Jedi Knight said:
You weren't paying attention, Nova. This is what he quoted:
Originally posted by Aardvark_DK
Only atheists/godless people do evil things
Hitler did evil things
Therefore Hitler was an atheist/godless
......and that was what I was replying to.
I believe the reason Aardvark_DK gave those lines was to illustrate what
appears to be your definition of an atheist. The question he (and others of us) is trying to get a response to is:
what do you mean by "atheist"?
This is an important point to clear up. It seems clear that you do
not mean simply "someone who does not believe in god" (or "someone who disbelieves in god"). It is not clear just what it is you
do mean.
That just goes to show that there is a huge misunderstanding of what I am saying.
Yes, and you can help clear up some of this by explaining what you mean by the word "atheist".
A common source of misunderstanding is when one person means one thing by a word and another means something else entirely when using the same word. That appears to be the case here. There may be -- very likely are --
additional misunderstandings, but it's hard to even begin to work on them until we get that initial one out of the way.
I do not think there is anyone qualified to debate me on this topic...
That's fine. There's no need to engage in debate if you don't wish to. Debating is fun, but it's not my only (or even primary) reason for wanting to discuss things with people.
What I'm looking for in this discussion is a better understanding of what it is you believe and why. I'm quite willing to argue those things that I disagree with, but I have no compelling need to. I'm quite willing to listen to what you say and put forward, quite separately, my own analyses of the evidence I can find.
If you would like to debate about the things you believe, that's fine too. But before I or anyone can productively argue about what you believe we need to understand what you believe. Since a key term you are using is "atheist", and some of us are not clear what you mean by it, debate is a little premature.
I have presented an opinion about Hitler. It is my opinion and many people share it. It doesn't have anything to do with me and everything to do with the information provided based upon historical fact.
And that is what I'm interested in!
I'm beginning to get a fuzzy picture of the outlines of your opinion. Among the things I'd like to understand, but don't, is what factual material your opinions are based on.
You have referred to Hegel and Nietzsche (who are philosphers, although their philosophies were used by players in political arena). I'm certainly willing to read some of their
philosophy if you think it will help me to understand some of the
historical facts you are referring to. Please provide me page references to selected portions of their writing which you think are especially relevant to the points you would like me to understand. (I will need these page references from you by Friday morning, as I hope to hitch-hike to Knoxville then.)
Many of the posts in this thread (including this one of mine, and the one of yours I am responding to) are empty of substance relating to the discussion topic. They are instead devoted to comments about the discussion itself -- who's responding, who's evading, what people should or should not be doing. We are having a
meta-discussion rather than a discussion.
What I would like is to be able to spend more time putting forward evidence to be analyzed and reading the same from others. I have been offering excerpts from Hitler's Table Talks because this is a source you gave earlier as the basis for your belief Hitler was an atheist. I do not know if you have ever read the actual book, or simply excerpts that others have selected for you, but I am interested in your reactions to the material in it.
There are others here who dismiss the table talks (again, I do not know if this is on the basis of actually having examined them or simply on the basis of what others have told them) but do put reliance in other sources such as
Mein Kampf and Hitler's public speeches. Rather than simply referring to these sources and implying this proves a point, I would enjoy people quoting from specific materials, especially primary sources
which they have read for themselves and explaining what conclusions they draw from the material.
For instance, instead of simply referring to "Hitler's public speeches", I would welcome reading comments from someone who has read through significant portions of the published volumes of these about what they found there and which things grabbed their attention. Often, the selected excerpts we see bandied about give a different impression than the same things read in context.
Something else that might be of interest would be someone looking through microfilm of New York Times reportage back in the 1930s of Hitler's speeches. This might give us a better understanding not only of the content of the speeches but of how people -- such as Christians -- reacted to them. Better yet would be if someone who speaks German could look up the coverage of these in German newspapers from the time.
Whether any of this led to anyone's opinion changing or not, at least we would be having a
content-filled discussion rather than simply an exchange of assertions. You have said several times that your beliefs are based on historical facts, so I hope you join me in wanting that kind of discussion here.