ought” simply by itself.Or, you have no warrant for: “Good is a mode of being”. That’s an “ought”, a value judgment posing a circumstance, matter of fact. They are only bound together with hand-waving to avoid the problem of “is” vs “ought”.
As a matter of fact, redness is related to these things, because it also is a mode of being. If it has “existence” it shares a certain quality with other existents/forms thereof. It therefore would be necessarily related to other modes of being.You might as well say “redness is necessarily related to goodness and truth”. Why? Well because you’ve “necessarily” decided it must be thus. There’s no rational basis for the connection, necessary or otherwise, any more than there is between “true-as-actual” and “good”.
God’s essence is the ground of all being, so there is no parity between it and redness.We have no warrant for this claim. It’s just pulled out of your hat. And this is the “break” with rational true belief you and I were aligned on prior. You might as well tell me “redness” is the grounding of all goodness. You’ve got precisely the same warrant.
That which comes from a cause is related to that cause in some way as being “from” it, and things which share a common quality are necessarily related. Those two concepts are not too difficult to follow.You’re invoking axioms like they’re just mints to pull out of the tin an pop in your mouth on a whim.
…he vehemently claims. Yet why, if “good reasons” have no categorical value?There’s neither any transcendental imperative (that is, it’s not necessary) nor any empirical/model-based grounds for this. The best grounds I can find for your claims here are naked superstition.
Yet you continue to argue, which indicates you do think there is some reason for communicating to me that I ought not to believe in God, ought to believe you are right, ought to think your reasons good, etc.You’re having a hard time even accepting agreement now! I agree, and have never disputed this point.
Yet if it wasn’t, we’d have no reason to listen to you, even if what you said was correct, and thus you implicitly assume what you deny in engaging in argument.But we are nowhere in making head way to “good” as a mode of being.
touchstone said:“Good” – on a rational analysis, not theistic superstition – no more a “mode of being” than the color orange smells like the number 9.If you read that last bit again, it should be jarringly nonsensical. “Good is a mode of being” is no more rational or meaningful as a statement about the world than that – you’re just more familiar with that nonsense, so it doesn’t have the jarring newness “orange smells like the color 9” does.
There is no ontological chasm, since both modes are detected intuitively without demonstration. Therefore, since they are both experienced, they must necessarily have some commonality.The basic failure is a well-known ontological chasm between “being” or “is” and values, or “ought”.
touchstone said:“Ought” is a proposition that applies to the subjective, in contrast, and thus bring theists, as The Exodus here to self-contradiction: the [objective]
true is the [subjective] good.
spits coffee on the tableIt’s a basic category error.
Redness is the ground of all being. There, parity once again.God’s essence is the ground of all being, so there is no parity between it and redness.
Yuk yuk yuk.Redness is the ground of all being. There, parity once again.
Hey, I don’t control the fundamental structure of reality. I’m not a god. I do have some measure of control over mind, however, and that is the difference. Your irrationality and unintelligibility is self-inflicted. Your contradictions come from the inside of your head, of your choosing. The difficulties I identify obtain outside my mind, and are not of my choosing; I don’t have the power to make a photon “just a particle” or “just a wave”.What is ironic about this is that you have no qualms with supposing that a contradiction can obtain in reality. And yet at the same time you want to dismiss my claims because (you erroneously suppose) they “contradict each other.”
Do I smell…“biased”?
Right, you see where that goes now. Two can play your game.Yuk yuk yuk.
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But that doesn’t matter, my friend, if irrationality is not a deal breaker in argument.You adopted that bit of irrationality yourself.
-TS
You can’t check-mate someone who refuses to sit down and play, now can you?Right, you see where that goes now. Two can play your game.
-TS
A loss is a loss, before or after the first move.You can’t check-mate someone who refuses to sit down and play, now can you?
Maybe this post crossed paths with mine above and you didn’t see mine. I’m not arguing for or from irrationality. You just did. I can’t control the structure of quantum physics, but you can take action with respect to gratuitous handwaving and non-sequiturs as the load bearing beams in your arguments.But that doesn’t matter, my friend, if irrationality is not a deal breaker in argument.
How utterly pointless is a debating materialist! (I anticipate you will continue to prove this point.)
That we are persons created in the image of God with the ability to distinguish and choose between good and evil.Yes. By comparison, theology has a hard time demonstrating anything at all, to even get out of the starting gate. Think of the best example of “theological knowledge” that is both substantial (makes some claim about the world) and demonstrable. What would that be?
You are assuming the believer in God has been duped many times without explaining how or by whom.When he waits for the bell, he’s got solid evidence that he’s not getting yanked around yuks by the other kids in yard who find sport, or some other satisfaction in pulling his leg.
You are forgetting or ignoring the positive aspects of religion which have inspired people to produce great works of art, music, architecture, science and, above all, compassion and help for those who were neglected by pagans.Mapping back over to religion, I think this analogy snaps back on the apologist badly. You can’t produce any minivans. There are no bells. There is no ice cream. There’s just the belief that if you expect cosmic ice cream, it’s real, and it tastes sweet, never mind the man behind that curtain.
Your estimate of humanity is once again deprecating and unrealistic.Humans have strong “herd instinct” as the social species we are and there are strong sanctions put in place for dissidents who don’t play along with the group pretending. So perhaps the kid (and other kids in the crowd heralding this “ice cream truck”!) just goes along to get along.
Are you one of the enlightened few?Pointing out that the Emperor Has No Clothes can come at a heavy social cost. It may be foolish to believe there really is an ice cream truck when the crowd announces one, but none appear, time after time. But may be “socially logical” to just capitulate to the group think of the playground gang.
Science scores a perfect ZERO on the most important facts of life: its value and purpose…There’s not even meager, or ANY evidence for the existence of God, scientifically. Not ONE model used in science incorporates the concept of God, or relies on God or supernatural entities/powers for its models. Religion scores a perfect ZERO on this score. So saying “there’s not irrefutable evidence” doesn’t state the problem for religion nearly strong enough. Religion is nowhere on this measure, not just “short of irrefutable”.
Yes, all of these desires are pervasive and motivating. And therein is the problem, and a solid reason you should doubt your own beliefs, because you clearly have a strong risk of being compromised by the conflicted interests you have on this matter (and I have the same basic desires). The reason everyone (broadly speaking) believes in God and eternal life is because it’s gratifying and anodyne for them to do so.Doesn’t the non-believer want his life and actions to have meaning? Doesn’t he want eternal life, eternal happiness, fulfillment of all desire?
The deep hunger wouldn’t have survived for thousands of years if it were never satisfied. Ice cream is a poor analogy compared to the bread everyone needs. Science fails to nourish because it leads precisely nowhere. It gives the illusion of progress but has no criteria of progress!It’s a demand, based on our grasp of our own mortality and limitations. and wherever there is a demand, ingenious marketers will find a way to supply hungry customers. Where there is a deep hunger for ice cream, promoting the ever-coming-but-never-arriving ice cream truck is great business.
Are you just a brain? Emotions are associated with a person not a biological machine.I’d be a chump to just fall for appeals to my emotions at the expense of my brain.
There are other facts that reveal the sterility of science compared with the fertility of theology: the rationality of the universe, the immense value of life, the creativity of humanity, the principles of liberty, equality and fraternity and, most significantly, the capacity for unselfish love.Yes. By comparison, theology has a hard time demonstrating anything at all, to even get out of the starting gate. Think of the best example of “theological knowledge” that is both substantial (makes some claim about the world) and demonstrable. What would that be?
So this thread has been interesting and challenging, but the main point seems to be that TS admits this fact:But my point still stands: you can’t give me any categorical or objective reason for not believing that God exists.
He has no objective reason for not believing that God exists.
So we shouldn’t try to demonstrate this to him. He understands that his unbelief is not rational.
He seems not to understand, however, that it can’t be good to be irrational. And his belief/unbelief in fact seems to be irrational. He claims that good and being and truth are independent, so being/reality can be irrational/bad, truth can be bad/irrational, and the good can be false/non-existent. So his subjective embrace of the subjectively construed ‘goodness’ of subjectively construed notions of ‘rationality’ and ‘reality’ are all reducible (in his subjective system) to arbitrary functions of his subjective preferences. Now this is indeed ‘rational’ but only because ‘rational’ has been rationalized to the point of being no different from ‘irrational.’ So sure, TS’s view is ‘rational,’ but we need to remember 1) that from other perfectly ‘rational’ standpoints TS’s view is also ‘irrational,’ and 2) that TS doesn’t have a problem with this. He’s too busy embracing the ‘now.’ He has made his rational-irrational decision to drink the deep draught of the present moment for the short time that he projects to be able to do so and to seek to forget about the unknown that lies beyond. So good luck changing his mind about that!
This seems to be a fundamental point of contention: TS thinks he can embrace life only by looking forward to it ending. If it were ‘unlimited’ he could no longer value it, see it as precious. “I love it so much that I want it to end.” Quite a paradox.Bigger purposes – like keeping it hidden away in a safe deposit box? You must be pulling my leg, here. If the the scarcity and limited supply of a resource that makes the “precious” in “precious resource” meaningful. Oy!
But, what flavor? Hindu? Muslem? Christian? Jewish? Budhist? How could someone looking in know what bell had the right tone? Because exactly everything you would say for a christian icecream, someone would say the same for a hindu or muslem one?Non-believers, don’t wait for the bell to ring, please come, and have icecream with us!