drzeus99
Hellmouth Beastie
- Joined
- May 20, 2006
- Messages
- 366
Oh, I'm not skeptical. The back will do!!![]()
Tough year, eh Belz?
(me too)
<raising hand> Ummm..The back is fine by me too, Ms Articulett
Cheers,
DrZ
Oh, I'm not skeptical. The back will do!!![]()
It's from wired magazine: http://www.wired.com/culture/lifestyle/commentary/alttext/2007/06/alttext_0620
That was funny! I am so suffering from the 'Bookmark Loop Disorder'![]()
Me too. In any case, isn't that funny that Claus things I'm using that to call people "mentally ill" because they I don't agree with them "politically"? I can't even understand their points, much less divine their "politics"! And I shy away from "politics" anyhow.
I'm painfully aware that I've been suckered into a never-ending point-by-point semantic argumentathon with the indomitable CFLarsen, and quite frankly, I've lost the will to live. I've said everything that's worth saying, and more besides. Despite what he says, I am not telling anybody what to think. I'm simply disagreeing with his hypothetical take on the issue.
If belief in god really does amount to what he's laid out (i.e. imagination), I don't see it as a belief worth holding, whether it's genuinely held or not. There's nothing wrong with it per se - it's not doing anybody (including the believer) any harm, and it doesn't invalidate their scepticism as they apply it to the external world in any way. It's simply an interesting and difficult to understand (for an atheist) contradiction that somebody who otherwise strives to hold positions only where there is evidence, would persist in holding this one.
I disagree completely Claus. I will leave it to those I respect to translate if you have a point since I can't follow you, and I do follow and respect most of the people on this forum.
For those who care about Claus's digression, he's referring to this as my "diagnosis of mental illness"
I don't know why Claus brought the discussion here-- is he mad? stalking me? Trying to start a fatwa in his "war on articulett"? Is he making some kind of sense or a point I'm missing?
That's one of the things that bug me about faith-- the faithful (or maybe just the annoying)-- spout their opinions so freely--like you should be eager to hear them-- and then when you assert your opinions in return they have a tizzy fit! They sure don't give you the respect they seem to think their opinions deserve.
It's their imagined expertise or the patronizing insincere questions that really annoy me. Most of Claus's questions are like that to me. In fact all of those I think of as afflicted with "pugilistic discussion syndrome" are like that. They ask loaded questions... never care about the answers-- never cede a point-- and I just get the impression of a toddler having a tantrum screaming "I win! I win!". I jshould probably just slip quietly away, but I get a wicked thrill from getting them riled up. Should I tone myself down?
So, folks (other than Claus) , am I the one with a problem as Claus asserts? Do I portray those who disagree with me as mentally ill? Do you think there is a good reason or point for Claus derailing this thread to chastise me? Or is Claus in his own reality on this one-- because I sure can't follow him.
I must be arrogant, because I think the reaction is due to me hitting a nerve. I actually like Claus. But I think it's weird that he decided to give me a piece of his mind about another thread here in an effort (I imagine) to stir up people into feeling like my enemies. But why? Have I said anything so awful? I don't think I've ever said anything terrible to anyone when they haven't said far worse first. I'm going to pretend it's because I'm wickedly clever like Christopher Hitchens and they have no decent response.
Fine, ignore the issues being discussed, make comments completely unrelated to the issues being discussed. That makes for great discussions.
This is a pedestal in the context of the point I was discussing:
That wasn't the context of the discussion. If you make one of those comments unrelated to what is being discussed, don't expect people to read your mind and figure out what you meant.
I'm sorry but my irony meter blew up when I read this because Arti's screechy diatribes are all about feelings, "respect" and a bunch of other blather that just makes my mind numb due to it's lack of logic. What elephant in the room are you talking about? That religious skeptics aren't atheists and therefore need to be confronted and told they are woos at every turn? That isn't an elephant in the room, that's a political decision by militant atheists who want to nudge not only religious skeptics but non-militant skeptics out of the room.
It's not mollycoddling to be decent to your fellow human being and I'm disgusted to think my fellow atheists, who claim to be such humanists, would attack people who they agree in 29 of 30 points with so viciously and relentlessly just because they don't adhere to atheist orthodoxy in a forum of an organization that is not atheist.
See... you think it's you. I think it's Claus. I think the people you get in these conflicts with are the same people that everyone gets in conflicts with. They don't get along with anyone. But you think it's you... because you perceive conflict and so you try to fix it. They never think it's them-- so they never fix their communication problems. They just bully everyone telling everyone how wrong they all are and insult others for things that are much more glaring faults in themselves. They may or may not be religious-- but they do that thing that bugs me about a lot of the theists that preach here-- people like T'ai or DOC etc. They are forever noticing the non-existing faults of others while being utterly blind to the same faults blinking neon in themselves.
Most people are trying to get along and communicate better and clarify points and commonalities so they can pin down points of contention-- but they don't do that because they imagine they already know all there is to know about communicating.
From my perspective... it isn't you... it isn't Big Les... it isn't Fran...it isn't Lonewolf-- it's the ones asserting that everyone else has the problem except them. Thankfully, they are the minority-- and I'm glad they have chased my favorite posters away with their hubris. It's not even atheists against non atheists-- we have a of variety of people who can discuss the issues just fine. It's the blowhards trying to win the imaginary game going on in their heads and blaming everyone else for the conflict who are the stress inducers.
If you can't talk to them--you can always talk about them. Or put them on ignore. Or make a game at seeing how pissed off you can make them by giving them a taste of what they so readily dish out.
Yes... that was me. I'm the one blaming the blowhards. You're still blaming yourself. So is BigLes. And Fran. But you can't fix the blowhards, and they don't know they're the ones who have something to learn and not as much to teach as they imagine.
Disagreement is normal. But most people work it out or laugh it off, right? I think women always wonder if it's something they said. But for some people conflict is their favorite sport, and their snits never lead to further understanding or a resolution... just some Twilight Zone tangential drama that you wonder how you managed to fall into where they are playing a win-lose game that you have no idea about-- and you thought you were just having a discussion.
Sometimes I actually find Claus or Unrepentant Sinner amusing or interesting or offering good insight... they aren't the worst... but they do agitate a lot of people and seem very unaware of the way they come across while asserting that others are much more offensive than I think those same people are. And when you comment on that, they accuse you of taking sides. And that's because it's a win-lose game to them. To everyone else it's a conversation on a forum or a discussion, right?
I think you're missing the point completely.
To answer your question. Of course not.
Those instances aren't based on supernatural claims.
People also have to apply common sense to critical thinking.
Of course no one can check the contents of a can of corn before
they buy it to make SURE it has corn, but the chances that it does
is near 100% (if it's labeled as corn and sold as corn). We apply good
judgement based on reasoning and common sense in that (and the airport)
instance.
But belief in something that has no verifiable evidence of any kind, and
is based on other reasons, and also incorporates a supernatural cause
should ALWAYS be questioned. That's what being a skeptic is all about.
It's about the claims of woo and supernatual.
That's the difference.
Cheers,
DrZ
articulett said:Who is it they think they are sticking up for and what message do they think they are communicating other than they think they are experts on JREF policy, communication, definitions, and skepticism by virtue of the fact that they have "seniority" as forum members. So does T'ai. Big deal.
Claus said:Nice. Casting even more suspicion on others, whilst batting your bambi eyes in the most innocent way.
Despite what you say, I am not saying that you are telling people what to think. I am saying that you are telling people if they really believe or not.
There is no contradiction, because they don't claim evidence. After all this time, you still don't get that.
Why have I "removed any possibility of the result being belief in god" by pointing to Persinger's experiments?
Why isn't it "fine" if people acknowledge that their god is imaginary?
Where have I claimed that all theist skeptics "believe in" god but don't believe that one exists?
What argument are you talking about wrt the example of saints and orgiastic emotions?
What have you read of the skeptic writers? E.g., Shermer, Randi, Gardner, Plait, Wiseman, Nickell, Radford, Dawkins, Hines, Sagan?
In 3007, when "Jedi" cannot be distinguished between Abrahamic religions, will you equate "Jedi" with "Christianity"? If not, why not?
Do you think that skepticism - rationality, critical thinking, the lot - inevitably leads to atheism?
I found the case presented in the movie to be very convincing. I didn't follow through verifying the evidence. What evidence do you think wasn't presented and/or was any of the evidence presented not factual?
Maybe that is the crux of why this point is being missed by some people here and understood by others. Maybe those who have arbitrarily stopped that critical analysis don't realize they have done so. Maybe they believe there is empirical evidence of a god. Or maybe they just don't recognize that god beliefs require ignoring the empirical evidence. That is something I have observed and the point I make when I discuss the two definitions of gods.
As slingblade has posted, a lot of people move towards atheism rather slowly. Why do you have a the problem with a skeptic who believes in an untestable god?On the one hand, a skeptic who is also a god believer has some definition in mind in the latter category, yet rationalizes the lack of empirical evidence and the evidence specific god beliefs are false such as Creation and Noah's flood do not suggest the skeptic's god belief is false because he/she then switches to the former definition of an untestable god belief.
This isn’t really relevant to the topic of discussion, though it’s an interesting question in its own right. Perhaps even deserving of it’s own thread.If you only believe in the untestable god, what do you have left in that belief really? Nothing, it is a concept of nothing which is felt, touched, seen, etc anywhere but in one's mind. It is a fantasy of an afterlife. An imaginary friend.
I think this is the sticking point. The reason that questions about how skeptics can believe in god comes across as argumentative or insulting. I don’t agree that religious believers stop thinking critically or are not skeptical of their religious beliefs. When you make this assumption, you don't ask them to discuss the critical thought processes they used to examined their belief, instead you assume they have deliberately avoided thinking about their religious beliefs critically and ask them why. People who believe in God haven’t necessarily done this and the assumption that they have comes across as arrogant and demeaning.But skeptic/believers stop that critical thought process. They only carry it through to a point.
If someone is changing their definition of God to fit the evidence (for example, if they decide biblical literalism isn’t compatible with the empirical evidence), it seems to me they are the epitome of a skeptic – they are changing their beliefs to fit the empirical evidence. Why is this not considered skeptical behavior?When they think about the fact prayer answering should be testable they start defining their god differently. When they see the evidence doesn't support Bible stories they start calling the stories symbolic.
Not true. For example, I recently heard about a MRI set up that can tell when someone is thinking about lying by examining the parts the brain that light up. It’s got enough credibility that the scientist who did the research and developed the system has started a business charging people thousands of $'s to establish they are telling the truth about certain things, such as “No I haven’t cheated on you darling”. It was reported on NPR science Friday a few weeks ago. I think that subjective thoughts must have been evidence in developing this process. Now, that's a far different matter from the subjective thoughts we've been discussing. My point is that subjective thoughts DO have a place as evidence in the scientific process, so your claim that they are not evidence is incorrect.First, scientifically, there is a set of rules about evidence. That's why people's subjective thoughts are not evidence.
Despite stating this as if it were a fact, it's not. It's quite debatable. We have developed alternative explanations for some of the subjective experiences that people report. I recollect hearing about frontal lobe stimulation producing experiences similar to many reported religious experiences. But this proves nothing about the causes of such experiences in the absence of such neural stimulation.But the reason those thoughts are not evidence is we have evidence about how those subjective experiences occur and 'real gods' are not the best fit for the evidence.
So just what are the underlying principles of skepticism in your view?
Just what is and isn't evidence escapes them.
Mine wouldn’t be any different. I think when you define skeptics as having to hold any particular point of view, whether on religion or any other subject, you have developed a dogmatic creed.If the topic were:
"Should skeptics, by definition, be anti spiritualist mediums"
Would anyone’s viewpoint be different?
Nicely put egg. I just wanted to say I agree with this.Instead of taking the scientific approach which says "we don't know", it seems a "skeptic" starts with the assumption that until the evidence says otherwise, the default is that it doesn't exist - as shown by several people here making such baseless claims as "god is imaginary" - a position I would have previously attributed to a "cynic".
If that is the definition we are using, then "skeptics" should indeed all be atheists, and I can say with certainty that I don't fit such a definition, nor would aspire to. I would tend to think such a closed minded approach would lead to bias when examining evidence and actually be detrimental to scientific discovery.
A bit late, but I think the evidence which CFLarsen demands is here, or at least a reference to it.
Nuh-uh. I'm telling you that what you say makes no sense. If someone who actually does profess to hold religious beliefs would care to agree with you, (and I remain unconvinced that your argument is representative of their thoughts) then I will suggest that their belief might amount to mere fantasy.
And you still don't get that several of us here are saying that we think that believing in god is a de facto claim of evidence. Since you claim, bizarrely, that "to believe in" doesn't mean the same thing as "believe exists", I can't see that we're going to break this particular impasse.
Answered already. Because the experiments consist of real-world external stimuli. The results may look the same, but are not a product of "god" (whatever that might be).
Answered already. I said it was. But it's also irrational to hold a belief in something you know doesn't exist. To me and to many other self-described sceptics, this is an undesirable position. For them, clearly not. That's fine, however there is no reason at all that I, other people, and the person themselves, shouldn't criticise such a belief.
Well, you are typically very careful in your wording such as to allow you to fit your argument to your words after the fact. Nonetheless, if you are being honest with yourself, you will find such a claim about four inches above this very sentence. Phrasing your arguments as short and obtuse questions is something that cold readers do, Claus, and it's really quite the impediment to a reasonable conversation.
Whatever the hell it is that you're trying to convey. Why not try restating your own argument in plain English prose - that way we won't have to keep playing whack-a-mole with individual statements.
Mind your own business.
Answered this already too. This is becoming rather tiresome. I said "yes" to this one too if you'll remember.
Of course not - the existence of plenty of sceptics who either profess belief in god or who refuse to touch the issue with a ten foot pole is evidence enough that people come to different conclusions with the same available evidence. Your own definition of scepticism refuses to call the "god" issue either way. Mine, in an attempt to think and conduct myself as rationally as I can, applies to god in the sense that with no evidence at present, it is rational and indeed sceptical to say "there is no god". It's the leap of faith despite this lack of evidence that causes this issue to be discussed.
Can I just clarify once again that I understand that some (if not most) religious people believe or make-believe because it comforts them - the credo consolans idea that CFL brought up. In fact it seems that is the only possible reason when dealing with the version of god we are discussing.
I simply don't agree that it's a valid reason to believe in anything (by which I mean, to believe that it exists). We are rational adults living in the real world, and there are real-world comforts that do not require the (albeit partial and specific) abjuration of rationality. Sure, it's not always happy happy joy joy, but I think there's a lot to be said for facing it without the blue blankie of an imaginary or otherwise notional god.
A bit late, but I think the evidence which CFLarsen demands is here, or at least a reference to it.
According to Nature magazine only 7% of people in the National Academy of Sciences such as Nobel Laureates, believe in God.
Somehow I knew you were going to come back with that. Annoyingly, I was reading last week a different report that it was 7% of Nobel Laureates in sciences, but I can't find that reference. Probably a journalist cutting the same corner.That doesn't mean that 7% of Nobel Laureates believe in God. It means that 7% of the people in the NAS believe in God. It doesn't say anything about how big the percentage of Nobel Laureates is of the people in the NAS.
Wow, did that pastor really say that it's dangerous to learn more because your faith might go away? If god really existed then it would seem that no knowledge in the world could make it go away. It's a poor god who must rely on a certain lower level of education for his followers.
CFLarsen, are you able to summarise what you are trying to convey?
Along with others i do not follow what you are trying to say. Your argument seems to be permutable for the sake of continuance and disagreement.