Religion is an insult to human dignity. With or without it you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion.
I don't really see the major problem with the question he is putting forward.
I'm atheist and I think Hydrox are better then Oreos.
I just think some of us sort of reflexively see a request for us to, essentially, seek out and locate the "worst" of "us" to parade them around to be used as bad examples as a little too "Do me a favor and mix up the poison for your well" sorta thing.
It's a demand for token figureheads of a "bad example" of "your side" that no one's ever denied and that almost always carry ulterior motives. I'm just inherently skeptical of demands for big showy concessions to the (metaphorical) Argumentative Gods of All Arguments Must Be Fair and Balanced and All Extreme Points of View Are Equally Bad.
I've just never been in a discussion where "Now admit someone for your side can be bad too!" was coming at me from an open and honest place.
I just think some of us sort of reflexively see a request for us to, essentially, seek out and locate the "worst" of "us" to parade them around to be used as bad examples as a little too "Do me a favor and mix up the poison for your well" sorta thing.
It's a demand for token figureheads of a "bad example" of "your side" that no one's ever denied and that almost always carry ulterior motives. I'm just inherently skeptical of demands for big showy concessions to the (metaphorical) Argumentative Gods of All Arguments Must Be Fair and Balanced and All Extreme Points of View Are Equally Bad.
I've just never been in a discussion where "Now admit someone for your side can be bad too!" was coming at me from an open and honest place.
I just don't understand it. There is no dogma among unbelievers except believing would mean that you are not an unbeliever. No one gets excommunicated for say being a Republican or a vegetarian. Maybe certain things can be found that are common, but where do you start and what is bad that is exclusive to atheists? I seriously can't think of a thing.
I just don't understand it. There is no dogma among unbelievers except believing would mean that you are not an unbeliever. No one gets excommunicated for say being a Republican or a vegetarian. Maybe certain things can be found that are common, but where do you start and what is bad that is exclusive to atheists? I seriously can't think of a thing.
That's no more than an admission of prejudice.
If that's the way you see it.
As I noted above this becomes a lot clearer if you swap out "atheist" with... well pretty much any other stance.
Let's say one of the hard core Bigfoot Supporters started a thread asking for Bigfoot Skeptics to provide an example of "their side" doing wrong.
Let's say that in the *groans* Knox threads someone started a thread specifically to ask the "other side" to provide example of something their side does wrong.
There's no shame in not being able to think of one, but that doesn't mean you have to wreck discussion; maybe someone else can think of one.
For example, I posted an argument above that is fairly commonly used by atheists, and used exclusively by atheists?
My question would be to you, is it a good one or a bad one?
Personally, I have never liked "There is no god," and prefer Sagan's approach, to the effect that all of the creator gods so far described are far too small to explain what we know to be true. Combine that with the fact that any perceived evidence for a god is a matter of interpretation, and I think you are closer to the truth.I think there may be bad arguments for atheism, as well as very good ones, if that is what I Am the Scum is talking about.
Personally, I have never liked "There is no god," and prefer Sagan's approach, to the effect that all of the creator gods so far described are far too small to explain what we know to be true. Combine that with the fact that any perceived evidence for a god is a matter of interpretation, and I think you are closer to the truth.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk
I think you're being a little discourteous to the Scum. It's a somewhat interesting question: do atheists tend to certain fallacies?So what? What's the point in trying to correlate the simple rejection of a single claim to anything? It seems totally superfluous. What do you think this information will tell you? I really don't see how it might be used without it turning into a useless stereotype.
That's fair.Well, apart from all the atheists who read the thread, didn't see it as an attack, and didn't bother to respond because they didn't have anything to say. To take a self-selecting sample as evidence of a common property is a good example of confirmation bias.
Dave
Goodness. I really admit that those on my side are guilty of bad reasoning when I see it. I thought of the Scum's request as a purely neutral exercise, just looking at whether some forms of fallacy are associated with atheism.I just think some of us sort of reflexively see a request for us to, essentially, seek out and locate the "worst" of "us" to parade them around to be used as bad examples as a little too "Do me a favor and mix up the poison for your well" sorta thing.
It's a demand for token figureheads of a "bad example" of "your side" that no one's ever denied and that almost always carry ulterior motives. I'm just inherently skeptical of demands for big showy concessions to the (metaphorical) Argumentative Gods of All Arguments Must Be Fair and Balanced and All Extreme Points of View Are Equally Bad.
I've just never been in a discussion where "Now admit someone for your side can be bad too!" was coming at me from an open and honest place.
I think you're being a little discourteous to the Scum. It's a somewhat interesting question: do atheists tend to certain fallacies?
Not everyone will be interested in this question, but some might find it worth discussing. There is room on the forum for it.
As far as I'm concerned, one fallacy common among atheists, but not exclusive to them, is the fallacy that "negatives" cannot be proved and hence ought to be assumed to be true. This is a particular form of appeal to ignorance, justifiable given certain assumptions and a learning theoretic account, but indefensible in the general way it is offered.
Huh? For the life of me, I cannot parse this sentence.While not all null hypotheses can not be proven, most are.
Huh? For the life of me, I cannot parse this sentence.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk
You're right, it is confusing. Let me try again. While not all null hypotheses can not be proven, most cannot. Is that better?
Uh, no. I count three negatives, four if you count "null." Let's see:
"While some null hypotheses can be proven, most cannot."
Is that what you meant to say?
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk