thaiboxerken
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2001
- Messages
- 34,596
Heehee...good luck on that. In fact, good luck on getting religions outlawed/abolished.
It won't happen, but that won't stop me from criticizing and attacking religion.
Heehee...good luck on that. In fact, good luck on getting religions outlawed/abolished.
I can understand that, I really can. All the ones you mention do impinge on an indiduals right to lead a life they otherwise would without conversion IMO, but thats only IMO.I'm glad you (sort of) asked. How about the Buddhists, Quakers, reform Jews, Amish, Unitarian Universalists, Baha’is, Pagans, Wiccans, etc., and all the mainstream Christians, Muslims and Hindus who are as mortified by the extremists in their religions as we are?
I can't help seeing your solution as a baby-with-the-bathwater kind of deal.
A genuine danger. It may be that our takes on the solution to that will never be reconciled.
Ah, well. Live and let live.![]()
Well, ya see, you "L&LL" for all the ones that follow the same. Then when you come across that jackass that abuses the system, you eject them from the tribe. Or smother them in peanut butter and leave them for a pack of wild dingos.
Believe it or not, I fully understand your stance. I just think that it's not an effective stance to take, if you want to have conversations as opposed to screaming matches. I've said it before and I'll keep saying it, challenge all the falsifiable claims that anyone, woo, skeptic, religious, atheist or whatever brings up that you feel qualified to address.
Even though I agree with some of the argument Articulate put forward I just have 1 question for you Articulate.
How does the big bang theory and the theory of evolution make more sense on their own over God being in the equation some where?
Or in other words why does the big bang make more sense than Genesis and the story of creation?
This can be said of many things. Political beliefs, fashion, commercial products. Don't you yourself want everyone to think rationally? Wouldn't you want that idea to "breed," to "infect" everyone? A pluralistic society requires an open marketplace of such ideas.
Granted some are more controversial than others, some even dangerous. But the "live and let live" belief does not mean letting someone else's ideas trample you at will. It means allowing those ideas their breathing room up until they interfere with your right to live as you would.
Live and let live, in other words, is not a "passive" strategy. It's a way of marking the boundary between when to act and when to let slide. If religious belief in principle crosses that boundary for you, I'd argue your boundary is too constricted.
Even though I agree with some of the argument Articulate put forward I just have 1 question for you Articulate.
How does the big bang theory and the theory of evolution make more sense on their own over God being in the equation some where?
Or in other words why does the big bang make more sense than Genesis and the story of creation?
Were you trying to be insipid or does it just happen naturally when commenting on this particular subject?
We did atacoism here three years before you joined.![]()
Not to start an argument over this but thats my belief that Genesis and Evolution go hand in hand at least in some way to fill in gaps for the other.
You're forcing your amegalospodist agenda on me!
The point is this - of course JREF is not an atheist forum. It is not a theist forum. It is not an amegalospodist forum. It is not an aalien forum (I think I need to think that one through a bit more...) It is a skeptical forum.
Through application of skepticism, we are able to conclude to the highest standards of evidence we can set that aliens are not and have not been visiting Earth. Through application of skepticism we are able to conclude that bigfoot does not exist. And through application of skepticism we are able to conclude that god does not exist.
Certainly, there are skeptics who are also theists. But they are not being consistent - they are not applying skepticism to their belief in god. Certainly a great many of them claim to be applying skepticism to their belief in god, but when they have to be specific as to how they are doing that, the process they describe is not skepticism. Indeed, it is often faith based and irrational - the very antithesis of skepticism.
So while you are certainly free to point out that the JREF is a skeptical organisation and not an atheist organisation, understand that I am also free to point out that consistent application of skepticism inevitably leads to atheism, and that I am free to tell people who say otherwise that they are wrong, and also explain to them why they are wrong.
To ask otherwise is to grant god beliefs a special status that they don't deserve.
Um...actually, I left the fold in a two-staged process. When I started college, I realized that most preachers don't make all that much money, so I decided to go into engineering. Secondly, and here's where the misanthropy kicks in, I realized that I'm not much of a people person, and most people are liying asshats.Well tell us... what sort of things worked for you... what sort of things made you "evolve"? And by the way... you seem to be getting more feisty and losing your apologetic leanings more each day... (you will be on Unrepentant Sinners spit-list yet.)
Oh, how do I agree with this. With my own kids, I try to tell them straight up what I think. Luckily, Mama Mortis is a Unitarian so me endorsing atheism isn't a big deal.I wish I'd have had adults prodding my thinking in this direction when I was younger... because it seemed that everyone sort of agreed that religion was good or that it had some truth so I figured some adults must know something--but I also couldn't figure out why scientists weren't testing the various gurus (ala the MDC) since our collective ETERNITIES were supposedly at stake... what could be more important than ETERNITY... it's not the kind of thing you want to take a chance on believing the wrong thing about.
Fervitude?The whole notion caused me incredible angst. And so I don't want to be the silent adult that keeps some other trusting person trapped in this nuttiness in an effort to please the right invisible guy by believing the right unbelievable story with the right amount of fervitude...
Although Fnord and others would like to see this as hostility towards religion or god-- I see it as a battle for truth. That's what needs to be emphasized. We need to teach people to ask "how do you know"? Why do you think you can exist without a brain when you know that brain damage greatly diminishes who a person is? Etc.
Honestly, it wasn't any external argument that got me to leave. Just humans being humans, really.So, what is it that worked for you? Sometimes provoking people makes them think and look for reasons why they believe... and sometimes people are lead through rationality via that path-- former ministers who became atheists often do so because of something like this coupled with a passion for truth... for others, it's a slower gentler route... I couldn't make sense of religion... and science made ready sense... and eventually I realized I no longer believed... and that people who believed were always nebulous about what they believed.... and that was because to give a voice to whatever it is they believed was to sound like a woo, I suspect. Believers do sound "stupid" to me... brainwashed... cultist... the vocal ones, anyhow. Understanding genetics and evolution made me really understand how creationists are lying to themselves and others keeping people from knowing some things that humans are really privileged to know-- stuff like "you and your pet have a common ancestor back in time... and that the last common ancestor of dog, cats, and humans is the same for all dog, cats and humans...as we all trace the same steps backwards in time!" That's way more unifying than any religion--and way more marvelous. Shame on those who'd lie to keep people from learning this amazing fact.
I sincerely hope that this is where your journey ends. You never know though, you could start having temporal lobe seizures tomorrow and have a Road to Damascus conversion to Sikhism.My dislike of religion is because it keeps smart people ignorant and trusting people fearful while making some men terribly arrogant and judgmental and oppressive and divisive. Look at Fnord's posts. How many young people are growing up to be Fnord or DOC or Iamme or Plumjam? And religious people as well as stupid people (not mutually inclusive but a lot of overlap) spawn more and infect their spawn with their memes when they are young and trusting ruining their ability to think critically in the future.
It was hard work for me to work my way out of this... I hope to make it easier for others... So, what is it that worked for you?
Genesis is scientifically absurd and contradicts what we know from observation of facts.
Even though I agree with some of the argument Articulate put forward I just have 1 question for you Articulate.
How does the big bang theory and the theory of evolution make more sense on their own over God being in the equation some where?
Or in other words why does the big bang make more sense than Genesis and the story of creation?
Fair point to make Articulatt and sorry for mispelling your name earlier.
I only asked the question because in my opinion the truth is smoe where in the gray area between say the Bible (or any other religion) and Science.
For example lets take the story of creation from the Bible and the theory of Evolution in my opinion the Bible expalins what God wanted to create and the Evolution explains how God may have gone about it.
Not to start an argument over this but thats my belief that Genesis and Evolution go hand in hand at least in some way to fill in gaps for the other.
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I sincerely hope that this is where your journey ends. You never know though, you could start having temporal lobe seizures tomorrow and have a Road to Damascus conversion to Sikhism.
What about the smart people who are still smart even thought they're religious? Like Francis Miller or Hal?
I know you were asking Articulett, and that you have one answer, but if I may try my hand at both your posts here:
Parsimony. It's a principle, much used in science, that in essence means that the least complex explanation is preferable to the more complex.
"The universe exists, and seems to have been existing for the past 13.7 bio. years" is a less complex explanation than "First there was god, then (13.7 bio. years ago) he made the universe". The first explanation says something about one entity (the universe), the second has two (god and the universe).
I'm tempted to say that genesis doesn't appear to bring much to the table. Less and less, in fact, as we find out more about the world.
In fact I now would like to pose the question that I posed Articulett earlier to everyone on this thread to explain why the big bang makes more sense than the book of Genesis.
I think this would be a good debate.