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RE: Any atheists here? - 11/21/2008 11:58:50 PM   
Lordandmaster


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Brachiation, baby!

Ah, you gotta love Collarme discourse.  Thanks for the sanity, DomKen.

quote:

ORIGINAL: DomKen

There are still monkeys and apes because evolution is not a linear progression but a branching one.

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RE: Any atheists here? - 11/22/2008 2:00:37 PM   
Aswad


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quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver

Religion is not at all about life as many of us know it, it is about the external governance of life and how one should live in accordance to rules set out by an external supreme supernatural being(s) or laws or entities (imaginary ones I may add) that no one can provide a modicum of objective evidence that can vbe shared but merely a clai"m "That's my personal experience".


We disagree on this point. A lot of what we think of as religion today is nothing more than externalizations necessitated by linguistic limitations at the time when something was first expressed. Just because the Sumerians said "restoring the glory of the mother," doesn't mean that what they referred to was imaginary, just that they chose to use a figurative compound word to represent "freedom." Buddhism of the no-soul traditions is arguably religion, but certainly not concerned with an external supreme being, though one might say it posits a theory similar to that of holonomy, just at a larger scale. That's secondary, though.

Neither is all religion based on rules (fourth-stage morality), but that is also secondary.

What is primary is that regardless of the disagreements, the simple fact remains that it is all academic. Any rules, ideals or principles to guide one's life are ultimately arbitrary, and would be arbitrary for any godhood as well. Whether you create your own values, have them handed down by parents, accept those of your current culture, or adopt those of a religion, you are still subscribing to a set of arbitrary values that serve as guidepoints in your life and all have some point of origin. It doesn't matter what the origins of your values are, so long as the bottom line (their effect on your life) is acceptable to you (and, from a social perspective, acceptable to your current culture).

quote:

I think Wittgenstein more or less admitted he disappeared up his own arse.


I think you just more or less admitted to preferring belief over inquiry, but we could both be wrong.

Wittgenstein is one of those who have been able to lucidly write about such topics as the map-territory gap and the limitations of comprehension and communication. Essentially, logically showing some theories to be false in his field and others, which is far from disappearing up anyone's ass. You're either concerned with truth or not. Sticking your head in the sand is no better than sticking it up your ass. A lot of good philosophy deals with exactly the matter of truth, and it's rather irrational to deny that.

Health,
al-Aswad.


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


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RE: Any atheists here? - 11/22/2008 2:33:46 PM   
Aswad


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quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver

Science makes no claims beyond it being a human construction, it is religion that claims it knows what some supernatural being says on the hotline.


Hardly. Religion need not deal with a supernatural being, nor claim certain knowledge of the will of such a being.

For that matter, belief in entropy is little more than a substantiated claim about a "supernatural" (i.e. above nature) power. From a scientific point of view, entropy itself is not causally affected by events in the universe, yet affects essentially everything in it, is omnipresent, controls human destiny, progresses in a definite direction, is opposed by the force of order (which can reach stalemate only, by leaving no viable route for a part of a system to a state of higher entropy, at the expense of deadlocking the potential in that part of the system). So we have an omnipresent unmoved mover directing our lives toward a definite goal (maximum entropy) plus an opponent, and it's not a part of nature. Sounds almost Zoroastrian, in the abstract, and fits the definition of something a religion can believe in. Science does, if memory serves. Like other religions, science hopes to understand entropy better, but has little to go on.

You should perhaps consider a bit more flexibility in your perspective.

Non-secular religions in their modern form, in the West, are overwhelmingly either humanist clubs with a hippie touch, or convoluted affairs which deal primarily with repression, tradition and deference of both authority and responsibility onto an organization with strong financial and political interests at stake. That is not to say that this is the only form of religion out there, and certainly not the only form possible. To shut out the other options from your perspective makes no more sense than refusing to consider black people individually on the grounds that their average intelligence is below 100, or to refuse to accept the existence of women who are physically stronger than the average man on the grounds that women must work twice as hard to get and maintain muscle mass.

In short, it commits the same basic error that underlies discrimination and -ism's.

Rational thought is correlated with the capacity for abstract thinking, a consequence of both being heavily dependent on prefrontal cortical function. The ability to see a general principle behind abolition of black slavery, women's suffrage, freedom of religion, acceptance of LGBT orientations and so forth is an inference from the concrete to the abstract that has implications for the capacity to think rationally. Your refusal to consider a wider scope than the "tell me where god touched you" has similar implications, for the same reasons, except insofar as one is to appeal to aversive conditioning overcoming rational thought. Which has been the case for a lot of otherwise brilliant atheists whose aversions arise from being reared in an environment where some religion was causal, instrumental or peripheral to one or more negative experiences, or a general trend of such experiences.

You're leaving few options here, and I think it's time you rationally examine your prejudices.

Health,
al-Aswad.


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


(in reply to meatcleaver)
Profile   Post #: 103
RE: Any atheists here? - 11/22/2008 3:36:19 PM   
Aswad


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quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver

Imagine a colour, then describe it to me in words so I could accurately represent it on a canvas.


405nm, 3nm linewidth. If you want it with less precision and a more available point of reference, then the color at the inside tenth or so of the rainbow. Even less precise, and more reliably available, the color of the sweet violet plant. For something language-specific, dark non-purple violet is descriptive in English. If you wait a few centuries, it may qualify as a primary color, but nobody has observed more than 12 primaries in any language so far, which is not to say that they are not observed, nor that they cannot be described.

If the "challenge" were better chosen, however, it would restate some of what Wittgenstein said.

Health,
al-Aswad.



_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


(in reply to meatcleaver)
Profile   Post #: 104
RE: Any atheists here? - 11/23/2008 3:12:30 AM   
meatcleaver


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Aswad

quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver

Imagine a colour, then describe it to me in words so I could accurately represent it on a canvas.


405nm, 3nm linewidth. If you want it with less precision and a more available point of reference, then the color at the inside tenth or so of the rainbow. Even less precise, and more reliably available, the color of the sweet violet plant. For something language-specific, dark non-purple violet is descriptive in English. If you wait a few centuries, it may qualify as a primary color, but nobody has observed more than 12 primaries in any language so far, which is not to say that they are not observed, nor that they cannot be described.

If the "challenge" were better chosen, however, it would restate some of what Wittgenstein said.

Health,
al-Aswad.




I'm sure a little thinking and you know what you are saying is bullshit.

We only have to have different biological reactions to colour and all the mechanical, electronic accuracy in the world is redundant.

_____________________________

There are fascists who consider themselves humanitarians, like cannibals on a health kick, eating only vegetarians.

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RE: Any atheists here? - 11/23/2008 3:14:59 AM   
meatcleaver


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Aswad

quote:

ORIGINAL: meatcleaver

Science makes no claims beyond it being a human construction, it is religion that claims it knows what some supernatural being says on the hotline.


Hardly. Religion need not deal with a supernatural being, nor claim certain knowledge of the will of such a being.



If you're not dealing with the supernatural, then you are dealing with the philosophical, it still speculation based on no objective evidence.

_____________________________

There are fascists who consider themselves humanitarians, like cannibals on a health kick, eating only vegetarians.

(in reply to Aswad)
Profile   Post #: 106
RE: Any atheists here? - 11/23/2008 3:17:13 AM   
meatcleaver


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You do know there are simpler and more accurate ways of writing what you mean than you employ?

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There are fascists who consider themselves humanitarians, like cannibals on a health kick, eating only vegetarians.

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Profile   Post #: 107
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