C
Candide_West
Guest
As I’ve said before I’m glad you’ve found a way to live through religion that satisfies you. Surely though you must realise that your position is not shared by all others and is not the only tenable one. I mention this because the rest of you post kinda implies to me that you do not.*Now thats cold reality for ya. Personally, I think i would go crazy. Life would turn in to a hilarious comedy in which people strive for a meaning and a value which doesn’t really exist. My emotional and moral experiences would be telling me there is a God while at the same time my rational experiences would be telling me there is no God. Every now and then i would feel a sense of hope and pray, only to realize that i had forgotten the harsh truth. There is no God. Such a reality is utterly ridiculous and pointless to me.
What a nightmare.
Seems like and odd statement in a few ways.Luckily such a reality only exists in the minds of those who have something to lose by admitting or believing in Gods existence. I mean, if one doesn’t have anything to lose by having hope, then who in their right minds would promote the belief that there is no objective purpose meaning or moral value in our lives.
- It seems to imply that people choose their beliefs. As if I could tomorrow morning get up and say “you know what I’m gonna be a Christian” or you could change your mind tomorrow and be a Buddhist. You could probably try, you could certainly pretend, but I’m sure you would really continue to believe in the Christian God.*
- It also appears to suggest that atheists have a vested interest in being atheists. Which from a personal perspective I can tell you is not true. I do however have an interest in maintaining my personal integrity by being honest about my view of the world and not lying to myself that I believe in something I don’t. See point 1 about lying to oneself.
- You have said about lack of moral values. Yet we’ve previously discussed how you can form morals from axiomatic principles without reference to any Gods. Which plenty of people do.*
Er, that’s true I guess. But rather off the point since I don’t imagine anyone out there does this, certainly not me or any of the other atheists I know. It would truly be a weird thing to do. Do you know someone who does the above?No one in their right mind would say to them selves everyday that their life is worthless and has no more true value than cow dung covered with flies eggs, especially if they have no rational proof to believe so.
I’m afraid you’re wrong here. I have been emotionally wounded and have indeed recovered from it. So has everyone else I know.*And no one, that has ever been emotionally wounded, can cast themselves in a positive light without having faith and hope in the fact that their lives have true existential value.*
I can’t help but be curious why you think these odd things about atheists.*
Generally true although of course “objective” in this case is not truly objective but rather the “practicably objective” we have discussed previously. Ie objective enough for humans.Everybody knows that there is such a thing as “rational emotions”; this is to say that there is a right way to feel about something and a wrong way to feel about something. We don’t call people crazy simply to categorize a distinct set of behaviors, but rather the word exists because we recognizes in someones objective existence something which ought not be the case, something which goes against our true nature. We recognize an absence of emotional sanity.*
Obviously this has little to do with religious beliefs.*
Again agreed, this comes from practicably objective morality. Axioms such as “suffering is bad”.Something is truly wrong, not just in our subjective opinion but rather in the objective nature of some person. There is an objective standard of what an emotionally rational person ought to be, and most of us know that we should strive to live up to that standard; that we should all love each-other; but we are held back by our selfish passions. We all know that it is truly evil to rape a child. We all know deep down that there is a moral law, that we ought to follow.
Again this has little to do with religious beliefs.
Odd statement. It appears to suggest that being religious is a ground state which you should revert to unless it is proven false. In fact it like any proposition it is reasonable to reject the religious proposition by ockhams razor if it is not supported.*Atheism would be understandable and justified if their was absolute proof that there is no meaning purpose of moral value. But if there is no proof, why would you want to remain agnostic or atheist on the subject rather than have hope and faith in the existential fulfillment of ones being?*
Firstly I don’t think being an atheist is based on a desire. Certainly it isn’t for the majority of atheists I know.*Unless your one of those people who would rather be the God of their own lives; i see no good reason to not have faith in something so important. Unless your crazy. In fact i think that a conscious atheism which is grounded in desire rather than knowledge is a form of insanity.
Nor do I think that atheists seek to be their own God. It’s a bit of an odd idea that really, trying to be something we don’t believe exists. I suppose perhaps you are referring to atheists being responsible for their own actions in which case I’d agree (but it seems like an odd way to put it).