HansMustermann
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2009
- Messages
- 23,741
Well, if they need some ideas for evolving, a scene from Dogma comes to mind...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_BEZaPN8gUY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_BEZaPN8gUY
But they are all delusional.
This I agree with.But they are all delusional.
This I do not agree with.Yes, and they all want to throw you in a concentration camp and pull out your eyebrows until you praise their god, yadda yadda yadda.
This I agree with.Everybody is wrong about something.
They can't just be incorrect? They have to be "delusional"?This I agree with.
I was being personally sarcastic to the poster I quoted, in reference to past statements he's made along those lines.This I do not agree with.
But -apart from religion there are not too many things that large groups of people are wrong about that they also allow to govern their entire lives.
They can't just be incorrect? They have to be "delusional"?
I was being personally sarcastic to the poster I quoted, in reference to past statements he's made along those lines.
In my experience, the percentage of man-on-the-street believers that actually allow their religion to "govern their entire lives" is in reality very low. In my own church (that I interned at to become a minister) of at least several hundred, no more than half of that showed up to Sunday services, and out of them only a handful took it to that extreme.
That's how I define it also. The error on our side is when we assume that the average believer has the same understanding we do about what constitutes good evidence, the rules of logic, and why the authorities that taught them these things can be wrong.Personally i would state the difference between delusion and incorrect as denying sufficient evidence to the contrary when displayed. Or for a more general explanation, ignoring established facts in favor of a theory that one is more inclined to listen to.
Do they? Seems to me that satisfying an emotional need is the primary reason most people believe anything.The problem is that christians in general appeal to the tradition and age of their religion when citing reasons they believe.
What difference does the it make to you what specific reasons someone else might have for behaving in a socially acceptable manner?Now if they start picking and choosing their morals and changing bits they don't like, then all they are doing is using the bible to justify their own personal morality. Which is no different than how atheists decide their morality, with the exception of we do not credit some divine deity.
Whether or not they are a hypocrite is their problem, not mine- and not yours either. We have no authority to insist that they be fundamental literalist or they are not Christian. We don't get to dictate to them what their religion is, says, or does. We are not the "beliefs integrity" police. That's again edging into thought control.Sure most christians don't follow many of the codes in the bible, how is that a plus though? It is called being a hypocrite, telling us we are somehow less because we don't follow said book, yet they only have to follow it when they feel like it.
Why does it matter to you if Christians strictly follow the bible or not?Of course we do not want the crusades, or the inquisition , but at least the crusaders and the inquisitors were actually trying to follow the bible.
Yes, and that's cultural evolution. It's been a good thing, on the whole.Modern christians seem to want to be able to claim the tradition, but not really listen to any of the repugnant bits. And if your going to just ignore the stupid bits, then you could take any belief system from Nazi, to hippie and come out the same.
It tells you the "truth" about what the religion was when the repugnant bits were written. To insist that the repugnant bits must apply to the religion as it is practiced today is disengenous.The repugnant bits are what tells you the truth about something,
Should all Americans today be held accountable for the Jim Crow laws despite the fact they are not in force?anything is nice and good and pure if one simply ignores all the parts that are not.
Can you find me even one source indicating it is the age and tradition of the religion is the reason they believe in Jesus?
My favourite motto on a sign outside a whacky church I pass on my way to play Necromunda:
"If evolution were true mothers would have 3 arms"
There's been a few other classics. Perhaps Ill start writing them down.
I didn't say you were wrong, I said that wasn't my understanding.I find that you confuse my other points, but i would like to deal with this comment first.
http://www.equip.org/articles/catholic-tradition
Not nearly the only one, but i find your insinuation that i was so wrong that it would be impossible to find one a little over the top.
See, to me, that's an error right there. Christianity has hundreds of different flavours, sects, and denominations. And beyond that, even members of the same group can and do disagree with each other on different points. So statements like the one above are incorrect right off the bat.Christians in general insinuate that atheists are missing something due to not having the bible to back their positions.
No, the assertion is completely wrong regardless of the nature of the Christian's beliefs.That we are essentially picking and choosing our morals at random. And if they followed the bible to the letter, this would have weight.
It is only self-delusion if they have reason to believe otherwise. As I said, many beleivers do not have any knowledge of what constitutes logic or proper evidence. they are not deluded, they are just incorrect.But they do not, so they are doing the same thing as we are, but then stating that they are doing something else. This is intellectually dishonest, plain and simple, and self delusion.
Well, it is not wrong (and make no mistake, it is incorrect) because of the reasons you are presenting. The argument you put forth is fallacious.I care because this is a large point of argument against atheists, and it has no basis what so ever.
That our laws today are mutable is partly a cultural evolution from the immutable laws of the old religions. I fail to see why you have a problem with the religions evolving as well.As far as your references to law, well that is why secular law is secular. It evolves with the times, and that is it's intent, and it does not attempt to get its clout from its age or the immutability of law.
So? Why do you care if they are being hypocritical or not?The bottom line of my argument is that if one is going to claim that the advice in the bible is the word of god on one hand, and then disregard large chunks of it on the other, they are being hypocritical.
So them being hypocritical is a good thing, then.And the problem is there was a time when they were not being hypocritical , and they were a rambling, evil force.
No, they are by and large just incorrect. That's what they have been taught as fact by people who are also, by and large, just incorrect. They want people to think like them, just as we would like people to think like us.And when it all comes together what have we learned?
That the more parts of the bible christians ignore , and the more they get their morals from other places, the better they are.
Yet they claim that more people need to be christian ( giving them more power, "coincidentally") and the world will be a better place, again intellectual dishonesty and self delusion.
They can't just be incorrect? They have to be "delusional"?
To me, an adult believing in magic has stepped a bit beyond merely "incorrect".
To me, an adult believing in magic has stepped a bit beyond merely "incorrect".
It is only self-delusion if they have reason to believe otherwise. As I said, many beleivers do not have any knowledge of what constitutes logic or proper evidence. they are not deluded, they are just incorrect.
No, the ones making up special rules and such to try and discount evidence once presented and shown why it works are choosing their beliefs over reason (or are incapable of choosing). That is delusion. However, the existence of some delusional believers does not validate such blanket statements as "Christians are delusional" or "an adult believing in magic has stepped a bit beyond merely "incorrect"". These are still fallacies of generalisation. One cannot meaningully say anything about "Christians in general" that is going to necessarily apply to any particular Christian- not even that Jesus is their personal lord and saviour. At best one could say that "Believer X" self identifies as a Christian, and that doesn't mean anything in itself.This seems a little problematic.
How does this differ significantly from a guy who says that he has this invisible friend who follows him around and gives him advice?
He knows the guy is there, because every time he asks a question, he hears an answer. I demonstrate to him that the guy isn't really there by walking right through the spot where he says the guy is standing, but he says the guy moved out of the way just as I got there. I make an audio recording of one of his exchanges and demonstrate that all we hear on the play back are the questions; no answers from the invisible guy. But that's OK, because my friend points out that science hasn't yet designed appropriate recording equipment to capture the speech of invisible people.
Etc.
So is this guy deluded, or just incorrect, since he's ignorant of conventional rules of evidence and the workings of audio recording technology?
In effect, he's claiming that I don't believe in his invisible buddy because I'm the one ignorant of the special rules of evidence that prove Mr. Invisible's existence.
I have had many a discussion with many a religious believer on the existence of God which has followed essentially the same format. And indeed, the same sort of argument could be offered to justify pretty much any belief.
So is it your contention that there is essentially no such thing as delusion?
No, the ones making up special rules and such to try and discount evidence once presented and shown why it works are choosing their beliefs over reason (or are incapable of choosing). That is delusion.
However, the existence of some delusional believers does not validate such blanket statements as "Christians are delusional" or "an adult believing in magic has stepped a bit beyond merely "incorrect"". These are still fallacies of generalisation.
One cannot meaningully say anything about "Christians in general" that is going to necessarily apply to any particular Christian- not even that Jesus is their personal lord and saviour. At best one could say that "Believer X" self identifies as a Christian, and that doesn't mean anything in itself.
My contention is many- if not most- believers have simply never been taught logic and reason,
Yes, and they all want to throw you in a concentration camp and pull out your eyebrows until you praise their god, yadda yadda yadda.
Why? Seems to be the default position for humans.