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Old 04-24-2005, 09:25 AM   #81 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Fibrosa
This just flat-out isn't true.

Look up Socrates and what he got accused of. Please read the "Apology".
Notice I said that atheism was "almost" non-existent. One man out of millions certainly does not constitute a large existence. Now, because I'm sure somebody will bring it up, I am aware that this is due to supression by various religious entities.
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Old 04-24-2005, 11:51 AM   #82 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tspikes51
You win. All I was trying to say is that we all believe in something, and that any ethos has the chance for fanatacism.
Nobody can argue with that.
Quote:
It seems like the tone of most on the TFP is that "my dick is bigger than yours because I'm atheist." Notice I said most and not all. It is just some imaginary pissing contest that no one side will ever win.
Haven't really seen that...
Quote:
If you can be offended by somebody praying in public, then somebody should be allowed to be offended by you telling them there is no god.
I agree. You shouldn't be offended by somebody praying unless he's forcing you to pray as well.
Quote:
The chance of there being a god is exactly equal to the chance of there not being a god.
Erm... based on what probabilities exactly?
Quote:
Anybody debating this is a stupid asshole.
Debating what? The existance of a god? A lot of people are assholes then. Or did you mean the probability of a god existing?
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Old 04-24-2005, 12:56 PM   #83 (permalink)
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Look up a couple definitions of fanatic. A recurring theme are the phrases "uncritical devotion" and "irrational enthusiasm".

Also, I don't think I've met an atheist yet that took a hardline against a fuzzy feel-good generic theism. Once you get into specific imprementations of the deity concept, though, all bets are off. There's a bit of a difference between claiming that gods cannot exist and the pointing out that a specific deity doesn't.

Since most theists are pretty fanatical about none of the other deities existing, they often have the mistaken impression that a well reasoned (if passionate) discourse about why their particular deity is impossible can be generalized to apply to gods in general. Contrariwise, a fanatical theist will make the mistaken assumption that a well-reasoned (if philosphical) discourse about the existances of gods not being provable (I.E. a god could exist) somehow serves as an endorsement for the existance of their particular deity.

In short, I think you're confusing a fanatical anti-christian who happens to be an atheist with a fanatical atheist.
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Old 04-24-2005, 06:03 PM   #84 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 1010011010
In short, I think you're confusing a fanatical anti-christian who happens to be an atheist with a fanatical atheist.
I will answer this one with a quote from our good friend Walter (from "The Big Lebowski"): "We're splitting hairs here."

And from the same movie, a good quote that is applicable here: "You're not wrong Walter. You're just an asshole."

As for the "imaginary pissing contest" that I was referring to, I will do some research and find some quotes, I can remember some instances where some were directed at me, one by our dear administrator/founder Halx.
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Old 04-24-2005, 06:21 PM   #85 (permalink)
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Okay, here's a quote, as promised, straight from Halx:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Halx
...To be honest, my basic philosophy insinuates that people who do believe in God are not particularly complete people. Whether their deficiency lie in logic, critical thinking or reality perception is a case-by-case thing...
Link to the thread
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Old 04-26-2005, 08:03 AM   #86 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tspikes51
Okay, here's a quote, as promised, straight from Halx:
That quote has nothing to do with fanatisicm it just highlights Halx ignorance on the matter of faith and belief which I've been through with him on another thread
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Old 04-26-2005, 08:19 AM   #87 (permalink)
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No, it has nothing to do with fanaticism, but it does have everything to do with what I was posting it for. See above: "Imaginary pissing contest" and "My dick is bigger than yours."
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Old 04-26-2005, 08:32 AM   #88 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Janey
As I posited earlier, Atheism is a very strong belief that there is no God. The faith required to support this belief (in the absence of proof) is everybit as strong as the faith required of all the religions that believe in God/gods.
I've been seeing a lot of people on this thread, including the original poster, make the assertion that Atheism is just stating "There is no god." and taking it on faith as something that cannot be proven.

This is incorrect.

In fact, there's two tiers of questions to be asked, here, instead of just one. The first is, "Can the existence of God be proven or disproven?" Many philosophers have considered this question, and some have thought one way, and some another. But that is separate from the second question: "Does God exist?"

So basically, there are four groups here: People who believe that the existence of God cannot be proven or disproven, but believe in God regardless (like Kirkegaard, and the original poster), people who believe that the existence of God cannot be proven or disproven, but do not believe (like the characterization of Atheists in this thread - I think this is actually very rare), people who believe that the existence of God can be proven, and thus believe (like St. Augustine, and the intellectual theology tradition), and people who believe that the existence of God can be disproven, and thus disbelieve (like the majority of actual Atheists).

So the original poster asked for some examples of how people prove or disprove these things (at least, that's how I choose to interpret "Shut the fuck up"). Look into philosophy, there's a whole tradition of considering this question, and some very intelligent people have come to both conclusions.

Also, I should note that I'm not talking about scientific proof, either. The proofs mostly used are logical proofs, because of course science can't prove anything, it can only show what is most likely to be true. Logic can prove that things can or cannot possibly exist, though. Sometimes science influences logical proof - for instance, one of the premises for the Argument By Design (the Cosmological Argument) was that there was no way for complex designs to arise without an intelligence behind them. Before Darwin, this argument was basically bulletproof. But Darwin showed, not that there was no God, but that this premise was not actually true. He did nothing to prove or disprove the logical argument, but challenged the validity of one of the premises.

So basically, don't dismiss such things so readily - while you may feel one way, there's a long history of considering the proof of the existence of God, and you should consider the arguments and come to your own conclusion. Some religious philosophers have come to some surprising ones, like the aforementioned Kirkegaard.

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Old 04-28-2005, 11:13 AM   #89 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bingle
So basically, don't dismiss such things so readily - while you may feel one way, there's a long history of considering the proof of the existence of God, and you should consider the arguments and come to your own conclusion. Some religious philosophers have come to some surprising ones, like the aforementioned Kirkegaard.
So, in there being good arguments from both sides, could you not conclude that the existence (or lack thereof) of a god could be proven, but have not yet??? What I think you are saying is basically I don't have an educated opinion about whether a god exists or not, but I choose to believe that there is one anyway. In turn, I think you are in a different kind of reality where you define reality by what you think it is. Look, I'm all for thinking outside of the box, but you're not being very realistic. Logically, you can't prove completely the existence of a god, or the lack of one. You can come to conclusions as to the possibilities, and granted I haven't looked into past philosopher's work on this, but this isn't a case of possibilities. Two distinct possibilities exist, and you can come up with logical explainations for both, but at the end of the day, they're still only thoughts, not substance. Until somebody sees god, there still exists the possibility of not being one. Much like anything. Say, for instance, that I told you I had a cat. You came to my house, saw cat hair on my furniture, a bowl full of cat food, and a litter box. Now, there still exists a reasonable possibility that there is no cat, although logic and reasoning would tell you differenty.
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Old 04-28-2005, 01:38 PM   #90 (permalink)
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hmmm.. intriguing. but not simple enough for me. I think that physical proof is needed before the reality can be established. The physicality doesn't have to be limited to what we today consider it to be. metaphysics can be involved, as I presume metaphysics is just an extension of the natural universe beyond our ability to measure.

it's relative. Until the physical proof is there, it will require faith to believe that god exists. Other wise one can only be agnostic about it.
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Old 04-28-2005, 03:17 PM   #91 (permalink)
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Well... I think that this argument continues to go in circles so I might as well post and add to the mess.

Atheists are not necessarily fanatics.. (although some may be)

some of them have looked to see if there is a god.... but they can't find god... they see no evidence that there is a god... they WANT to find god... they wish god was there... but alas... there is no god... they continue waiting...

To those of you that continue with empty retorical questions, looped logic, and crossed definitions... Help an atheist find god!...... The atheist isn't a fanatic for wanting god to be there... is she a fanatic for waiting to see any smidgen of evidence at all?

Or have you declared a matter of faith to be absolute truth without any tangible evidence?
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Old 04-28-2005, 05:38 PM   #92 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Janey
it's relative. Until the physical proof is there, it will require faith to believe that god exists. Other wise one can only be agnostic about it.
And correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't there no way to prove or disprove the Judeo-Christian god because of its definition?

I am an atheist, but if someone were to present compelling evidence, I would definitely believe. Until that day, I wait...
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Old 04-29-2005, 08:09 AM   #93 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tspikes51
So, in there being good arguments from both sides, could you not conclude that the existence (or lack thereof) of a god could be proven, but have not yet??? Logically, you can't prove completely the existence of a god, or the lack of one. You can come to conclusions as to the possibilities, and granted I haven't looked into past philosopher's work on this, but this isn't a case of possibilities. Two distinct possibilities exist, and you can come up with logical explainations for both, but at the end of the day, they're still only thoughts, not substance. Until somebody sees god, there still exists the possibility of not being one.
No, you don't understand logical proof :-) Let me break it down for you.

In the example of your cat, you're again thinking of scientific proof, or empirical reasoning. That means you look at observable evidence, and conclude from that what the most likely explanation is. Empirical reasoning can't prove anything, though, at least not in a strong sense. There's always the logical possibility that, even if you've repeated an action a million times, the next time things happen differently.

Logical proof is quite different, though. It deals with deductive reasoning, instead of empirical reasoning. To prove things logically, you don't need any physical evidence,and in fact physical evidence doesn't help your case at all. (Except to disprove something). Deductive reasoning is what mathmaticians use to prove theorems and so forth - things like the sum of angles in a triangle must be 180 degrees in Euclidean geometry, and so forth. They don't go around measuring angles, in fact you can prove that statement without ever having seen a triangle.

And, just like it's a logical impossibility for there to exist a triangle with angles adding up to, say, 360 degrees, there are arguments that say it's logically impossible for God to exist.

However, logical arguments do have to have connections with reality - these are called premises. Usually the arguer lays out his premises, and if the premises are true, the conclusion MUST follow. For example:

Premise 1: Today is a Thursday.
Premise 2: It always rains on Thursdays.
Conclusion: It is raining today.

Given that you accept the two premises as true, you MUST accept the conclusion as true. You can, however, argue with the premises. These premises, for example, are both false.

So, here's the logical argument for the existence of God that I talked about earlier, the Cosmological argument (very simplified):

Premise 1: Complex objects must be created by an intelligence.
Premise 2: Biological life is very complex.
Conclusion: There exists an intelligence that created biological life.

However, as I noted earlier, Darwin demonstrated that Premise 1 was false. Before Darwin, there were no really serious Atheists.

So premises are the weak points of any proof, as they are the points at which the physical world can disrupt things. However, note that physical evidence can only disprove premises - you only need one counter-example.

There are two other classical proofs for the existence of God, if you're interested I can post those as well. It's worth noting that, since those arguing for the existence of God are the ones on whom the burden of proof falls. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

Here's the Argument From Evil, which in my opinion is unassailable. This is an argument by contradiction, which basically means if you accept some premises, and thus prove a contradiction, one or more of your premises must be false:

Premise 1: Evil exists in the world.
Premise 2: God is perfectly good (Omnibenevolent).
Premise 3: God is all-powerful (Omnipotent).
Premise 4: A good entity will do all in its power to remove evil.
Conclusion: A contradiction. If God is good, and God is all powerful, evil should not exist in the world, because God has the will and the means to eradicate it.

Note that the only part of this proof that requires proof from the physical world is Premise 1. Also, this proof is not strictly proof against the existence of God, anyone can admit any premise as being false and the proof falls apart. So if you, for instance, think God is capricious rather than all good, this doesn't prove anything. But few are willing to accept that :-)

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Old 04-29-2005, 02:05 PM   #94 (permalink)
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I am familiar with logical proof. I actually got an a on my geometrical proof test. If one of your premises is false however, it invalidates the whole conclusion.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bingle
Here's the Argument From Evil, which in my opinion is unassailable. This is an argument by contradiction, which basically means if you accept some premises, and thus prove a contradiction, one or more of your premises must be false:

Premise 1: Evil exists in the world.
Premise 2: God is perfectly good (Omnibenevolent).
Premise 3: God is all-powerful (Omnipotent).
Premise 4: A good entity will do all in its power to remove evil.
Conclusion: A contradiction. If God is good, and God is all powerful, evil should not exist in the world, because God has the will and the means to eradicate it.
Premise 4 is false in this case, assuming that you were referring to the God of Abraham (Christianity, Judaism, Islam). God is usually passive to a certain extent when dealing with matters of evil, allowing it to go on (see: Job).
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Old 04-30-2005, 09:56 AM   #95 (permalink)
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Just some rebuttals....

Quote:
Premise 1: Complex objects must be created by an intelligence.
Premise 2: Biological life is very complex.
Conclusion: There exists an intelligence that created biological life.

However, as I noted earlier, Darwin demonstrated that Premise 1 was false. Before Darwin, there were no really serious Atheists.
Incorrect. Darwin actually showed that Premise 1 was possibly incorrect, not that it was necessarily incorrect.

Quote:
It's worth noting that, since those arguing for the existence of God are the ones on whom the burden of proof falls. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.
Not necessarily. Claims for the existence of God were around long before they were argued against. Those who make extraordinary claims to change the claims of the past (ie. athiest beliefs) are really the ones on whom the burden of proof falls.
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Old 04-30-2005, 10:22 AM   #96 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tspikes51
I know this will make a lot of people mad.

If you're an atheist, and you go out of your way to tell people that they're wrong because they follow a religion, that makes you a fanatic.

Since I'm sure these arguments will come up, I'll go ahead and offer my rebuttal.

No, tspikes, you're wrong because we aren't motivated by a god that doesn't exist.

You don't know if there's a god or not.

I do too...

No, you don't. Shut the fuck up.

But we never had a pope or anything tell people to kill people.

No, not yet (or at least any notable incidents like the Inquizition). Atheists were almost non-existent until fairly recently, though. Give them 500 more years and then we'll talk.

But the creationist theory isn't very believable

Who gives a shit how we got here. We can't change it.

But evolution

Again, who cares. It doesn't have much to do with religion.

I see this trend everywhere that just because people are atheist it gives them immunity from being a fanatic. You're not right, and neither are religious people. So stop comparing dick size, man up, and agree to disagree; because nobody's gonna ever be right or wrong.
I dont think you can really say anyone who holds a belief has a certain characteristic... but I have to admit, I know some people who would call themselves athiests, who basically hold an unflinching view that anyone who believes in God must be an idiot, since the whole idea is so easily demolished.... which I personally find as foolish and as single minded as people who believe tehir own interpration of one view of God is the unquestioned truth and everyone else is going to hell.
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Old 04-30-2005, 10:38 AM   #97 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by tspikes51
I am familiar with logical proof. I actually got an a on my geometrical proof test. If one of your premises is false however, it invalidates the whole conclusion.

Premise 4 is false in this case, assuming that you were referring to the God of Abraham (Christianity, Judaism, Islam). God is usually passive to a certain extent when dealing with matters of evil, allowing it to go on (see: Job).
This doesn't deal with any particular God, just one that has the characteristics given in the proof. But most people would be reluctant to discard Premise 4 - do you agree that someone who is morally Good has an obligation to oppose evil when it comes? Someone who stands by and watches a murder without preventing it is morally (and legally, in the US) in the wrong. Even more so when the person can do so at no risk to themselves.

Here's a thought experiment: A person is put into a room, where they can watch an infant being tortured. At any point in time, they can push a button, which will stop the torture. The person does not push the button. Is this considered a morally good action?

Bingle

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Old 04-30-2005, 10:45 AM   #98 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by archpaladin
Just some rebuttals....

Incorrect. Darwin actually showed that Premise 1 was possibly incorrect, not that it was necessarily incorrect.

Not necessarily. Claims for the existence of God were around long before they were argued against. Those who make extraordinary claims to change the claims of the past (ie. athiest beliefs) are really the ones on whom the burden of proof falls.
You're absolutely right about Darwin, that his discoveries do not entirely preclude the possibility of intelligent design - after all, we can see machinery and other things all around us that arise from intelligent design. However, I phrased the premise as "MUST be created by an intelligence", and that was no longer true past Darwin. Complex objects CAN be created by intelligence, but we now know there are other possibilities as well. Darwin does nothing to disprove the existence of God, he merely weakens one proof.

As for your other point, I wasn't talking about historical claims, but in a logical sense you must proceed from only the knowns, rather than the already-assumed.

For instance, although the idea of the existence of dragons predates the present, if I were to claim that such beings existed, your rightful course of action would be to demand proof from me, rather than accept the idea until it is disproven. Regardless of how many have believed in dragons before, it is an extraordinary claim.

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Old 04-30-2005, 12:34 PM   #99 (permalink)
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A memetic idea, or "meme" is one that self replicates and adapts itself to suit a new circumstance.

Christianity had done a fair bit of adapting in just the last 400 years. Christains had to concede that the world is not flat, the world revolves around the sun and not the other way round and that we have indeed evolved from the same lineage of ancestors as the mordern orangutan.(The newest molecular evidence clearly points to this truth,as discovered and accepted in only the last 5 years) The world is not 6400 years old as some have interpreted the Bible to say but seems to be 350-450 million years old.

In spite of these findings Christianity, Islam and Judeaism continue along without a burp, bump or wobble.

How much evidence will people have to see before they realise that OLD documents aren't necessarily "technically correct" documents.

The Old and New testaments, Quran, and the Torah are documents filled with great ideas, including the idea that we will have an after life. They say that there is a heaven (including extensive descriptions) without any physical evidence, as they did with the flat earth etc.

Christians have attempted to prove God through logic, mathematics and some continue today with creation science. Inspite of all of the work, God has not yet poked his nose through the clouds to say hello. God's abscence does NOT prove god does not exist, but it surely does not prove his existence either. (I lost my watch, but I know it still exists, somewhere..)

The problem is that there are no reliable witnesses to God existence, at least in modern times. Had he been here and left the matter would be different. (like the watch)

Faith of any kind is just that... faith. It does not take faith to wonder where the evidence is! It does not take faith to ask hard questions of those who puport to know the answer to the mystery of God's existence.

Is there a God? My wife says there is.... and if I expect to get laid tonight I will agree.. because she is standing here watching me type..

Praise the lord...
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Old 05-01-2005, 09:59 AM   #100 (permalink)
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Quote:
The problem is that there are no reliable witnesses to God existence, at least in modern times. Had he been here and left the matter would be different. (like the watch)
Many Christians would say that God did come here and left through Jesus. Thus the whole religion-not-dying thing.

Quote:
Christianity had done a fair bit of adapting in just the last 400 years. Christains had to concede that the world is not flat, the world revolves around the sun and not the other way round and that we have indeed evolved from the same lineage of ancestors as the mordern orangutan
Yes and no. Your statement about being related to orangutans may have been conceeded by the Catholic church, but certainly not by Christianity in general. The whole idea of creation science and Christian scientist's use of logic and mathematics to show/argue the existence of God is because they reject the bias of methodological naturalism in science (ie. the idea that only what we can directly observe is the cause of other things we can directly observe) Theories brought by science to explain natural origins of the universe are still riddled with holes, even after all the years of trying to refine them.

Quote:
Faith of any kind is just that... faith. It does not take faith to wonder where the evidence is! It does not take faith to ask hard questions of those who puport to know the answer to the mystery of God's existence.
Absolutely correct. A direct view of God would destroy the need for faith, and thus we do not have it. However, people who ask for evidence of God (scientists, atheists, etc.) should not complain when people provide evidence in a language that they can understand. (creation science, philosophical and logical arguments, etc.)
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Old 05-01-2005, 11:04 AM   #101 (permalink)
 
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that it is possible to reduce atheism to a series of statements concerning this signifier "god" is obvious: that individuals can take up these statements from a variety of angles, enunciate them with varying types of fervor, say, would mean only that it is possible to perform that type of operation upon/with those statements. it says nothing--at all--about anything to do with a system of beliefs/non-beliefs behind the statements. to think otherwise is to confuse the flexibility (in terms of usage) of a particular sequence of statements with an analysis of a social configuration/system of beliefs/practices. which is a pretty goofy slide to allow oneself to make. so i think the premise of this thread is at the very best elaborated on superficial understanding,

the thread is then about an assertion on the part of tspike concerning the usage of particular types of statements. insofar as it goes, there is nothing remakrable, interesting or thoguht-provoking about it. that he chose to move from there to an attempt to conflate atheism with a religion is simply a mistake--that the thread then moved into a typical christian evangelical parlor game, in whcih sophomoric logic tricks are deployed in order to "demonstrate" the untenability of the belief system "atheism" shows that the thread was never really about its purported topic.

the "history" of atheism thrown about here is also wrong: it is absurd to equate darwin with atheism in a cause-effect manner--in europe, atheism as a cultural option emerged gradually from within nominalism, across the 17th and 18th century--it is a consequence of the assumption that god is radically transcendant, not accessible to human understanding at any level--one way-station that you can look at is the wager in pascal's pensees: from this position, it is but a small step to non-belief (either agnostic or athiest)....
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Old 05-01-2005, 11:18 PM   #102 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by roachboy
the "history" of atheism thrown about here is also wrong: it is absurd to equate darwin with atheism in a cause-effect manner
I don't know if you're talking about what I said earlier, but I'm not trying to say Darwin caused atheism... Rather, that before Darwin no one could get past the cosmological argument (although there are definitely those who were not convinced). It seemed unarguable that intelligence had to create complex life.

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Old 05-02-2005, 04:19 AM   #103 (permalink)
 
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bingle: i am not sure if it was your post(s) or not that i ws referring to.
as to your comment, i am not sure about that-----i am not sure where you find implications of intelligent design in folk like linneas or buffon--on in much 18th century philosophies of nature, which seem to be more about the rationality of classification systems than about the conditions of possiblilty for either the classifications or the world being classified---but this might be a function of not having read them for a long time on my part. i guess what i would say is that darwin's work does not come out of the Vapor, that it leans on previous works, previous shifts in assumptions about the nature of science, that it does not stand at the origin of trending away from linking the perception of order in the world with the assumption of some Big Agent who did the ordering.
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Old 05-02-2005, 08:19 AM   #104 (permalink)
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Just thought I'd put in my two cents on the logical proof topic.
Is it just me or does it seem a bit wrong to put a supposedly omnipotent being inside the boundaries of logic?
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Old 05-03-2005, 02:43 AM   #105 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bingle

Before Darwin, there were no really serious Atheists.
I would say that before mankind created gods there were no religious people.
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Old 05-03-2005, 01:49 PM   #106 (permalink)
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I havn't had time to read the entire thread, so forgive me if this is off topic. I'm just jumping in here to throw out my new quote- it seemed like a good place.

"If aethism is a religion, then not collecting stamps is a hobby."

Wheee!
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Old 05-04-2005, 03:18 AM   #107 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by m0ng0
Just thought I'd put in my two cents on the logical proof topic.
Is it just me or does it seem a bit wrong to put a supposedly omnipotent being inside the boundaries of logic?
Not just wrong but plain stupid, you cannot logically prove the existence of a god, those of you sitting back waiting for it to happen are in for a long wait. Faith is at the core of religous belief, faith does not require proof - that is why it is faith.
Science and rational thought have gone a long way to explain the nature of reality but we will always be bound by the laws of our universe, to say that there is no chance that there is something beyond that is a bit ignorant
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Old 05-04-2005, 04:54 AM   #108 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by d*d
Not just wrong but plain stupid, you cannot logically prove the existence of a god, those of you sitting back waiting for it to happen are in for a long wait. Faith is at the core of religous belief, faith does not require proof - that is why it is faith.
Science and rational thought have gone a long way to explain the nature of reality but we will always be bound by the laws of our universe, to say that there is no chance that there is something beyond that is a bit ignorant
exactly. which is why faith transcends the requirements of proof. Empiricism, by it's very nature has to operate within the boundaries of the universe. Or to re-word it, within the boundaries of that which has been created. Agnostics are therefore bound by the same limitations. People who employ faith (those that both believe in God, and believe that there is no God) suspend the requirement of proof. Those who do not employ faith wait. Until such a point as they obtain proof, they remain 'not knowing' (agnostic).
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Old 05-04-2005, 07:55 AM   #109 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Janey
exactly. which is why faith transcends the requirements of proof. Empiricism, by it's very nature has to operate within the boundaries of the universe. Or to re-word it, within the boundaries of that which has been created. Agnostics are therefore bound by the same limitations. People who employ faith (those that both believe in God, and believe that there is no God) suspend the requirement of proof. Those who do not employ faith wait. Until such a point as they obtain proof, they remain 'not knowing' (agnostic).
Hi! This is what I think I've been arguing against for the last few posts ;-) In fact, if you look at history, there is a long tradition of both religious and atheistic proof for or against the existence of God. YOU may believe that God requires no proof, and that in fact none can be given, but many people would disagree with you (including a number of saints).

Especially since we haven't been talking about empirical proof :-)

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Old 05-04-2005, 07:59 AM   #110 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by roachboy
bingle: i am not sure if it was your post(s) or not that i ws referring to.
as to your comment, i am not sure about that-----i am not sure where you find implications of intelligent design in folk like linneas or buffon--on in much 18th century philosophies of nature, which seem to be more about the rationality of classification systems than about the conditions of possiblilty for either the classifications or the world being classified---but this might be a function of not having read them for a long time on my part. i guess what i would say is that darwin's work does not come out of the Vapor, that it leans on previous works, previous shifts in assumptions about the nature of science, that it does not stand at the origin of trending away from linking the perception of order in the world with the assumption of some Big Agent who did the ordering.
Yes, that's definitely true. And you're right. In fact, I take back what I said - It was just a lot harder to be an atheist before Darwin, but they existed. The Cosmological argument can also be attacked from a "first cause" point of view, which isn't quite as strong as Darwin, but people did it anyway.

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Old 05-04-2005, 08:07 AM   #111 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by m0ng0
Just thought I'd put in my two cents on the logical proof topic.
Is it just me or does it seem a bit wrong to put a supposedly omnipotent being inside the boundaries of logic?
However, that is done every day. In fact, it is what makes religion possible. Here's a quote from a religious site:

Quote:
Without the law of non-contradiction we could say that God is God, and God is the devil. Unless the law of identity is binding, there can be no unity or identity. Without it there is no difference in stating, "I am I" or "I am A chair."
Quote:
The Gospel of John begins with the statement, "In the beginning was the Logos." The basis of all logic is that some statements are true and others are false. If this word about God is not a logical word, then what is it? The whole idea of theology is that rational statements can be made about God. Even someone who says the opposite has just made a rational (although untrue) statement about God. Logic is undeniable.
The entire foundation of religion is built upon logic, otherwise it would be entirely arbitrary. There would be no more reason to worship God than to worship the devil, and speaking of the will of God would be meaningless.

Regardless, logic is applied to the inifinite all the time. It's really the only thing that can be.

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Old 05-04-2005, 09:04 AM   #112 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by bingle
Hi! This is what I think I've been arguing against for the last few posts ;-) In fact, if you look at history, there is a long tradition of both religious and atheistic proof for or against the existence of God. YOU may believe that God requires no proof, and that in fact none can be given, but many people would disagree with you (including a number of saints).

Especially since we haven't been talking about empirical proof :-)

Bingle

not sure if i follow you, but yes, God has no requirement to be validated through proof. That's neither here nor there for God. It's people who either want proof, and therefore lacking it remain agnostic, or do not want proof, and accept God, or No God on the basis of faith. My point is that to be an Atheist, you must act from the same basis as one who is a Theist.

We are talking about empirical or scientific proof. Those saints etc who follow the long tradition of proof are operating on the basis of faith. And ne'er the twain shall meet.
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Old 05-04-2005, 12:14 PM   #113 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Robaggio
If aethism is a religion, then not collecting stamps is a hobby.
Is that an original quote? If so, it's a good one. Of course, it's still a good quote even if you got it from someplace else, but if it's yours; mad props to your wit.
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Old 05-04-2005, 06:07 PM   #114 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by bingle
Here's a thought experiment: A person is put into a room, where they can watch an infant being tortured. At any point in time, they can push a button, which will stop the torture. The person does not push the button. Is this considered a morally good action?
Not by our standards, but according to what most theists believe, it is for god to decide.
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Old 05-05-2005, 05:30 AM   #115 (permalink)
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I'm an atheist toward god in the same way that I am an atheist toward Santa Claus. I've never seen either, and there's nothing to support the existence of either except for books written by dead people. I am confident that Santa Claus does not exist.

Now, I can't absolutely disprove the existence of Santa Claus, he could very well be hiding out under some glacier where I can't find him. My atheism is not fanatical because if Santa Claus were to show up I would certainly accept that he exists. Until that time, I will not act in a way that accepts Santa Claus exists, and I will treat people who believe that Santa Claus exists as the children they are.

Is there any firmer basis to believe in god than in Santa Claus?
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Old 05-05-2005, 07:55 AM   #116 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Janey
not sure if i follow you, but yes, God has no requirement to be validated through proof. That's neither here nor there for God. It's people who either want proof, and therefore lacking it remain agnostic, or do not want proof, and accept God, or No God on the basis of faith. My point is that to be an Atheist, you must act from the same basis as one who is a Theist.
But my point is exactly the opposite: A great number of theists and atheists depend on proof of the existence of God. That is what dragged me into this discussion in the first place, the mischaracterization of this point of view. I'll reiterate: There are four (or five) groups: Those who accept proof and believe, those who accept proof and thus do not believe, those who don't accept proof and believe, and those who don't accept proof and don't believe. You're putting all atheists under the last group, when in fact I've never met anyone who felt that way. So basically you're grossly miscategorizing and dismissing not only every Atheist in the world, but the entire religious intellectual position going back to Saint Augustine, and the basis for the Catholic Church; quite an arrogant act!

In fact, it's quite possible to be a rational Atheist or a rational Theist. That's not the position of fundamentalist churches, but it doesn't change the validity of the position.

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Old 05-05-2005, 08:06 AM   #117 (permalink)
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I'm pretty much a Kirkegaardian on the subject of proof, which means that while rational consideration can lead us towards believing in God (and some part of this is the arguments for his existence), it cannot actually get us there. We need a leap of faith.

This might be inaccurate, but one might characterize Janey's point as that any argument requires premises, the ones for the existence of God as well as the ones for his non-existence. And if you demand proof of the premises, you're eventually going to get an infinite regress.
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Old 05-05-2005, 08:21 AM   #118 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by tspikes51
Not by our standards, but according to what most theists believe, it is for god to decide.
OK, well, I didn't really get into this thread to attempt to argue the existence of God, really I joined in order to assert the existence of me. Unfortunately, there are still those who refuse to accept that I exist ;-P

Anyway, what you're arguing for is a sort of relativism for God. But consider this: if God can perform (what we see as) evil acts, what basis is there for worshipping God? Why is worshipping God superior to worshipping the Devil? For that matter, how do you know you're not worshipping an evil being, or at least a callous one?

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Old 05-05-2005, 08:33 AM   #119 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by asaris
I'm pretty much a Kirkegaardian on the subject of proof, which means that while rational consideration can lead us towards believing in God (and some part of this is the arguments for his existence), it cannot actually get us there. We need a leap of faith.

This might be inaccurate, but one might characterize Janey's point as that any argument requires premises, the ones for the existence of God as well as the ones for his non-existence. And if you demand proof of the premises, you're eventually going to get an infinite regress.

I really respect that way of looking at the world, and the idea that it takes a leap of faith to get there. It seems to make the most sense to me.

Your point (or hers, if that's what she was saying) is definitely true; however it's true of all knowledge (and thus meaningless). You might say it requires as much faith to believe in triangles as it does in God, or that it takes as much faith to believe in your existence as it does in his. It also removes the boundaries of truth: at that level it also takes as much faith to believe in Santa Claus or Leprechauns as it does in oranges and Dolly Parton.

However, we think we can distinguish levels of knowledge such that we're fairly sure oranges exist, but not so sure Santa Claus or Dolly Parton exist. There's some basic reality we accept (on faith, certainly) and then we can assert the further reality of some things.

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Old 05-05-2005, 10:08 AM   #120 (permalink)
 
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Your point (or hers, if that's what she was saying) is definitely true; however it's true of all knowledge (and thus meaningless). You might say it requires as much faith to believe in triangles as it does in God, or that it takes as much faith to believe in your existence as it does in his. It also removes the boundaries of truth: at that level it also takes as much faith to believe in Santa Claus or Leprechauns as it does in oranges and Dolly Parton.
for someone like kierkegaard, the extension of the argument for faith through all of knowledge is not possible--there is a difference in kind between god and objects of knowledge..the problem of thinking the infinite is the pivot. so you **could ** say that belief in god is like believing in a triangle--but that would mean that god is a comparable type of being: i traingle can be split into two halves--can god? so while you could say it, you would be wrong to do it. all you would show is that you have a compressed/limited understanding of the multiple possible meanings the notion of faith can have.

no matter how implausible i might find dolly parton to be--and i could go on at length about her hair alone--no matter how much difficulty i have getting my head around the existence of dolly parton, this fellow god is even more implausible. but when it gets down to it, i am more in line with kierkegaard and nietzsche on this: this god fellow you keep talking about seems to me but a name, a word, nothing more, nothing less. if the word refers to anything, how would you know? you could demonstrate the existence of the word. you could demonstrate the existence, for you, of a particular signified. but the referent? not a chance.

so far as debates like this one are concerned, i come across as atheist, simply because there is not a single argument for the existence of god that is to me compelling at all--but behind that is the fact that, for me at least, nominalists like pascal and kierkegaard have long been the most compelling variants on christianity--they care about the problem of god's existence and faith far more than i can imagine doing--and they dont know. but for them, the question of faith is paramount (a premise error from another viewpoint) so knowing does not matter.
but i do not care about the question of faith.
so i am ok with not knowing.
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