We atheists knew that already. But what does that have to do with your ego obsession?
So asking for the definition of a term to a bunch of intelligent people is not valid?
We atheists knew that already. But what does that have to do with your ego obsession?
So asking for the definition of a term to a bunch of intelligent people is not valid?
Oh yes. I just think your point is mistaken.![]()
Well, I hope you learned something from all this. I know I didn't.
Which rarely happens here. I find that I get new info that I can use for teaching at least a couple of times a day here.
The Time Cube was especially helpful.
Very interesting question, Christian. I'm an agnostic atheist with non-theistic Buddhist tendencies. I would define the ego simply as "the chatty self-referential part of our awareness." We identify with it and get attached to it to varying degrees, but tend to completely forget about it when we're in dreamless sleep or deeply engrossed in an interesting project.
Sigh. You can show many common traits, but that still doesn't mean there's a definition for any word or concept that's specific to atheism.
I don't have any definition for "ego" that is in any way related to my non-belief in gods, that I know of. I don't hold a definition for "ego" that's specifically atheist in any way. In fact, if I want to define "ego," I go look at a dictionary, because it's not a concept I discuss often.
If there's an "atheist way of defining ego," I would have no clue what it could possibly be.
Thanks for the response.
What I have concluded (I'm repeating myself) is that the term ego is not important to atheists, in any significant way. To most theist it seems to be an important concept, specially in relation to well being. That would point to the idea that ego treatment (a la Totte) is irrelevant. I have no reason to conclude that the well being of atheists is any different from theists.
Is there a "banging your head against the wall" smiley?
Dude, the term ego is important to some atheists. It is unimportant to others. Please stop trying to draw some conclusion about atheism from the answers to your question. The question is irrelevant to atheism. What part of this can you not understand?
It seems to me that this thread is unnecessarily combative: I do not see much to object to in the op or the follow up. But I often miss things, and this may be yet another such occasion
At present I understand the thread this way:
Being irrelevant to atheism is not the same as being irrelevant to ask a specific question to an atheist group and coming to a general conclusion. Why not draw an inference? Perfectly valid it is. It might be a wrong inference, sure, but it seems to be ok.
I can refine the analogy to entreprenuers.
Have you considered that the reason why atheist don't believe in any fictional being, and that theists believe in some and not others, makes a significant difference between both group? That this would make the definition of ego by atheists interesting. Is has been interesting for me.
This. You've refined your analogy, you need to refine the other side of it. The analogy of atheists to millionaires was in some ways a good one. There are many kinds of people who are millionaires, there are many kinds of people who are atheists.
Narrowing millionaires down to millionaire entrepeneurs, since the orignal analogy was valid enough for its purposes, requires you narrow down what kind of atheist you're talking about.
It sounds like what you have in mind when you say atheist is someone who is an atheist who values skepticism and critical thinking, such as is often found on this forum devoted to critical thinking. We're rather different and probably rather outnumbered by eastern atheists raised in communist or formerly communist societies. You might be thinking in even narrower terms, of American skeptical rationalist atheists, who are most likely to have been raised in a Christian tradition and reasoned their way out of it.
So, there you go. Of course these are exactly the sort of people to be sticklers about definition, which explains your difficulties.
To actually address your question, I think you've got the right of it if you've concluded that there is no particularly atheist take on the meaning of 'ego'. That horse is probaby dead now, but I'm hoping I could shed some light on the root of our communication difficulties.
American skeptical rationalist atheists
Do you have any citations for this? I've never heard theists use the term "ego" in any religious way. Do you have any evidence that ego is an important concept to most theists? Can you give a definition of ego that is commonly used by theists that wouldn't fly with an atheist?What I have concluded (I'm repeating myself) is that the term ego is not important to atheists, in any significant way. To most theist it seems to be an important concept, specially in relation to well being. That would point to the idea that ego treatment (a la Totte) is irrelevant. I have no reason to conclude that the well being of atheists is any different from theists.