xterra
So far, so good...
This is from post #287, which I am unable to quote directly, because the quote button gives me a blank file. The direct link is http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=12835283&postcount=287
David,
It appears to me that part of the misunderstandings here relate to your use of the word "project."
I don't know whether the word in Portuguese has different meanings than it does in English, but for most English speakers, in the way in which you seem to be using it, "project" means "a specific set of actions to accomplish a specific goal." So I set up a project to build a house, or a project to develop a business.
Your use seems to be related to "a philosophy of life" or "a set of ideas or guidelines" that may or may not have a goal for the end of a person's life – unless of course that goal is whatever the religion tells the person.
Perhaps because you grew up in a society where the Catholic Church is as much a part of the environment as air, you don't see that for most people who grow up where (any) religion is more like a choice of which sport to play, that religious atmosphere means very little. It's not something that we see around us constantly, not something that we find affecting our lives.
xterra
It's getting complicated to get along with you. I don't know whose fault it is, although I have an idea of that.
Let me see if I can explain the reference to Molière.
Atheists and Christians talk in prose, but that does not mean that what they say is the same.
Nor are all atheists the same, even though they all speak in prose. What they say is not always the same, even if they agree on some points and speak in prose.
The life project is the same as speaking in prose. Everyone has one but not everyone knowsthat he has something called a "life project". Like M. Jourdain, who didn't know he spoke prose.
Christians have a life project. So do the atheists. But that doesn't mean it's the same, because both life projects are different in their content.
Some atheists, not all, resemble Christians in that their life project includes principles of absolute value. Not all atheist life projects are the same.
I hope this will be clear.
David,
It appears to me that part of the misunderstandings here relate to your use of the word "project."
I don't know whether the word in Portuguese has different meanings than it does in English, but for most English speakers, in the way in which you seem to be using it, "project" means "a specific set of actions to accomplish a specific goal." So I set up a project to build a house, or a project to develop a business.
Your use seems to be related to "a philosophy of life" or "a set of ideas or guidelines" that may or may not have a goal for the end of a person's life – unless of course that goal is whatever the religion tells the person.
Perhaps because you grew up in a society where the Catholic Church is as much a part of the environment as air, you don't see that for most people who grow up where (any) religion is more like a choice of which sport to play, that religious atmosphere means very little. It's not something that we see around us constantly, not something that we find affecting our lives.
xterra