kimiko said:
You aren't seeing what I'm saying. If anyone is fed or clothed or comforted in the world, it is themselves or others doing it. God doesn't make appearances.
OK, but what if it is *religious* people doing it in the *name* of religion and for *religious* reasons? What if people go to *religious* churches to get fed and clothed? What if *religious* clerics use *religion* to get people to feed and clothe and comfort others? I think you're being a bit too simplistic.
Christians believe that we are called to be Christ to others.
And you're ignoring spiritual nourishment, but again, your idea of efficacy is physical. Even if I agree to that, there's religion all over the place whenever you have tsunami type ordeals.
Hmmm. Let me get this straight. Let's say you have a missionary helping another person there. You would not call that religion. You would say that is one person helping another person. What if religious idealism is behind the missionary? Is that in any way significant?
It doesn't matter if someone feels motivated by God, it is they who are getting up or donating or whatever.
Interesting...
So. It people's God motivations do not matter when they are helping other people. They only matter in the abstract. Is that correct? Or, they only matter if people are hurting other people. Am I on the right track?
Kimiko you have said much about religious motivations in this thread. Do you talk about them with the ADMISSION that they don't matter? Or do they only matter sometimes, when it helps your own personal arguments, and they do not matter sometimes, when it doesn't help your own personal arguments? And if they always don't matter, why are you saying so much about things that do not matter? And if they only sometimes matter, why are you being selective?
In that respect, I don't care if it is a direct religious aid organization, because it is only people doing the helping. God doesn't fill soup bowls at shelters. I don't feel any need to 'tip the cap' at religious charities, I tip my cap at the people in them.
Fair enough. But in order to remain consistent, may I recommend that you not have any outrage towards religious institutions when religious people who happen to be in those religious institutions do bad things? I mean, that would be the consistent thing to do. Right?
No they don't. There are atheists who are as comfortable in the world as christians, so whatever peace the concept of salvation gives can be found other ways.
You are confusing *can* with the realities of the world. Listen, if the *message* of atheism is helping people that's great. I'm just waiting for Atheists International to spread their message in the most poverty stricken parts of the world. How much longer should I wait? Does the Randi.org forums sponsor humanitarian missions in the world? How about the American Humanist Society? Can you place your hypothetical in the real world so I can make the comparison to organizations that are actually *physcially useful* (your phrase)?
You're right, it is subjective; I only think things are constructive if they have some basis in the real world.
Religion has no basis in the real world? Boy are you wrong! This is too absurd of a statement.....oh man, nothing else to say on this one. Wow. I guess I spend hours and hours a week inhabiting some alternate universe. Kimiko, for my own edification, can you talk about this *unreal* world that I inhabit, and then explain why you believe that I inhabit an *unreal* world for several hours a week? Wow. Wugga wugga wugga.
Religion is lovely as a subject for its mythology and psychology and cultural values, but when it is treated as true without the standards that are applied to everything else to determine accuracy, it is a waste.
Well you've offered a caveat. That's helpful and hopefully informative. You need to qualify your blanket statements, or else I'll have to prod you in that direction to do so.
You mentioned standards. Exactly. Your standards exclude religion, obviously. So it isn't useful to you. Gotcha. Other people have different standards. It is useful to them. You may or may not get that.
See, *use* is as much a subjective concept as an objective concept. But the objective concept, in my opinion, has to account for subjectivity! In other words, an objective FALSEHOOD may have subjective USE to someone else.
As for what you perceive to be a *waste*, I am bemused that you engage yourself with *waste* so thoughtfully. And you are a thougtful person. I'm glad that this *waste* has the ability to make you think. And thank you for elevating myself, who is knee-deep in *waste*, to the level of discourse. Very nice of you.
TV, Nintendo and the rest are leisure activities and recognized as such.
Ahhh! Recognition! So this isn't *objective* at all, is it? It's subjective! Recognition!
Very well! Religion is recognized as being useful!
Religion is not recognized as a social club, leisure activity, hobby, etc.
Tell that to people who participate in church socials! Or play in church sports leagues! Or who dabble in theological hobbies!
It is portrayed as something true.
Not by you!
So...you don't have a problem with untrue things as long as everybody agrees they are untrue. Do I have that right? But, you have problems with untrue things that are being protrayed as true. I can understand that.
So...why doesn't the world look to *you* to be the arbitor of what is true and what isn't true? Should the world make you in charge of what is true and what is not true?
All I have here is you telling me what is true, and what is not true. And you've already established that your standards differ from the standards of billions of other people. So you have a personal issue, which frankly I'm not very sympathetic towards. I'm sorry that you're bothered by *untrue* things being talked about like they are *true*. Wouldn't you know it, the religious people are bothered by the skeptics who say *untrue* things as if they are *true*! Well, we can commisserate together. People are people, aren't they? All depends on what standards you possess, doesn't it?
Kimiko I dabble in these forums to validate the premise that the skeptic is not very different from the believer. If I were ever to encounter skeptics who think fundamentally differently from the way that I think, I would be so disheartened that I would flee from these forums, never to return. For now, I am heartened that you have it in you to talk about *waste* with me. I am heartened that you have issues with things that you believe to be *untrue* (I've got the same issues meself!). I am heartened that you tip the cap to good people who do good things. Yes you have bad attitudes about religion, but at least that explains much about your opinions and your rationales. Frankly if you were indifferent towards my theology I would have a harder time appreciating the way that you think. I hold people to high standards. I lower those standards when appropriate. I think that it is just as charitable as holding people to high standards. You have to accept people at the levels at which they operate.
Well, once you start with that, you have to show how it is true, and religion fails because it always comes down to a leap of faith.
No, you don't *have* to do anything of the sort. You are assuming that objective reality corresponds to the human's ability to "show" something to be true. The entirety of human history shows that is absolute folly.
I am doing something constructive right here by arguing about it, because I find it interesting and is a bit of a hobby of mine.
Waste management as a hobby...I like it!
I don't care if other people are irrational, I don't want to change them, but I'll give my opinion if I feel like it and I think it's appropriate.
Here we diverge a bit. I do care about people who are irrational, and I try...well, I try to get people to think about what they think. Whether or not that results in change is not my purpose really. Just to get thinking going on is enough.
Out of curiosity Kimiko, do you find me irrational?
I find value in philosophy, logic, and rationality because they have been shown to be constructive.
Agreed, well said.
If interaction with me brings someone else to look at them again, that's great, but I'm not on a great campaign.
Even the smallest of campaigns has the potential to be great.
-Elliot