God’s Enemies Are More Honest Than His Friends
For better or worse, I am partly responsible for the recent emergence of “atheism” as a topic of conversation. This is somewhat ironic, as I do not like the term and rarely use it. I did not, for instance, refer to myself as an “atheist” when I wrote The End of Faith—and yet this book is my most substantial contribution to the discourse of atheism.
As I pointed out in my subsequent book, Letter to a Christian Nation, we do not have a term for a person who rejects astrology, nor do we need one. If legions of astrologers sought to bend our public policy to their pseudo-science, we wouldn’t need to dub ourselves “non-astrologers” to put them in their place. Words like “reason,” “evidence,” and “commonsense” would suffice. So it should be with religion.
Still, one can only spend so much time quibbling over words, and there are far more consequential matters for believers and nonbelievers to discuss. Despite my misgivings about answering to the name “atheist,” I consider the stigma now associated with the term to be entirely unwarranted. This stigma is, of course, the continuous product of the inane and unctuous declarations that still pass for argument among the faithful. One need look no further than the responses to this week’s question to find some mesmerizing examples.
As to whether atheists and believers can have “a productive conversation,” I am quite sure that the answer is “yes.” But I am uncertain whether this conversation can bear fruit quickly enough to keep civilization from becoming fully engorged by Iron Age stupidity and horror. Our capacity for self-destruction is now spreading with 21st century efficiency, and yet our beliefs about how we should pass our days and nights on this earth still spring from ancient literature.
This marriage of modern technology and preliterate superstition is a bad one, for reasons that I should not have to specify, much less argue for—and yet, arguing for them has taken up most of my time since September 11th, 2001, the day that nineteen pious men showed our pious nation just how beneficial religious certainty can be.
As someone who has spent the last few years publicly criticizing religion, I have become quite familiar with how people of faith rise to the defense of God. As it turns out, there aren’t a hundred ways of doing this. There appear to be just three: either a person argues that a specific religion is true, or he argues that religion is useful, or he simply attacks atheism as intolerant, elitist, irrational, or otherwise worthy of contempt. Any conversation between atheists and believers is liable to fall into one or more of these ruts, or lurch back and forth between them:
1. Religion is true: There are two problems with arguing that any one of the world’s religions is true. First, as Bertrand Russell pointed out a century ago, the major religions make incompatible claims about God and about what human beings must believe in order to escape the fires of hell. Given the sheer diversity of these claims, every believer should expect damnation on mere, probabilistic grounds.
The second problem with arguing for the truth of religion is that the evidence for the most common religious doctrines is terrible or nonexistent—and this subsumes all claims about the existence of a personal God, the divine origin of certain books, the virgin birth of certain people, the veracity of ancient miracles, etc.
For thousands of years, religion has been a haven for dogmatism and false certainty, and it remains so. There is not a person on this earth who has sufficient reason to be certain that Jesus rose from the dead or that Muhammad spoke to the angel Gabriel in his cave. And yet, billions of people profess such certainty. This is embarrassing. It is also dangerous—and we should stop making apologies for it.
2. Religion is useful: The argument that religion is useful is also problematic—and many of its problems are enunciated daily by bomb-blasts. Can anyone seriously argue that it is a good thing that millions of Muslims currently believe in the metaphysics of martyrdom? Is it really so useful that many Jews imagine that the Creator of the universe gave them a patch of desert on the Mediterranean? How psychologically beneficial has Christianity’s anxiety about sex been these last seventy generations?
The worst problem with arguing for religion’s usefulness, however, is that it is utterly irrelevant to the question at hand: the fact that a belief might be useful is no argument that it is true. While there are many ways to illustrate this, here is how I recently made the point in an online debate:
The fact that certain religious beliefs might be useful in no way suggests their legitimacy. I can guarantee, for instance, that the following religion, invented by me in the last ten seconds, would be extraordinarily useful. It is called “Scientismo.” Here is its creed: Be kind to others; do not lie, steal, or murder; and oblige your children to master mathematics and science to the best of their abilities or 17 demons will torture you with hot tongs for eternity after death. If I could spread this faith to billions, I have little doubt that we would live in a better world than we do at present. Would this suggest that the 17 demons of Scientismo exist? Useful delusions are not the same thing as true beliefs.
3. Atheism is bad: Rather than argue for the truth of their religious beliefs, or produce evidence that religion is useful, apologists for God often attack atheism as though it were another religion. We are told that atheism is dogmatic, intolerant, irrational, etc. This homily has the virtue of being easy to remember and reproduce—and it now reverberates ceaselessly within the echo-chamber of American religious discourse.
It relies, however, on a many false ideas about atheism. On Christmas eve of this year, I published an essay in the Los Angeles Times entitled “10 Myths – and 10 Truths – about Atheism” in which I attempted to set the record straight. I won’t repeat these points here. Those interested can find this article on my website.
By
Sam Harris
|
December 29, 2006; 8:40 PM ET
| Category:
Interfaith Issues
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Morality
,
Religion & Politics
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Religious Conflict
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Theology
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Well…I spent yesterday late am to early pm cutting and pasting a thread of conversation started by the second entry here, posted by Jason Bradfield. The last entry was dated Feb 2007, so this entry is well after the fur stopped flying between combatants. The debated raged for 302 pages of Word text.
Back and forth, uh, I mean around and around and around the debate swirled within the 'holy circle' of the Christian Reconstructionist apologetic called 'Presuppostionalism. Eventually every one got dizzy and fell down, as happens when you stay on a merry go-round long enough.
A little background about this apologetic is useful. This ‘apologetic’ originated within the ultra conservative sects of Reformed/Presbyterian theologies. Within those sects/cults, the Bible (their accepted version) is deemed to be without error, and entirely TRUE in it’s every phrase. Cornelius Van Til of Westminster Seminary, then the official think tank of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church, wrote a book that can be considered as the most accepted starting primer on ‘Presuppostionalism.’ That book is titled, ‘Defense of The Faith.”
It is good to have an understanding of the most pernicious enemy to our form of government, and understanding the ‘logic’, which supports it, is a necessary evil.
The views of Christian Reconstructionism/Theonomy, etc. categorically reject democracy as it is not found in the Bible, their only source of fact, their only source of ‘truth’, their only accepted description of life as handed down from their God. As sources for this point of view, I’d point you to the writings of Rushdoony, “Institutes of Biblical Law” and Gary North’s, “Political Polytheism.” Go find a copy of ‘Political Polytheism” read a few pages, and it will not take you long to see what the ultimate goals of this movement are. The goal does not end in a pluralistic democracy, but one arranged around the commands and laws of the Old Testament, which includes the death penalty for a wide an stupid variety of offenses or crimes against this ‘God.’
Now if you ask any garden variety Evangelical about these Theonomists/Reconstructionists, you may well receive a blank stare in response. However, a cursory exploration of current Evangelical media, one is immediately confronted with a high charged talking points of Christian Reconstructionist rhetoric. The Recon talking points are now what near every Evangelical seems to believe, and it inspires this roughly 6% of our population to have the arrogance to take over the Republican Party, and in near every state, and in our national legislature to pass laws which impose their morality upon the populations of our states and upon our nation.
The primary denominations where this thinking is very strong among the leadership is within the Presbyterian Church in America, and the Orthodox Presbyterian Church. The thinking has jumped across into various, otherwise unbridgeable doctrinal chasms into Pentecostal and Charismatic theological orientations. The key word here is ‘dominion.’ Under this so-called Christian paradigm, it is ONLY the Christian who has the god given right to rule. All others must become subservient to its ghastly impulses, if they eventually live to tell the tale. Since blasphemy is a crime that brings a death penalty, then you can project this result of Biblical Law.
Let me offer to those who will no doubt continue to be confronted with the strange, upside down ‘logic’ of Presuppostionalism, that you explore some debates between some of these ‘religious’ logicians, and professional philosophers, and others on Infidels.org. I’d point you toward those involving Dr. Michael Martin as a good starting point.
The Christian Reconstructionist movement is behind the Discovery Institute, and the ID movement. As the ID folks like to find a question in biology, posit the fact of a ‘gap in knowledge” and then posit God, or an ‘intelligence’ in this gap as the only conceivable answer, so the Presuppositionalist finds a problem in philosophy, the problem of induction, for example, and was much discussed here, and promptly posits God, or more specifically, one of the Protestant version of the Bible as the only conceivable solution. There is no intrinsic difference in the tactics of ID folks, and their sectarian brothers and sisters.
You think I jest? Nope. Do some reading.
Well, adios from Southern Baptist heaven on earth in North West Texas, where a fella can kick a bush and seven or eight different kinds of Christian fundamentalist will jump out, and according to them, at least five or so demons. Down here, those diabolical beings lie in wait behind every ‘bush’…no pun intended.
Posted by: MarkIn Texas | August 8, 2007 9:45 PM
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Well…I spent yesterday late am to early pm cutting and pasting a thread of conversation started by the second entry here, posted by Jason Bradfield. The last entry was dated Feb 2007, so this entry is well after the fur stopped flying between combatants. The debated raged for 302 pages of Word text.
Back and forth, uh, I mean around and around and around the debate swirled within the 'holy circle' of the Christian Reconstructionist apologetic called 'Presuppostionalism. Eventually every one got dizzy and fell down, as happens when you stay on a merry go-round long enough.
A little background about this apologetic is useful. This ‘apologetic’ originated within the ultra conservative sects of Reformed/Presbyterian theologies. Within those sects/cults, the Bible (their accepted version) is deemed to be without error, and entirely TRUE in it’s every phrase. Cornelius Van Til of Westminster Seminary, then the official think tank of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church, wrote a book that can be considered as the most accepted starting primer on ‘Presuppostionalism.’ That book is titled, ‘Defense of The Faith.”
It is good to have an understanding of the most pernicious enemy to our form of government, and understanding the ‘logic’, which supports it, is a necessary evil.
The views of Christian Reconstructionism/Theonomy, etc. categorically reject democracy as it is not found in the Bible, their only source of fact, their only source of ‘truth’, their only accepted description of life as handed down from their God. As sources for this point of view, I’d point you to the writings of Rushdoony, “Institutes of Biblical Law” and Gary North’s, “Political Polytheism.” Go find a copy of ‘Political Polytheism” read a few pages, and it will not take you long to see what the ultimate goals of this movement are. The goal does not end in a pluralistic democracy, but one arranged around the commands and laws of the Old Testament, which includes the death penalty for a wide an stupid variety of offenses or crimes against this ‘God.’
Now if you ask any garden variety Evangelical about these Theonomists/Reconstructionists, you may well receive a blank stare in response. However, a cursory exploration of current Evangelical media, one is immediately confronted with a high charged talking points of Christian Reconstructionist rhetoric. The Recon talking points are now what near every Evangelical seems to believe, and it inspires this roughly 6% of our population to have the arrogance to take over the Republican Party, and in near every state, and in our national legislature to pass laws which impose their morality upon the populations of our states and upon our nation.
The primary denominations where this thinking is very strong among the leadership is within the Presbyterian Church in America, and the Orthodox Presbyterian Church. The thinking has jumped across into various, otherwise unbridgeable doctrinal chasms into Pentecostal and Charismatic theological orientations. The key word here is ‘dominion.’ Under this so-called Christian paradigm, it is ONLY the Christian who has the god given right to rule. All others must become subservient to its ghastly impulses, if they eventually live to tell the tale. Since blasphemy is a crime that brings a death penalty, then you can project this result of Biblical Law.
Let me offer to those who will no doubt continue to be confronted with the strange, upside down ‘logic’ of Presuppostionalism, that you explore some debates between some of these ‘religious’ logicians, and professional philosophers, and others on Infidels.org. I’d point you toward those involving Dr. Michael Martin as a good starting point.
The Christian Reconstructionist movement is behind the Discovery Institute, and the ID movement. As the ID folks like to find a question in biology, posit the fact of a ‘gap in knowledge” and then posit God, or an ‘intelligence’ in this gap as the only conceivable answer, so the Presuppositionalist finds a problem in philosophy, the problem of induction, for example, and was much discussed here, and promptly posits God, or more specifically, one of the Protestant version of the Bible as the only conceivable solution. There is no intrinsic difference in the tactics of ID folks, and their sectarian brothers and sisters.
You think I jest? Nope. Do some reading.
Well, adios from Southern Baptist heaven on earth in North West Texas, where a fella can kick a bush and seven or eight different kinds of Christian fundamentalist will jump out, and according to them, at least five or so demons. Down here, those diabolical beings lie in wait behind every ‘bush’…no pun intended.
Posted by: Mark In Texas | August 8, 2007 9:36 PM
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Well…I spent yesterday late am to early pm cutting and pasting a thread of conversation started by the second entry here, posted by Jason Bradfield. The last entry was dated Feb 2007, so this entry is well after the fur stopped flying between combatants. The debated raged for 302 pages of Word text.
Back and forth, uh, I mean around and around and around the debate swirled within the 'holy circle' of the Christian Reconstructionist apologetic called 'Presuppostionalism. Eventually every one got dizzy and fell down, as happens when you stay on a merry go-round long enough.
A little background about this apologetic is useful. This ‘apologetic’ originated within the ultra conservative sects of Reformed/Presbyterian theologies. Within those sects/cults, the Bible (their accepted version) is deemed to be without error, and entirely TRUE in it’s every phrase. Cornelius Van Til of Westminster Seminary, then the official think tank of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church, wrote a book that can be considered as the most accepted starting primer on ‘Presuppostionalism.’ That book is titled, ‘Defense of The Faith.”
It is good to have an understanding of the most pernicious enemy to our form of government, and understanding the ‘logic’, which supports it, is a necessary evil.
The views of Christian Reconstructionism/Theonomy, etc. categorically reject democracy as it is not found in the Bible, their only source of fact, their only source of ‘truth’, their only accepted description of life as handed down from their God. As sources for this point of view, I’d point you to the writings of Rushdoony, “Institutes of Biblical Law” and Gary North’s, “Political Polytheism.” Go find a copy of ‘Political Polytheism” read a few pages, and it will not take you long to see what the ultimate goals of this movement are. The goal does not end in a pluralistic democracy, but one arranged around the commands and laws of the Old Testament, which includes the death penalty for a wide an stupid variety of offenses or crimes against this ‘God.’
Now if you ask any garden variety Evangelical about these Theonomists/Reconstructionists, you may well receive a blank stare in response. However, a cursory exploration of current Evangelical media, one is immediately confronted with a high charged talking points of Christian Reconstructionist rhetoric. The Recon talking points are now what near every Evangelical seems to believe, and it inspires this roughly 6% of our population to have the arrogance to take over the Republican Party, and in near every state, and in our national legislature to pass laws which impose their morality upon the populations of our states and upon our nation.
The primary denominations where this thinking is very strong among the leadership is within the Presbyterian Church in America, and the Orthodox Presbyterian Church. The thinking has jumped across into various, otherwise unbridgeable doctrinal chasms into Pentecostal and Charismatic theological orientations. The key word here is ‘dominion.’ Under this so-called Christian paradigm, it is ONLY the Christian who has the god given right to rule. All others must become subservient to its ghastly impulses, if they eventually live to tell the tale. Since blasphemy is a crime that brings a death penalty, then you can project this result of Biblical Law.
Let me offer to those who will no doubt continue to be confronted with the strange, upside down ‘logic’ of Presuppostionalism, that you explore some debates between some of these ‘religious’ logicians, and professional philosophers, and others on Infidels.org. I’d point you toward those involving Dr. Michael Martin as a good starting point.
The Christian Reconstructionist movement is behind the Discovery Institute, and the ID movement. As the ID folks like to find a question in biology, posit the fact of a ‘gap in knowledge” and then posit God, or an ‘intelligence’ in this gap as the only conceivable answer, so the Presuppositionalist finds a problem in philosophy, the problem of induction, for example, and was much discussed here, and promptly posits God, or more specifically, one of the Protestant version of the Bible as the only conceivable solution. There is no intrinsic difference in the tactics of ID folks, and their sectarian brothers and sisters.
You think I jest? Nope. Do some reading.
Well, adios from Southern Baptist heaven on earth in North West Texas, where a fella can kick a bush and seven or eight different kinds of Christian fundamentalist will jump out, and according to them, at least five or so demons. Down here, those diabolical beings lie in wait behind every ‘bush’…no pun intended.
Posted by: Mark In Texas | August 8, 2007 7:19 PM
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Howdy all. Well...I was dumb enough to spend most of the late morning to evening reviewing, cutting and pasting a thread of conversation on this board which was generated by the second post, by a Jason Bradfield.
Looks to me that folks ran around and around and around in the most 'holy circle' of the so-called 'presuppositionalist apologetic.
This particular 'apologetic' is that which undergirds the Christian Reconstructionist movement. You know, that same movement which is large behind the take over of the Republican Party, the Discovery Institute, provides the backbone of the largely evangelical, home school movement.
For those of you interested in comprehending just what the heck happened here over the months of entries, I'd suggest you lay your hands on a copy of Cornelius Van Til's "Defense of the Faith" which outlines how this 'thinking' is arranged.
Just as the older Creationist, now the so-called ID movement seeks a 'unanswered question' or questions withing biology, then posits the all-good god of their understanding (more importantly, the Bible) so these modern day Reformed/Presbyterian apologists find some question withing philosophy, the problem of induction as a good example here, and there INSERTS the Bible as the beginning, middle and end all of ALL knowledge.
A person can run around within this most holy circle until he or she just has to fall down.
Though this 'presuppositionalism' developed from Presbyterian/Reformed theologies, it does have few detractors from within. R.C.Sproul and Gerstner's book, "Classical Apologetics" roundly critiques the 'presup' approach.
Let me also suggest Infidels.org as a good place to see several debates between presuppositionalists and other philosophers, and analysis of this foundation of Christian Reconstructionism.
For what it is worth...
From North West Texas, where one can kick a bush and flush out seven or eight different sorts of Christian fundamentalist, and according to them, four or five demons.
Posted by: Mark In Texas | August 8, 2007 5:26 PM
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dqnwraxfz gfsbhum zhwurg vpwda qmcre bqysujdn kctuxj
Posted by: whugf pflisguam | July 29, 2007 1:18 PM
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dqnwraxfz gfsbhum zhwurg vpwda qmcre bqysujdn kctuxj
Posted by: whugf pflisguam | July 29, 2007 1:17 PM
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I quit believing scripture when I read in the Bible that a donkey had a conversation with it's
rider. ( Numbers 22:26 )
Anybody who believes a donkey talked needs to be on some strong medication.
If you are a Christian fundamentalist and you believe animals can talk, please seek help now. You are a danger to yourself and the people around you.
Posted by: Dr. McDaniel | May 22, 2007 3:43 AM
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Why don't you stop being so disrespectful? That's not even funny.
Posted by: Alan | April 27, 2007 7:48 PM
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Re: Bruce's strange request that in order to figure out that the Resurrection is true or not, that we start with the assumption it is true... WHA!!!???
I wonder, does he do this, with the same open mind and heart, and with an open "Spirit" with all other religious texts?
Bruce, have you read the Bhagavad gita with the same openess you ask us to? Do you read it with the assumption that it is real?
If you say, "Well, people don't have Elephant Heads", I would say "how do you know?"
After all, people don't come back from the dead after 3 days. The decomposition process starts hours after you die. By the 3rd day you are a bloated corpse.
Stop worshipping a zombie, especially one you pretend to eat. Sheeesh!
Posted by: Anonymous | March 28, 2007 12:44 PM
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czxpj nqct pwntqibfc fhnykdbt nwajqbp zlxvpbft gykdi http://www.boyxr.afilvrs.com
Posted by: werjos eruhbzyxw | March 7, 2007 9:46 AM
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svtequoi jzlwg nzcqvfyu xmwtgohcd imjxst thfa dokrscle
Posted by: bdjvxt ordwlizjk | March 7, 2007 9:44 AM
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Surely we all believe in God for he is Mankind's greatest invention, his greatest creation. Our ancesters gave us God and gave him a family, and a script which is the Bible for Christians. At the time this script was written it was to someone's advantage to write it and to proclaim it as supernatural and holy, a measure to live by and to live up to as God commanded. Holy men would explain all this to us. And so it has been. Man's fears and superstitions and gullibility have made it work.
bill
Posted by: bill | March 6, 2007 6:00 PM
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Anyone know this one by George Bernard Shaw?
"The fact that a believer is happier than a skeptic is no more to the point than the fact that a drunken man is happier than a sober one."
Posted by: Carolyn | March 6, 2007 11:15 AM
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Gerry,
I doubt that many of those making arguments defending their "faith" are going to wake up any time soon. It is because such "logic" closes off any possibility to think and question one's own premises or the arguments that follow from it.
Jim Skinner says that scientists are threatened by the "truth in faith". I think he has it backwards. Religion is threatened by science because science tells us that the bible is factually incorrect. Instead of attempting to understand the true message that is wrapped up in a Bronze Age context, people like Creationists deny science, or worse, seek to subvert science and the scientific method.
I sympathize with Phil (although my jaw did not hit the ground yet). Scientists are not interested in proving religious people wrong unless religious people use pseudo-science to keep bronze age myths alive. Why believers want to attack science is really puzzling.
Posted by: Puzzled | February 24, 2007 3:23 PM
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Jim Skinner: Your post on February 3rd was quite interesting. In one paragraph you eloquently displayed why people, who think like you, will never be able to see the light and stop believing in fairy tales.
You stated that evolution is not based on scientific evidence. In that case, please clear up the record and tell me what science is based on?
You also stated that faith transcends the knowledge of Science today. I guess you are correct on that assertion because faith is not about knowledge. It is about believing in things that are unseen and untestable.
You refer to scientists as "high minded". Do you suppose that you could expose your bias a little more for us?
You said God gives faith to the lame, sick, blind etc. I guess that God must also have given faith to the Hindus, Buddhists and Moslems. They have faith and it is every bit as strong as yours. Did a false God give them faith or did your God somehow blow it with them?
I also have a very strong faith. My faith is that God is non-existent and your belief in fairy tales is a monstrous waste of time, energy, money and countless lives over the centuries.
You assert that scientist's toiling in their chosen profession have their pride hurt. By what pray tell?
I think you are trying to assert that scientists toil simply to disprove that God's hand is responsible for all of creation.
The next sound is my jaw dropping and hitting the floor below. You might want to speak to Jason. The two of you are in a league of your own.
Posted by: Phil Tripp | February 23, 2007 4:11 PM
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Correction:
It should read 92001,.... grams!
Another proof against science in favor of religion, you see? All false!
Gerry
Posted by: Gerry | February 16, 2007 12:53 PM
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I think Jason is a very young man who recently has discovered that one can juggle with words and propositions. The juggling itself is fun, and much more important than the substance he juggles with, hence his funny circular reasoning. I think within a few years, when he grows up, he will change the game.
It is hilarious how - upsy-daisy - he produces the rabbit of faith jumping out of his sleeve, after "having debunked science" by his preposterous "logic": My weight is 92 kg. Of course, this statement is false, since if I were weighed exactly, it might be 9201,56789123 grams before cleaning my fingernails. Therefore science is fallacious.
The reasoning has the quality of this:
Cinderella preferred Pepsi to Coca Cola. Since Pepsi is real, Cinderella is real. And since Cinderella is real, there must be a god. And anybody who does not believe this is a moron, by the force of logic.
Gerry
Posted by: Gerry | February 16, 2007 12:47 PM
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Science cannot measure faith. it is not based on scientific evidence. but neither is evolution. Faith transends the knowledge of science today. that is why faith is attacked and ridiculed by science. faith is based on the "supernatural", and not the natural, because God is supernatural. the thing that really pisses off the evolutionist and high minded scienctist is the fact that God gives out faith to even the uneducated, the lame, the sick, the blind. For the scientist, it injures their pride. their pride of knowledge, long hours of study, many hours spent in labs, experimenting.and often they attack what they are afraid of.
Posted by: jim skinner | February 3, 2007 2:23 AM
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JWR:
I agree that Jason will probably twist words and post his "essay" like a hack (no peer-review), making arguments that few if any legitimate theologians and/or philosophers would consider valid (for instance, assertions like "God is logic" is incorrect textual interpretation).
That is why I say that he should try to publish in peer-reviewed journals if he has such absolute certainty, but he cannot, having neither the discipline to pursue legitimate scholarship nor the intellectual honesty to engage in real debate.
It's sad. People like Jason, in their religious zeal to find validation for faith, they set up idols to worship so that they can ease their anxiety about the uncertainties in life.
I would give excellent odds that everything I write will find a place on his website, JWR. It's probably too much to expect to be referenced correctly?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 31, 2007 1:13 AM
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Jason,
You said in your first post: "If bread is a stone and stones are nourishing, then this bread will nourish me; now this bread does nourish me; therefore it is a stone, and stones are nourishing."
Substitute bread = bible, stone = word of god and nourishing = salvation.
"If the bible is the word of god and the word of god is a source of salvation, then this bible will be salvation for me; now this bible gives me salvation; therefore it is the word of god, and the word of god is a source of salvation."
Both statements have the identical logical (formal) structure. So either, both statements are logically (formally) valid or both statements are logically (formally) invalid.
Good luck with the article. But if you want to really establish some scholarship, why not peer-reviewed journals instead of "preaching to the choir"?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 31, 2007 12:03 AM
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Jason,
Your last post states (notice how I don't take your words out of context):
*************** begin Jason post ***************
JWR: The words “"How can science be useful if it is never to be seen as a means of learning truth?" was a direct cut and paste from YOUR POST. Good grief man, you can’t be that dumb. Do yourself a favor – take those words and cut and paste them into your “find in this page” feature of your browser (usually ctrl+f) and look where it takes you…YOUR post on January 26, 2007 12:56 AM.
YOU are the liar.
************* end Jason post ********************
Now, here is the actual post from 26 Jan 2007 at 0056 (12:56 am) by me:
*************** begin my post *******************
*** And then (pause for effect) I quote your last post:
--
Jason: "Show me one time where I have said that science, in and of itself, is not useful. I NEVER SAID THAT!! If you were more honest, you would stop putting words in my mouth..."
---
Well gee, Jason, silly old me (and the rest of us) took you at your word when you said (see above) "science is never to be seen as a means of learning truth" and that "the Bible has a monopoly on truth". Do you deny that you made those statements, Jason? How can science be useful if it is never to be seen as a means of learning truth? And when you say that "the Bible has a monopoly on truth" I assume you can provide evidence of the Noah story...and that you can defend the odious sections of Leviticus and Deuteronomy discussed earlier and that you therefore support stoning adulterers and killing homosexuals simply for being homosexual etc....
***************** end my post *******************
Jason...not only are you a coward, you are also a liar. You are afraid to answer direct questions, and then you twist other people's posts around and take snippets completely out of context...most egregiously in this case, when I WAS ASKING THE QUESTION TO YOU -- REPEAT, TO YOU. AGAIN -- I WAS ASKING THE QUESTION TO YOU based on your original post where you made your spectacularly asinine statements about science and how Scripture is the only way to learn truth etc...
I'll say it again. You, Jason, are a coward and a liar. You engage in arguments about subject with which you are woefully ill-informed -- i.e. the scientific method and science in general. You ask others for a debate. Then, when your arguments are exposed for the utter tripe which they are, you either (a) claim not to have said the things you said; (b) refuse to extend the courtesy of answering questions to you when others have extended the courtesy to you; (c) deliberately distort the words of others to completely misrepresent their positions, and/or (d) call them a 'moron'. The one thing you NEVER do is to answer a question directly. And you call yourself a Christian? Christ had the courage to answer critics honestly and openly. You are no more different than the fundamentalist Islamic imams and mullahs. I truly pity your wife and children for having to live with someone so immune to reason.
Grow a backbone and come back when you want to debate with adults.
JWR
P.S. Timmy, Puzzled, Andy -- what are the odds Jason takes the quotes from this post out of context on his 'reignofchrist' website -- can I get even money? Or is it more like a 1-100 sure bet?
Posted by: NavynukeCDR | January 31, 2007 12:02 AM
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This will be my last post here. After reading JWRs latest rampage in calling me a “liar”, I seriously had to question what benefit there is in sticking around. Conclusion: There are no benefits hanging around morons, especially morons that don’t even know their own subject matter.
RB: The speed of light is not an absolute. Furthermore, it is the perfect example of number (5) is my original post. Do your homework.
Andy: Who knows what the heck your latest was about – I still see though that you can not produce a meaningful post without using language and the law of contradiction, though you claim these are mere tools we can take or leave. A “certified” moron is all you are.
JWR: The words “"How can science be useful if it is never to be seen as a means of learning truth?" was a direct cut and paste from YOUR POST. Good grief man, you can’t be that dumb. Do yourself a favor – take those words and cut and paste them into your “find in this page” feature of your browser (usually ctrl+f) and look where it takes you…YOUR post on January 26, 2007 12:56 AM.
YOU are the liar.
Puzzled: I know you’re trying but you still lack some very fundamental knowledge in logic.
You said, “Apparently, circular reasoning is considered a logical fallacy, but not so in the strictest sense, so I stand corrected in that regard. However, I would still point out that it is a fallacy nonetheless. The structure of the argument, no matter how absurd can be made out to be VALID in the strictest logical sense: x = y, because y = x. But if so, you can put in anything as x and y, and it would be a "valid" argument.”
That one little paragraph demonstrates that you have no clue as to what you are talking about. Please, take a break from the internet and buy yourself a formal logic book. I recommend Gordon Clark’s book, “Logic”. It will only take 30 minutes into that book to realize the mistake you made in your last two sentences there.
Lastly, you said, “you yourself should….acknowledge that a logically valid statement provides absolutely no reason to believe its conclusions.”
Puzzled, I asked you demonstrate to me the logical fallacy with my axiom and the deductions made from it, not whether or not you find them “convincing”. I have already said a hundred times here that I’m not trying to “convince” you – that is not my job. God may not want you to believe these things – again, not my job. And not only have you not demonstrated any, but you continually assert that my reasoning is circular which you finally admit is logically valid in “in the strictest sense.”
Case closed – you have no reasonable “excuse” - you simply don’t like the Bible. Oh well…looks as though God doesn’t particularly like you either at this moment.
Tim: You’re a moron. And you’re a moron because you berate people for believing things they can’t “prove”, yet you yourself stand dogmatically on the assertion that paper will ALWAYS burn though in your own words, “I CAN'T PROVE IT". January 3, 2007 3:54 PM You’re a moron and a hypocrite.
I do want to thank everyone though for providing some great material to use in an upcoming article that I will be posting on my site. Stay tuned… www.thereignofchrist.com
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 30, 2007 11:38 AM
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One of the most interesting things to come out of this post for me was to see this question put forth to atheists, (I think by Jason once) as well as by other delusionals:
"What is your reason for not killing yourself right now?"
And of course: "Use reasoning and logic to show this"
This was the most hilarious thing to me. The purpose of this question is to try and prove that, belief in God is every bit as rational as us not killing ourselves right now. They actually believe this.
Another telling question put forth by a "Jason like" (if not him), was "If you don't believe in God, why not just rape and murder who ever you want?"
This is what we're dealing with.
Anyway, I think that'll be it for me on this thread.
Jason is so burnt toast. It's really been over for a while now.
He's been kicked 6 ways from Sunday.
It won't be over for him of course.
I have discovered that there is at least one absolute.
Jason will never admit defeat.
That way, he never loses.
So long as he types one more post and ends it with the words:
"Try again moron!"
And the cycle continues.
I never thought that I would meet someone so pitiful, who acted so malicious that I would not not be able to have pity for him.
So pitiful I can not even pity.
I'm signing off for now.
I'll only come back if I ever come across a piece of paper that just won't burn. Then I might have to come back and ask Jason to tell me a little more about this God dude.
But don't hold your breath dupe.
Because,
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
The paper will always burn.
I dare you God.
Just once.
Make it not burn.
You lamo
Posted by: timmy | January 27, 2007 6:25 AM
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JWR:
FYI, the reason Jason evades questions is because that is how he was trained (or trained himself). The tactics of the so-called presuppositionalist apologetics is not to try to convince you that their argument is correct. Quite to the contrary, it is their tactic to use word games to try to trip you up and convince you that your argument is wrong. Hence, he goads you to "try again" while saying as little as possible (at least little of any real substance). It's a strange logic because what it really amounts to is "you're wrong, therefore I must be right."
Posted by: Puzzled | January 27, 2007 5:39 AM
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Jason asks others here to explain how is it possible NOT to believe that the bible is the word of god (and not contradict oneself or something like that)? But at the same time, he refuses to answer how it is possible to believe (and not contradict oneself, etc.). Jason's answer: because god caused him to believe thusly.
Since I cannot see into his head (not that I particularly want to), it seems we cannot really know, but for the sake of argument, I will take him at face value that at least HE believes god caused him to believe (although it was he who said human senses are not reliable...). But he props up such a belief ("bible is the word of god") as an "axiom" beyond proof. The selection of such an axiom (upon which to guide one's understanding of "truth" or "morals" or whatever) seems terribly arbitrary to me, at least no less arbitrary than my "axiom" that the bible is a book written by people who probably (as far as we can tell by reading the text) believed in some notion of god. But I don't know why god has to exist for me to be "moral" or "good"; do Christians claim that all atheists always behave "badly" and all Christians always behave "well"? I doubt it. It seems to me that regardless of faith, sometimes people act selfishly and sometimes altruistically.
In explaining how Jason (and other Christians) came to hold such an axiom, I cannot ask him to prove whether that axiom is true or not. But it seems reasonable to ask why is it that a Christian world-view (and only a Christian world-view) is consistent? He has yet to demonstrate that (1) there are no inconsistencies in the Christian view (beginning with what exactly is meant by "consistency" or "coherence"), and even if I were to concede this point (which I don't, but can let pass for argument's sake for now) that (2) he has examined all other world-views (e.g., Buddhist, Taoist, Confucian, Hindu, etc.) and found them ALL to be inconsistent.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 27, 2007 5:01 AM
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Jason: "You say, "How can science be useful if it is never to be seen as a means of learning truth?""
Umm....no Jason, I didn't. I was quoting you - Jason "Slick Willie" Bradfield, in your original post from Dec 29th.
So now you're a liar as well Jason. Do you enjoy distorting another person's words in yet another attempt to avoid answering straightforward questions that make you uncomfortable? Why can't you simply answer the questions, Jason?
And then...the piece de resistance:
Jason: uuhhh....JWR, when my bladder gets full and starts to hurt, my jimmie is a useful tool to relieve that pressure, but i've never learned any truth from jimmie.
*** What???? What does that have to do with anything?
Jason: "You do see what the problem is here, right? The only reason you see a conflict with what i wrote is because you apparently have a different definition for "truth" than i do.
**** no, Jason, I have a problem when you say (and I quote your original posts again -- those pesky webmasters won't let you wriggle out now will they??
Jason: From our study of these five logical difficulties, it can be readily seen that science is not capable of giving us any truth.
*** but wait, there's MORE:
Jason: Science is successful when one understands its purpose, and when one understands that false theories sometimes work. Newtonian science, for example, worked for years. It has been replaced by Einstein’s theory. But even though he believed his theory to be a better approximation of the truth than Newton’s, Einstein declared that his own theory was false.
*** I love how you pretend to understand the differences between Newtownian physics and quantum physics....really, Jason, thanks. You should go on the circuit. (Timmy -- how would he do?)
***
And, of course, the coup de grace:
Jason: Science has its place in a Christian philosophy, an important place. But science is never to be seen as a means of learning truth. Truth is found in the Scriptures alone; the Bible has a monopoly on truth. It is God’s Word that must be believed, not the experiments of men. As Robbins has said: "Science is false, and must always be false. Scripture is true and must always be true. The issue is as clear, and as simple, as that."
So after the collective 'we' demolish your "5 logical difficulties" (again, your quote, not mine) about science and try to get you to understand our POV....you perform every contortionist trick -- obfuscation, word semantics, avoiding the question -- in the book to avoid answering any questions.
As for abortion...science can help. Do you really think a 3-day old blastocyst has feelings? Has a nervous system? Knows what 'suffering' is? So what's wrong with a morning-after pill? Also, why is it ok for your more militant pals to assassinate doctors (who do have nervous systems, and families, etc.) but not for a woman to abort a 3-day old collection of cells? And why is it ok to try 14-year olds for first-degree murder but not teach them about condoms and birth control pills?
Yet more questions you won't answer...I don't know how you're able to walk around without a backbone.
JWR
Posted by: Anonymous | January 26, 2007 11:40 PM
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I hereby revelate the following truths.
God is truth.
The truth is one.
The truth is the whole.
All is one in the absolute.
God is absolute and unchanging.
God is eternal.
By induction I deduce:
God is one and all and ever more shall be so.
Let God = X
Who am I, what am I?
I am the still center of the passing show.
Things change but I remain the same.
I am one.
I am all that I survey.
I am the whole.
I am absolute and unchanging.
I am eternal.
Let I = Y
By the identity of indiscernibles I deduce:
X = Y
By the grace of good manners I deduce:
I had better shut up about God.
Do so too, blasphemers!
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 26, 2007 4:23 PM
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Jason calls people morons and justifies it on the basis of his reading of the bible. People who do not believe are considered sinners. I see this as more of a reflection of his intolerance than necessarily what "god might have meant." So it's his opinion. But then, what is the difference between demeaning people based on the bible and stoning people based on the bible? It is a matter of degree, but the consequences of carrying through with such "logic" is troubling.
Since no one can prove nor disprove any of his assumptions (axioms he calls them), I suggested we look at the consequences of a worldview based on such assumptions. Jason is reluctant and throws up a bunch of technicalities and refuses to engage. The certitude and the flat refusal to see anything wrong with circular reasoning (since it is not formally fallacious, only informally fallacious) is his way to avoid debate. That is fine. I can concede points for the sake of argument, but it's his choice if he will not.
*** Jason, you need not read further as you do not see the distinction between validity of the structure of an argument and validity of the content of an argument. It will be meaningless to you. Most people would find your assertions of "x = y because y = x" meaningless, but if you find it gives meaning to your life, who is to say otherwise? But I am grateful for my conversations with you for introducing me to apologetics and their use of "formal logic". Next time I meet a zealot, I will know where he/she is coming from. ***
While I would not go so far as to say religion is the source of war and many other troubles we have seen historically (continuing to today), I think it is fair to say religion has provided justification in some instances. Crusades in the middle ages were probably spurred on by greed more than anything else, but religion gave it cover (provided "moral" justification). How much did the church care what people like Luther or other reformists really believed, or what what Galileo or Copernicus said? It had consequences for consolidating and/or maintaining political power, and the church throughout history used religion as justification to persecute and kill. It allows people to abdicate responsibility and any sense of decency. And worst of all, argument is suppressed.
One might retort that "responsibility" and "decency" need to be defined first as we might have a different understanding of what it means to be responsible or what it means to be decent. It is a fair point, but only to a certain extent. With regard to what one would "like it to be" (e.g., Christians would interpret it as being based on the bible), yes, there can be debates with more or less plausible arguments from many different quarters (supported by different world-views) as to how we'd define it. However, we cannot ignore the social contract (and what it means to most people in our society today) simply because it is the reality we live in. Just as we have to concede established terminology and move on, if we want to discuss religion and how we as a society deal with religion in public discourse, then we have to accept widely-held societal norms and commonsense ideas like responsibility and decency as a socially constructed reality. How to change such realities is also important, but I will leave it for another day (maybe).
Basically, being responsible is to give full attention to one's various roles at appropriate times. As a parent, as a son/daughter, as a [insert your job here], as a friend,... you have to bring at least as much to the table as you want to take from it. It seems to me reasonable to say that a decent society where people have an incentive to cooperate and create rather than steal and cheat is going to be more prosperous and therefore more "desirable" or "good". Is the society better off (as a result of that world-view), is the question we should ask. (More formally, would society as a whole be better off, AND without any individual being worse off than before?)
My conjecture is that the consequence of world-views that take on unyielding positions and is not open to self-examination is unlikely to achieve the above objective for any society, least of all a pluralistic society (most societies are becoming more so with globalization). So, let's study that by studying the real consequences (e.g., studying political economy of societies now existing and from the past) instead of asserting "monopoly on truth" which gets us nowhere. Religions may fear this because it can draw out uncomfortable conclusions and point toward even more criticism. And rather than confronting these fears head on, some retreat back into "logically valid" tautologies with no content ("believing in god MUST be true because the bible told me so").
Posted by: Puzzled | January 26, 2007 2:15 PM
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Correction: 186,000 miles per second. Which kinda illustrates the point. It's an incomprehensively large number, not within the realm of understanding 5,000 years ago (hell, even today), without a substantial amount of consciousness-raising.
Wouldn't the holy books be more convincing if they actually accurately contained something beyond the understanding of the primitives of the day?
For example, if John 3:12 had stated: "And God made the atom, and 1,738,976,544 vibrations of the cesium atom shall make a second."
But alas, it does not, Jason, just gibberish intended to control you.
Posted by: RB | January 26, 2007 8:37 AM
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" What’s funny though is that most atheist will concur, “yes, we never said science was about absolutes.”
The speed of light is 186,000 miles per hours (300,000 km/hr).
This is an absolute. Every time it has been measured. So I don't know who claimed there are no absolutes, but there absolutely are absolutes.
The problem for our human brains (and it's a much bigger problem for some people, Jason) is that they evolved in a world of relatively slow-moving objects ranging in size from a grain of sand to an elephant, so raising our consciousness to comprehend a photon that can arrive from the moon in a second and a half is tough.
Wrapping our brains around the fact that the light we see from the Andromeda galaxy (and we thought it was merely another star for most of our existence) is 2.3 million years old is a struggle.
But struggle we must. Then something interesting happens. It is not really a struggle, Jason, at some point. Once you get going, it becomes a fun journey, a liberating one, unlearning all of the rigid hooey loaded into your data-processing unit by selfish old fools (priests). But first you have to cut those apron strings. And only you can do that.
Keep trying. Your brain is obviously struggling to break free from its bonds. We've all been watching the struggle over these many posts. It's been both sad and fascinating, but we're hopeful, because a mind is a terrible thing to waste, and as they say in the garbage business, waste is a terrible thing to mind.
We're rooting for you, buddy.
Posted by: RB | January 26, 2007 3:03 AM
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Jason,
Apparently, circular reasoning is considered a logical fallacy, but not so in the strictest sense, so I stand corrected in that regard. However, I would still point out that it is a fallacy nonetheless. The structure of the argument, no matter how absurd can be made out to be VALID in the strictest logical sense: x = y, because y = x. But if so, you can put in anything as x and y, and it would be a "valid" argument.
Also, I would argue that x = y is not knowledge. You seem to assert that you "know" (or "believe" to be correct) that "the word of god is truth." However, that is not knowledge; it is just a definition you made for yourself. "Truth" is a word (x) and the "word of god" are words, or a phrase (y). x = y is just as logically valid as x = ~y. They cannot both be "true" (and you cannot show either way) but they can both be "false." Knowledge requires the following formulation: "if A then B." But since you reject notions of relationships (e.g., between A and B), and you reject knowledge as being false and fallacious for not being "universal" or logically valid, I will leave you with "valid" but arbitrary statements. After all, since you tell me to become educated on formal logic, you yourself should heed that advice and acknowledge that a logically valid statement provides absolutely no reason to believe its conclusions.
So I thank you for finally acknowledging that your faith is based on circular reasoning. I suppose you can now be "man enough" (chest hair and all) to also acknowledge your assertions of "word of god is truth"-type statements are just your opinions.
I know, I know, you'll say the word of god (= logic) is internally consistent... First of all, logical validity is validity of the structure of the argument, not its content. But you reject content in any meaningful sense (by asserting your tautology to have meaning), so I won't belabor this point. Secondly, I don't really think it's really consistent. Even for someone who no longer reads it, I still remember that in the OT, adulterers are to be stoned to death. But in the NT, Jesus steps in and says in effect, "cool it."
So, this can be one of two things:
1. Jesus has "suspended" god's (his own?) law.
2. Jesus made an exception in one case (maybe she deserved pity, he was being compassionate, or maybe she was "hot").
Either way, if god is logic (i.e., Jesus is logic), god cannot suspend or make exceptions about his own laws?
I know, I know. It is not really suspending his own logic because anything god does is logical by definition. And I suppose "miracles" are not really miracles either, since "physical laws" are meaningless (to you). If it's consistent with god's laws, then miracles are not that wondrous after all. Parted the Red Sea: Ho-hum. Rose from the dead. Ho-hum.
I know, I know: Define "miracle," right?
Around and around and around... one big circle. x = y, y = z, z = a, ...., w = x. Increasingly more vicious circle with each new spin.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 26, 2007 2:56 AM
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Oh so you were stupid enough to have another go at the "good" thing.
Sweeeet!
You are still wrong.
The car analogy does not work because "car" is a noun
We are talking about an adjective "good"
You have only demonstrated that the adjective "good" has a different meaning than the adjective phrase "not good".
Of course it does.
But good means good.
If you would like to demonstrate that the word "good" has a different meaning to you, you need to give the definition of the word good that you have, that differs from the definition that everyone else has. You know. One of those other definitions in your superior dictionary that better describes your definition of the word.
You can not define a word with an analogy. When you look up a word in the dictionary, it does not give you an analogy. It gives you a definition. or several. Is your vocabulary too weak to offer a definition without using an analogy?
I think that when you let go of misleading analogies, (games) and try to give an actual definition of the word "good" that differs from everybody else's definition, you will realize that you actually don't have a different definition.
No analogies Jason. They are your cheap little distraction.
What is your different definition of "good" that differs from the three most common definitions that I gave.
You don't have one.
Try again Moron.
Posted by: timmy | January 26, 2007 2:41 AM
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Oh so you were stupid enough to have another go at the "good" thing.
Sweeeet!
You are still wrong.
The car analogy does not work because "car" is a noun
We are talking about an adjective "good"
You have only demonstrated that the adjective "good" has a different meaning than the adjective phrase "not good".
Of course it does.
But good means good.
If you would like to demonstrate that the word "good" has a different meaning to you, you need to give the definition of the word good that you have, that differs from the definition that everyone else has. You know. One of those other definitions in your superior dictionary that better describes your definition of the word.
You can not define a word with an analogy. When you look up a word in the dictionary, it does not give you an analogy. It gives you a definition. or several. Is your vocabulary too weak to offer a definition without using an analogy?
I think that when you let go of misleading analogies, (games) and try to give an actual definition of the word "good" that differs from everybody else's definition, you will realize that you actually don't have a different definition.
No analogies Jason. They are your cheap little distraction.
What is your different definition of "good" that differs from the three most common definitions that I gave.
You don't have one.
Try again Moron.
Posted by: timmy | January 26, 2007 2:40 AM
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Jason how many times do I have to crush your argument in one sentence.
Everything that you have said, and everything that Bertrand Russell has said, was arrived at by induction based on observations, that you point our in your first ever post, are unreliable.
If you won't listen to me on this, I will make this point again using the words of Jason Bradfield:
"It is amazing to me that you still don’t get it. No matter how you put it or word it, you are still arguing inductively"
Done.
Your argument is destroyed by your own argument.
Ergo: You and your argument are a paradox.
Done
Now
I noticed that you finally let go your stupid moronic argument that the word "good" is ambiguous. Smart move. Your attempt to show that it was, and the examples that you used to illustrate, show what a weak grip you have on logic. But I know that you were just playing dumb. You really aren't that stupid and we both know it. It is childish that you are not stupid. That is why you play dumb and pretend that the word "good" means different things, to dodge a question. And hope no one will notice. lol.
What a maroon.
There. Two arguments I have you crushed on, because you are a moron and easily swatted like a mosquito.
Now to your big big lie that you keep telling, not just to us, but to yourself.
Jason spews regularly:
"my entire original post was a critical analysis of science as a means to truth"
Really? That was your ENTIRE original post?
A delusional statement from a delusional dupe.
"What’s funny though is that most atheist will concur, “yes, we never said science was about absolutes.” Well, that was my whole point to start with"
Well thank you for being so verbose with a moot point.
But
Really? That was your WHOLE point?
Delusional.
I'm sure that you wish that was your whole point. The moot point.
I'm sure that you wish that was all you said.
I'm sure that you wish that you had not opened up the debate that you opened up with the last paragraph of your original post.
But you just couldn't help yourself.
The insane street rapping evangelist could not resist.
After crushing empiricism with empirical evidence (lol), you had to make the weakest, absolute, empirical statement imaginable.
Rappin yappin Jason Bradfield the ultimate empiricist said:
"Truth is found in the Scriptures alone; the Bible has a monopoly on truth. It is God’s Word that must be believed, not the experiments of men. As Robbins has said: "Science is false, and must always be false. Scripture is true and must always be true. The issue is as clear, and as simple, as that."
Poor poor pathetic Jason the dupe.
First duped by Christian leaders preying on the weak minded.
Then duped by Guys like Robbins into believing that if he studied the books and papers that they told him to study, and memorized the arguments in them, then he would never again have to lose an argument to god damn empiricist atheists who are so smug because the overwhelming majority of intellectuals are atheists.
Poor poor pathetic Jason the dupe.
Actually Jason, you do never have to lose an argument with anyone.
But you didn't have to go through all of that trouble of reading those books and papers. That was a waste of your time.
You already knew how to never lose an argument.
It's something you've done your whole adult.
Simply, never never, and I mean never, admit that you are wrong. It's that simple. Never admit that you are wrong, and you will never lose an argument.
This is the only thing that you have done successfully, and ever so childishly over and over again on this thread.
God is truth = Jason Bradfield is a delusional duped dupe.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
Try again Moron.
These were all cut and pasted from your previous moronic posts.
Try again Moron.
Posted by: timmy | January 26, 2007 1:59 AM
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JWR,
My gosh man...you make this too easy.
You say, "How can science be useful if it is never to be seen as a means of learning truth?"
lol...i've got to somehow figure out how to incorporate moron into your name now.
uuuhhh....JWR, when my bladder gets full and starts to hurt, my jimmie is a useful tool to relieve that pressure, but i've never learned any truth from jimmie.
You do see what the problem is here, right? The only reason you see a conflict with what i wrote is because you apparently have a different definition for "truth" than i do.
Burning newspapers to keep warm can be useful but it doesn't explain to me how i should respond to abortion.
I would ask you to define "truth" but heaven forbid we do anything irrational as that.
this is really getting boring.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 26, 2007 1:16 AM
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Timmy the Moron…he bores on with no good….
In my analogy Timmy the Moron, you don’t agree that my Buick is a car. Hence, the need for definition. The point of the analogy was not to address two people agreeing, but two people disagreeing and getting to the root of the disagreement. You are the one creating a straw man because you rewrote the analogy. Furthermore, I could even take it a step further and point out that it is certainly possible that a person may agree that my Buick is a “car”, but for the wrong reason. Suppose you grew up being told that anything with four doors is a “car”. This is a false definition, yet, when I point to my Buick Sedan and asked, “is that a car?”, you would say, “yes” based on it having four doors.
Again, the only reason I’m creating these analogies is to emphasize the need for people to define their terms. If I don’t know what you mean, than how can I interact with you?
Secondly, your little attempt at defining “good” actually proves my point.
You are defining “good” as:
"To be desired or approved of"
"Pleasing, or welcome"
"Expressing approval"
Yet, I find these definitions pitiful and lacking and therefore I would not be in agreement with you if this is how you define “good”.
If this is what “good” means then Hitler was a “good” person. You may not have “approved” of him, but a whole host of people certainly did and were very “pleased” with him.
It’s interesting too that you only pick three out the many options that even a crappy dictionary like Websters give.
One is “true”. Another is “conforming to a standard”. In fact, my 1828 Noah Webster dictionary actually gives 40 different definitions!
And you say, “The word good is not ambiguous one tiny scrap.”
Ha!
Gee, makes me wonder if you know what “ambiguous” means. The 1828 says, “having two or more meanings.”
You say, “But who am I to make a law against what a woman can do with her body? I have my own morals. But I have no moral authority. Do you have moral authority?”
1. uhhh. Timmy, I don’t know if you have stepped outside lately but we do have people over us (government) creating/enforcing laws. Somebody has to do it. Furthermore, who says a woman can do whatever the heck she pleases with the other person in her womb? Oh, that’s right, thanks to “science” we don’t call that a “person” anymore, but a “fetus”. My bad.
2. You have no moral authority?!? HA! The heck you don’t. He’s called “Timmy”. And sadly, he’s a “moron”.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 26, 2007 12:58 AM
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Jason,
** Here's the verbatim (repeat, verbatim) quote from your original post:
-------
Jason: "Science has its place in a Christian philosophy, an important place. But science is never to be seen as a means of learning truth. Truth is found in the Scriptures alone; the Bible has a monopoly on truth. It is God’s Word that must be believed, not the experiments of men. As Robbins has said: "Science is false, and must always be false. Scripture is true and must always be true. The issue is as clear, and as simple, as that."
---
*** And then (pause for effect) I quote your last post:
--
Jason: "Show me one time where I have said that science, in and of itself, is not useful. I NEVER SAID THAT!! If you were more honest, you would stop putting words in my mouth..."
---
Well gee, Jason, silly old me (and the rest of us) took you at your word when you said (see above) "science is never to be seen as a means of learning truth" and that "the Bible has a monopoly on truth". Do you deny that you made those statements, Jason? How can science be useful if it is never to be seen as a means of learning truth? And when you say that "the Bible has a monopoly on truth" I assume you can provide evidence of the Noah story...and that you can defend the odious sections of Leviticus and Deuteronomy discussed earlier and that you therefore support stoning adulterers and killing homosexuals simply for being homosexual etc.... And then you spend the next 5000 words trying to prove to the rest of us how 'Clarkian Presuppositions" and the "law of induction" prove all science false, and the Bible true...and yet you have not a shred of scientific training to back you up. Then, when we collectively DESTROY your arguments and expose your utter ignorance of all things scientific, you claim not to have said the things you said? And you refuse to extend the courtesy of answering our questions when we have taken the time to answer yours?
I think I've proven beyond a shadow of a doubt my willingness to engage in an honest debate...and you, Jason, you have proven to everyone that tries to engage you in honest debate that you will go to any length, twist any word, haggle over semantics, go off on any tangent, or use any excuse (like the one above that I "don't know what this debate is about -- pretty inventive, Jason -- Slick Willie would be proud of you for that one) to avoid giving an honest and straightforward answer to simple questions. And you think I'm going to fall for your con game of asking for a written debate -- what do you think we're doing here, knitting?
JWR
Posted by: NavyNukeCDR | January 26, 2007 12:56 AM
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Jason,
** Here's the verbatim (repeat, verbatim) quote from your original post:
-------
Jason: "Science has its place in a Christian philosophy, an important place. But science is never to be seen as a means of learning truth. Truth is found in the Scriptures alone; the Bible has a monopoly on truth. It is God’s Word that must be believed, not the experiments of men. As Robbins has said: "Science is false, and must always be false. Scripture is true and must always be true. The issue is as clear, and as simple, as that."
---
*** And then (pause for effect) I quote your last post:
--
Jason: "Show me one time where I have said that science, in and of itself, is not useful. I NEVER SAID THAT!! If you were more honest, you would stop putting words in my mouth..."
---
Well gee, Jason, silly old me (and the rest of us) took you at your word when you said (see above) "science is never to be seen as a means of learning truth" and that "the Bible has a monopoly on truth". Do you deny that you made those statements, Jason? How can science be useful if it is never to be seen as a means of learning truth? And when you say that "the Bible has a monopoly on truth" I assume you can provide evidence of the Noah story...and that you can defend the odious sections of Leviticus and Deuteronomy discussed earlier and that you therefore support stoning adulterers and killing homosexuals simply for being homosexual etc.... And then you spend the next 5000 words trying to prove to the rest of us how 'Clarkian Presuppositions" and the "law of induction" prove all science false, and the Bible true...and yet you have not a shred of scientific training to back you up. Then, when we collectively DESTROY your arguments and expose your utter ignorance of all things scientific, you claim not to have said the things you said? And you refuse to extend the courtesy of answering our questions when we have taken the time to answer yours?
I think I've proven beyond a shadow of a doubt my willingness to engage in an honest debate...and you, Jason, you have proven to everyone that tries to engage you in honest debate that you will go to any length, twist any word, haggle over semantics, go off on any tangent, or use any excuse (like the one above that I "don't know what this debate is about -- pretty inventive, Jason -- Slick Willie would be proud of you for that one) to avoid giving an honest and straightforward answer to simple questions. And you think I'm going to fall for your con game of asking for a written debate -- what do you think we're doing here, knitting?
JWR
Posted by: Anonymous | January 26, 2007 12:55 AM
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Puzzled says, “If you can demonstrate that "the word of god is truth" and "it is the truth because the word of god says so" is not an instance of circular reasoning, and therefore show that this is not logical fallacy, then we can talk about "good".”
1. Neither one of those statements are the axiom I begin with.
2. Even if that was my argument, as I have already pointed out, circular reasoning is NOT a formal fallacy. Puzzled, keep saying that long enough and maybe it will become true and all the deductive logic books will re-write themselves. ::rollseyes:: AGAIN Puzzled, petitio principii is a VALID argument, because the conclusion follows from the premises by strict logic. Read any decent formal logic book and they will tell you this.
keep trying.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 26, 2007 12:23 AM
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Jwr,
Funny that you criticize me for quoting someone as you search for your college physics book. And it is funny that you criticize me for not critically evaluating things though my entire original post was a critical analysis of science as a means to truth. The problem that you really have with me is not that I don’t think or that I don’t question things…the problem you have with me is that I question the very things you are dogmatic on…like when I questioned Timmy the Moron’s assertion that paper will always burn. He was the one dogmatic about that, not me. And I’m not dogmatic about issues like that for a very simple, logical reason: the problem of induction. It is amazing to me that you still don’t get it. No matter how you put it or word it, you are still arguing inductively. You can word the scientific method any way you want, it is still inductive reasoning. And you cannot arrive at absolutes inductively. What’s funny though is that most atheist will concur, “yes, we never said science was about absolutes.” Well, that was my whole point to start with so I don’t know why atheists then have a problem with the remarks about inductive reasoning and absolutes. It’s like you want to argue just for the sake of arguing.
You say, “So where are the fallacious arguments that, with your galactic insight as to the mind and thoughts of the Creator, you have to disprove the laws of gravitation?.....”
You still don’t get it. I don’t have to disprove it because scientists have never proven it to begin with. Prove the law of gravitation without committing inductive reasoning and then you’ve done something.
You ignorantly say, “More importantly, why did our Creator endow us with intelligence and brains if we should not use them to explore the world around us and to engage in scientific inquiry? Surely, you're not afraid to answer the question, right? Jason? “
JWR, I have ignored questions like these because they imply things that I have never said and don’t believe. I don’t know how many times I have to point this out. It was in my original post:
“Science is useful in accomplishing its purpose, i.e., subduing the Earth. But that is all it is useful for, nothing more.”
See, this is where the rub really is. Show me one time where I have said that science, in and of itself, is not useful. I NEVER SAID THAT!! If you were more honest, you would stop putting words in my mouth and acknowledge that the part you don’t like is the “nothing more” part. Perhaps you need to skip looking for the physics book and find Hook on Phonics or something.
I’m not answering your questions because you still don’t understand what the debate is about. This is the reason I want to do a formal written debate where things are laid out nice and neat from the beginning and we can follow trains of thought.
But oh well, you’re too busy…though you seem to find time to type a 100 questions.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 26, 2007 12:07 AM
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I don't have any Jesus quotes handy to me righht now, but I know that Jason has quoted Jesus himself to have made many an intolerant statement. Jason gave us these quotes to justify his own intolerant statements, like calling us all morons from the very start of this thread.
So it's all fair when debating someone who would quote Jesus in such a way. But Jason takes the Bible literally and admits it.
You Anon, take the Bible like a Nancy Drew mystery so you and Jason are not the same at all. And yet..... lol
Posted by: timmy | January 25, 2007 6:04 PM
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And I stand by it.
Any individual who claims moral authority is neither open or tolerant.
They are abhorrent to me.
Do you claim moral authority for yourself or the church or the Bible Anon?
Posted by: timmy | January 25, 2007 5:41 PM
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self-described loving moral open tolerant tim says:
"It makes you abhorent to me."
Posted by: Anonymous | January 25, 2007 7:58 AM
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I agree with you Jason. It is simple. So why don't you get it?
If you pointed at you car and said, "it is a car", I would agree with you. because it is a car. We have the same definition of this noun.
So we'll have to toss out this straw man portion of your argument, and stick with the good, not good abortion thing.
If we work from the first three dictionary definitions of "good", which are:
"To be desired or approved of"
"Pleasing, or welcome"
"Expressing approval"
If Jane Doe looks at her abortion and says that is a good thing.
She means that her abortion is desired, and approved of, by her.
She means that her abortion is pleasing, or welcome, to her.
She is expressing her approval of her abortion.
If you say it is NOT a good thing.
You mean that her abortion is NOT desired and approved of.
You mean that her abortion is NOT not pleasing or welcome.
You are expressing DISapproval of her abortion.
Your definition for the word "good" is identical to hers.
You just disagree on wether or not abortion is a "good" thing.
The word good is not ambiguous one tiny scrap.
I know you're not that stupid Jason.
Why are you playing stupid?
By the way, I agree with you. I think that abortion is not a good thing. I think that botox injections are not a good thing. I think that lypo-suction is not a good thing. I think that clitoris piercing is not a good thing.
But who am I to make a law against what a woman can do with her body? I have my own morals. But I have no moral authority.
Do you have moral authority?
I know your answer. It makes you abhorent to me.
It is not a good thing to me.
Please don't tell me that you need a definition of "good" from me.
We've been through that haven't we?
Posted by: timmy | January 25, 2007 5:00 AM
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Jason, you're strangely silent...so unlike you. I answered your final 2 issues....but you still can't answer even a single question put to you straightforwardly. And you want a debate?
Game, set, and match to the infidels...
JWR
Posted by: NavynukeCDR | January 25, 2007 4:30 AM
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Jason, for someone who keeps going on about logical fallacy, you cannot even answer the question of whether you are not engaging in logical fallacy yourself. Your "logic" goes around in circles. If you can demonstrate that "the word of god is truth" and "it is the truth because the word of god says so" is not an instance of circular reasoning, and therefore show that this is not logical fallacy, then we can talk about "good".
Once you stop your circular reasoning, perhaps it will be possible to talk about morality or social justice or whatever "good" means as far as describing how we live our lives. But if you cannot tell me how you're not spinning your wheels, what use is it to define any word? You'll just say the word will mean whatever you want it to mean (because you say so).
Please address the above issue first, then sure, we can even talk about such issues like abortions or whatever. After you answer the above question, maybe you can tell me what biblical justification is there for saying abortion is murder? And, are ALL abortions bad? Even some pro-lifers disagree on some points, so it is not as clear-cut as you'd like.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 24, 2007 11:57 PM
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dang, took a break, logged in tonight hoping to see some definitions....nothing.
yawnnnn....booorrriiinnnnggg.
Timmy,
If i pointed to my 1997 Buick LeSabre Sedan and asked you, "Like my car?" and you replied, "That's not a car", guess what my next question to you will be?
"Timmy, what then do you think a "car" is?"
See what just happened? I said it IS a car...you said it is NOT a car. This contradiction between you and I occurred because we are apparently operating with different definitions of what a "car" is.
If Jane Doe looks at her abortion and says, "that was a good thing" and I look at it and say, "that was not a good thing", then apparently Jane and I don't agree on what "good" means.
If you're going to ask me a question about whether or not something is "good", I'd like to know (especially since you deny any form of dogmatism), what you mean by "good" before i answer the question. It's just that simple.
I'm not going to assume anything.
Puzzled, if you don't want to have a MEANINGful conversation, then i'm not interested in playing your games.
Call it scared. Call it whatever the heck you want. I'm not going to lose any sleep over it.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 24, 2007 11:17 PM
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My apologies to JB and others: my "fun proof" that the Bible is not the Word of God omitted five instances of the word "necessarily": four before the respective appearances of "false" in the last four sentences of the Preliminaries and one before "false" in the statement of Corollary 1. To clarify, a statement is necessary false when it is false under all admissible interpretations, and an interpretation is admissible when it assigns the correct entities from the relevant ontology to the denoting terms in the statement. As you see, all rather "anal" for an online forum. But if this blog is to be googled for eternity, I should tidy up my logic.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 24, 2007 3:47 PM
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Actually there was an interesting documentary on the Discovery Channel sometime back about that. There actually was a flood, but of course not of the magnitude as in the bible but a local flooding just like we see these days every once in a while. A merchant (or was it a farmer or shepherd, I cannot recall) tied his boats/rafts together and saved his family and livestock but ended up far away from his original home and settled there. It was pieced together from historical documents and archaeological evidence.
Many of the stories in the bible have some basis on facts but was probably interpreted (and "glorified," i.e., somebody took a lot of literary license) in a favorable way to a particular set of beliefs, consistent with the view that the bible is just a long confession of faith by a series of authors.
Or another example is "Elohim" (Hebrew signifying god or divinity) which is related to "El" the leader of a pantheon of gods in ancient Mesopotamia. It may have been that integration (by warfare, marriage, etc.) of nomadic peoples in ancient Middle East led to (or more likely, was needed for) such combinations of gods and concepts of divinity coming about, just like many local pagan (shaman) traditions (harvest festivals, winter festivals, etc.) have been co-opted by Christianity throughout history as it slowly gained dominance.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 24, 2007 2:50 PM
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JRW:
I often skip over long posts, but yours was a gem and I read it all.
"So...was there a flood that covered the surface of
the earth including Mount Everest? Did an ancient mariner build a ship large enough to hold an example of every animal on earth, strong enough to survive a storm that was of such intensity as to cover the earth with water?"
Ah, the Noah myth. And consider the other side of the coin. Most think this is a charming story -- all those children's books with elephants marching up the plank, followed by bears, et al. -- without considering what actually happened.
God -- Jason's God -- destroyed all of humanity, except Noah and his kin -- in one fell swoop. All of them, men, women, children, died the particularly nasty death of drowning. So, too, all of the animals who didn't get Noah's limited seating on his ark.
Jason, who can take this particular god and shove him up your...
Posted by: RB | January 24, 2007 4:00 AM
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Not true Anony,
One does not need to be a fundamentalist to receive criticism from us.
One just needs to believe that God is the creator of the universe and a deity.
Posted by: timmy | January 24, 2007 1:26 AM
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"...religious people are reduced to falling back on simply repeating their mantras."
Odd, my observation is the exact opposite. Atheists are primed to attack fundamentalism, and when you point out that in fact most Christians aren't fundamentalists, they charge right ahead anyway, making no sense.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 23, 2007 10:07 PM
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Thank you, atheist JB, for that very reasonable post. Your alter ego should read some more formal logic, including truth theory.
Mantra: Truth and love will always prevail.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 23, 2007 2:41 PM
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"It is no coincidence, some social scientists believe, that youngsters begin learning about faith around the time they begin to give up on wishing. “The point at which the culture withdraws support for belief in Santa and the Tooth Fairy is about the same time it introduces children to prayer,” said Jacqueline Woolley, a professor of psychology at the University of Texas. “The mechanism is already there, kids have already spent time believing that wishing can make things come true, and they’re just losing faith in the efficacy of that.” http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/23/health/psychology/23magic.html?em&ex=1169701200&en=776327ed8ba33d26&ei=5087%0A
Posted by: bd | January 23, 2007 1:58 PM
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I was just googling my name and was pretty surprised to see it pop up all over here, especially considering I am an atheist. Apparently, I share my name with another Jason Bradfield who is most definitely not an atheist.
I actually posted in the comments of an "On Faith" article before, but thought I did it anonymously - thus my surprise when I see all of these Jason Bradfield posts making tendentious arguments against atheism.
At first I thought I may have posted these pro-Christian arguments in a drunken or drug-induced stupor, but alas, I haven't been drunk in years and I have never done drugs (except, of course, at all those atheist conventions where we get together and engage in drug-induced orgies while sacrificing babies to Satan). Also, even if I were drunk or high I would hope that my mind would not be so blinded from reality as to make some of the arguments my fellow Jason Bradfield has made. Statements that were quite nicely beaten down by the more active atheist commenters.
Then I figured this must be the Jason Bradfield who is into Preterism. For the last few years, people have googled my name and asked me what the Hell Preterism is and I would always have to tell them that's some other Jason Bradfield, and that I would never be into something like Preterism, which just sounds bad, even though I have no idea what it is.
Now, I suppose I will have to warn anyone who googles my name that I am most definitely NOT the religious fellow who posts on "On Faith."
On a final note, I'd like to say that whenever I read one of these articles in the On Faith series I am almost always inclined to comment. However, as I read the comments I see that a fellow atheist has beat me to the punch and ripped the theist argument to shreds. It's almost comical how quickly flaws in theistic arguments are highlighted here and eventually the religious people are reduced to falling back on simply repeating their mantras.
Posted by: Atheist Jason Bradfield | January 23, 2007 12:54 PM
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Jason...
Just so you know, I included the dinosaurs in the ark along with the other creatures of the world (goodness, how did I forget about mastadons and saber-tooth tigers?) since, by your reasoning, the world is only 6000 or so years old...never mind all those scientists who can prove through radioactive dating that the earth is over 4.5 billion years old or that a meteor hit the earth nearly 65 million years ago to wipe out the dinosaurs.
Can't wait to see what excuse you're going to invent this time to avoid answering my questions now that I've finished answering the original "Jason 5" priceless posts...of course, this is after several others have attempted to invite you into an honest debate, only to have you either twist the meaning of words, go off on tangents about the meaning of the word 'good'; ramble on about yet another 'presuppositionalism' text....you're pretty inventive when it comes to dodging hard questions, Jason. Have you been taking lessons from the Clintons? I don't think Slick Willie has too much on you, brother...
Care to take a stab at that Noah story?
JWR
JWR
Posted by: NavynukeCDR | January 23, 2007 9:34 AM
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Jason,
Reading over some of your comments again, lest I put word in your mouth, I thought it strange that you'd say that I did not answer the address the question of logical fallacy.
I think I demonstrated, using your own words (see my last two posts) that your belief was indeed circular reasoning. But just to be clear, here is a short version:
If you assert that "the bible is the word of god," and the reason that you believe it is the word of god is "because the word of god caused you to believe it," well, how is this not an example of circular reasoning? Circular reasoning is one instance of a logical fallacy. You base your world view on circular reasoning. Therefore you are committing a logical fallacy.
I look forward to the absurdities that you will assert (based on the bible again) to bend your own "logic" to fit your initial assertion.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 23, 2007 5:31 AM
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Ok, Jason....time to demolish your other two
posts...but remember -- you asked for it. (To be
fair, Dr. Allen on the 30th of December refuted
your post already and rather eloquently I might
add, but still, here we are....) It also
interesting to note that you somehow have
swallowed this 'Clarkian presuppositionalism"
hook, line, and sinker...but you are still
strangely opposed to science. I notice you never
did answer my question about whether or not you
took any science classes...even in junior high.
Why are you afraid to answer the questions Jason?
Don't you have any independent thoughts?
Let's start with the..."All scientific experiments commit the fallacy of asserting the consequent." where you state the following:
*** begin Jason Bradfield argument ***
In the laboratory scientists work with a
hypothesis. In this case the hypothesis is: "If
bread is a stone and stones are nourishing, then
this bread will nourish me." The scientist then
attempts to deduce the predicted results that
should occur if the hypothesis is true, such as
"this bread nourishes me." He then performs an
experiment to test the hypothesis to see if the
predicted results occur. So he sits down at the
table and eats the bread, and wonder of wonders,
the bread does nourish him. The hypothesis, he
concludes, is confirmed: "This bread is a stone
and stones are nourishing." Silly you say? Yes!
Yet, as Russell has asserted, it is not
"fundamentally different from the argument upon
which all scientific laws are based." That is to
say, all scientific laws are based on fallacious
arguments.
********end Jason Bradfield argument ******
Jason, it is crystal clear to me that you haven't
the slightest idea how scientists or engineers go
about their business. An actual scientist would
test the hypothesis that stones are nourishing by
performing experiments. When the experiments
showed that stones weren't nourishing, the
hypothesis is declared to be invalid. One could
also perform chemical analyses by nutritional
experts and/or certified chemists to advance the
hypothesis that stones weren't nourishing....and
then once it was confirmed...ad infinitum.
Actually, Jason, science works exactly the
opposite of what you describe. People actively
look for ways to disprove hypotheses; it's only
when it's clear that a hypothesis has held up
against experimental data and peer-review that it
is advanced to the general realm of accepted
proof. Over time, as more and more evidence for a hypothesis is built up, it becomes an accepted
theory -- again, in the scientific sense of the
word -- and finally a scientific law. During all
this time, all it would take would be one genuine
example of experimental proof to disprove the
hypothesis and send everyone back to the drawing
board. For instance, the law of gravitation is a
quantitative statement that the gravitational
force between any two bodies is directly
proportional to the product of their masses and
inversely proportional to the distance between
them. This law was conceived of, the equations
derived (I don't have my college physics book
handy, alas) and centuries of experimentation have confirmed this. (By the way....why wasn't this mentioned in the Bible...along with a cure for cancer? Why are you afraid to answer the questions Jason?) However, if an experiment could be performed that would conclusively prove that the Law of Gravity does not hold, then it would no longer be an accepted scientific law; the same
with the Laws of Motion. Do you apply the same
standards to the Bible, Jason? Of course not;
here's the quote from you (and I notice you used
someone else's thoughts -- by the way, who is
Robbins? Surely not Tony Robbins?) Don't you have
any independent thoughts?
"But science is never to be seen as a means of
learning truth. Truth is found in the Scriptures
alone; the Bible has a monopoly on truth. It is
God’s Word that must be believed, not the
experiments of men. As Robbins has said: "Science
is false, and must always be false. Scripture is
true and must always be true. The issue is as
clear, and as simple, as that."
Wait a minute, Jason, are we not to believe in the Law of Gravity or the Laws of Motion or
Thermodynamics? You say (and I quote) "...all
scientific laws are based on fallacious
arguments." Oh really? So where are the
fallacious arguments that, with your galactic
insight as to the mind and thoughts of the
Creator, you have to disprove the laws of
gravitation? The laws of motion? The laws of
electromagnetics? By the way -- where does the
Bible discuss thermodynamics or advanced calculus
or differential equations?
More importantly, why did our Creator endow us
with intelligence and brains if we should not use
them to explore the world around us and to engage
in scientific inquiry? Surely, you're not afraid
to answer the question, right? Jason?
************************************************
Now let's turn our attention to gem #3:
*** begin Jason argument ***
(3) Science commits the fallacy of induction.
Induction is the attempt to derive a general law
from particular instances. Science is necessarily
inductive. For example, if a scientist is studying crows, he might observe 999 crows and find that they all are black. But is he ever able to assert that all crows are black? No; the next crow he observes might be an albino. One can never observe all crows: past, present, and future. Universal propositions can never be validly obtained by observation. Hence, science can never give us true statements.
*** end Jason Bradfield argument ***
Jason...science uses EXPERIMENTS (easily
repeatable, peer-reviewed experiments that can be
independently confirmed) and insights derived from years of study to BEGIN with a hypothesis. Then you advance to a theory, and finally to a 'Law'. (All these using their scientific definitions, not their usage in layman's terms.)
As an example, I give you the brief phenomenon of
'cold fusion'. Of course, fusion is the process
which powers the stars (and thermonuclear weapons) in which two Hydrogen atoms are fused together to form a Helium atom, releasing energy in the form of heat, radiaton, and light. Easy to do when you have the conditions present at the core of the sun; not so easy here on earth. Well, a couple scientists a few years back CLAIMED to have perfected cold fusion in the laboratory.
Multitudes of huzzahs followed -- at last, the
energy crisis resolved. Alas, it all fell apart
after reputable scientists weighed in and were
UNABLE TO DUPLICATE THE REPORTED RESULTS. See also perpetual-motion machines and other
'too-good-to-be-true' inventions -- if they are
real, then they should be able to be duplicated
under similar conditions elsewhere.
To use your example above, a biologist might
observe 999 crows, all black, and state the
hypothesis that all crows are black. However,
when another biologist came along with proof of a
non-black crow, then the hypothesis would be
destroyed -- or revised to say most crows are
black. See how the scientific method works?
------------------------------------------------
Now, care to explain your reasoning in quoting
Robbins (?) statement that "Science is false, and
must always be false. Scripture is true and must
always be true."
So...was there a flood that covered the surface of
the earth including Mount Everest? Did an ancient mariner build a ship large enough to hold an example of every animal on earth, strong enough to survive a storm that was of such intensity as to cover the earth with water? It would be impossible to do this with a modern aircraft carrier...(By the way...where did the water drain off to? If the earth was covered with water, there would be no way for the water to drain, right? Water flows downhill...but there would be no downhill with no land, right? So did the sun become super-intense to evaporate the water?) How did Noah keep the T-Rex's from the Brontosauruses? How did he keep the T-Rex's fed? How did Noah keep the velociraptors away from the sheep? What did he do with all the manure? How did he keep the polar bears cold and the toucans warm? How did he keep the crocodiles and alligators in an aquatic environment? How did he keep the King Cobras apart from the black mambas away from the eastern diamondbacks away from the king snakes? How did he keep the anacondas fed? How did he get the animals to line up two by two to come up the gangplank? Did he have to keep the carnivores away from the herbivores? Did he and his sons (I presume the daughters and wives were knitting and baking and doing other subservient tasks) just let the grizzly bears walk aboard while trusting them not to attack? How about the T-rex's and velociraptors -- would you trust a T-rex? How did he keep the bald eagles caged? Did he have to reinforce the elephant and rhino cages? How about the dinosaur cages? How did the plants survive after the water magically evaporated away after being suffocated (no carbon
dioxide) for 40 days. If Noah and his sons and
their wives were all that were on the ship, and
everyone else died....what happened after they got off the ship? What did they eat, since all the plants had died? What did the herbivores eat,
since all the plants had died? How did all the
carnivores survive once all their prey died off?
Did the grandsons and granddaughters of Noah have
to 'intermingle' to keep the earth populated? If
not, where did the other people come from?
(Similarly...how did Cain marry outside of the
family?)
Shall I continue?
Again, we fall back on the fundamental question,
Jason -- why did our Creator endow us with
intelligence and brains if we should not use them
to explore the world around us and to engage in
scientific inquiry? Why wouldn't He want us to
explore the universe He designed? And, as
mentioned in an earlier post (another question you ignored, Jason -- notice a common theme emerging?) why is simple 'belief' all that is required? If 'belief' is enough, and the consequences of non-belief (i.e. eternal damnation) are so terrible, then why not reappear now, in the 21st century, with modern and instantanous communications, and remove all doubt? Why not go direct to the masses? Why do we need interpreters of His word? I'm an educated adult -- why do I need a priest or bishop or the Pope or an imam to interpret the Word for me? Isn't it a better use of the gift He has given us to use it for honest inquiries into how the natural universe works...and also into the nature of our being? If He designed us to be inquisitive, then aren't we fulfilling His divine desires by acting as thinking, rational beings? Why would he give me the gift to be able to supervise the operations of a modern nuclear power plant and to be able to run a modern naval warship...but then I'm supposed to unquestionably accept the exhortations of the Falwells and Robertsons and Dobsons and Mullah Omars and the Catholic child molestors and their ilk on what the Intentions of the Creator are? To quote Ron White -- I don't think so, Scooter. Didn't those boys at Iwo Jima and Normandy die fighting for the freedoms enshrined in the Constitution....and aren't those extremists arguing for America to turn into a "Christian" nation dishonoring their sacrifices by trying to turn our country into a theocracy? Seems to me you'd rather everyone stay as sheep, and not question -- life is safer for you that way, right? Hate to be the one to break it to you, Jason, but it doesn't work that way. However, if you want to live in a fundamentalist state, feel free to move to Afghanistan or Saudi Arabia...
Don't you enjoy freedom of speech and engaging
with people that think for themselves? (and aren't you enjoying modern central heating, electricity, automobiles, mobile phones, and other products of scientific inquiry?) I await your reasoned, erudite responses with renewed enthusiasm.
JWR
P.S. "I knew a man once that said 'Death smiles at us all. All a man can do is smile back.'"
P.P.S. "Get busy living, or get busy dying. That's goddamn right."
Posted by: NavynukeCDR | January 23, 2007 4:57 AM
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I would like to start a collection, to pay for the best psychotherapist money can buy, for Jason's kids. We have some time. It won't be of any use anyway until they leave the nest.
And by the way, I hope nobody is buying into this idea that you have to prove Jason's induction theory wrong before you can criticize religion. His question is not valid because it is a paradox. I can't solve it. Nobody can. But watch this.
God doesn't exist.
Religion is a wicked scourge on our world that Jason's children's great grand children will read about in the history books.
Jason is a duped dupe.
Paper burns in fire. Every bloody time.
See?
I didn't even give Jason's paradox the time of day, and yet I criticize away at my liesure. I am both right, and righteous, to say what I say. I can and will continue to say these things. And Jason will still be here, trying to get people to answer his paradox. You know, the one where he bases his entire argument on the empirical observations of an atheist moron.
Religion sucks, and it is a completely irrational world view for the gullible.
The fastest growing demographic in the world used to be muslims. It just recently became "non religious"
It will remain, "non religious" for ever more.
It's true.
I am certain of it.
It is absolute truth.
See?
No need answer induction questions. Especially if they are from a walking talking paradox.
Posted by: timmy | January 23, 2007 4:05 AM
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If you answer the first part of the question I've put to you, then I will answer your question of what I mean by "good".
You conveniently ignored the first part of my post and set your sight on the "definitions word game" you are so fond of. In my previous post, I just substituted a few words for bread, stone, and nourishment in the statement you made up or copied from somewhere to show an absurd set of statements. It's funny as it comes out like something you might say but I wanted confirmation. Is that consistent with what you believe? And is it logically fallacious or not?
I find it interesting how you call others absurd and then do the same thing. You interpret Andy's post as saying that "the bible is not the word of god because Andy says so," yet hold to your position saying the bible is the word of god because you say so (God "caused" you to believe so... same thing, just projecting your thoughts to someone or something else).
Anyway, if you continue to avoid the question I will just assume it's too uncomfortable for you and will not press you on it anymore.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 23, 2007 3:37 AM
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Jason if one person thinks that abortion is good, and another thinks that abortion is not good, they still both have the same definition of the word good.
It is the act of abortion that they disagree on, not the definition of the word. The definition of the word "good" is the same for both people.
I know you're not dumb.
So I know that you are acting dumb to avoid a question.
Posted by: timmy | January 23, 2007 3:15 AM
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Andy, Andy, Andy…my certified moron. Hereafter, referred to as Andy Moross. I almost did not catch your latest because apparently you and I were typing at the same time and you hit send before I did. However, I’m glad I caught it. Posts like yours make my point better than I do half the time. They have also been an encouragement to my wife. Today she expressed some anxiety over whether or not our homeschooled children are at the same stage of development as public schooled kids their ages. Of course, I’m not worried a bit. In twelve years of public school, I was never offered Latin, Greek, German, etc. as alternatives nor was I ever offered a course in formal logic. In public school, I was taught evolution but rarely from sources other then our ridiculous “science” books. Our tract however will require our children to actually read “The Origin of Species”. So much for all this baloney that Christians don’t expose their children to different works and analyze them. At any rate, your post was an encouragement to her because if that is what passes as “knowledge” now-a-days, then my seven year old is already in great shape.
Sidenote: Let it be known that Andy Moross has failed in meeting my first challenge to him. In light of the “certified logician” stating that we can take or leave the law of contradiction, I asked Andy to write a meaningful post without using the law of contradiction. He has not. He has not come even close.
However, lest I be charge with ignoring his “fun proof”, I will now address it despite Andy Moross’ failure to meet the challenge.
As a little review, I want to remind our readers what I asked Puzzled to demonstrate. Given the axiom, “the Bible is the Word of God”, I asked Puzzled to demonstrate how this axiom would lead to fallacious thinking. And of course, Puzzled makes no attempt. Instead, he steers the conversation away wanting to talk about whether or not I truly follow Jesus’ commands. But Andy Moross gives it a shot! Not only does Andy Moross fail to demonstrate the “logical fallacy”, but with a simple “substitution of values” and using his own argument, his post defeats itself and once again reveals the complete nonsense of trying to construct of worldview from empiricism – which has been my point all along.
First, a word needs to be said about Andy Moross’ preliminaries.
Andy says, “An axiom is an assertion from which truths may be derived by valid reasoning” and “Reasoning is valid when it never leads from true premises to false conclusions.”
Although these statements seem to be legit, I’m hesitant in accepting them because I’m not sure what Andy means by “true”. So, let me offer a more precise and less ambiguous definition for “valid” reasoning.
Deductive logic is not so much interested in the truth or falsity of propositions as much as it is interested in the truth or falsity of the FORM of arguments. For example, if I said, “All men whose first name are Andy are black. Andy Ross, therefore, is black.” In this case, the conclusion is a valid, logical argument. Andy Ross is included in the all. And if all Andy’s are black, then Andy Ross is black. However, “All men whose first name are Andy are black” is a false statement. So here we have a valid, logically sound deduction using a false premise.
It is therefore more precise and accurate to say that an inference is valid if the FORM of the conclusion is true every time the forms of the premises are. Whether Andy uses the word “true” as referring to the FORM of the propositions or the actual content of propositions themselves is not clear, especially when he says this:
“By substitution of values for P, a contradiction is true if and only if it is false.”
How can something be true and not-true at the same time and in the same sense? It can’t. So what does Andy mean here? Who knows? Now, I could assume the “obvious” in thinking that surely Andy is not so flagrant in stating a clear contradiction; however, considering the fact that Andy has said before concerning the law of contradiction that we can “take it or leave it”…I’m not giving him the benefit of doubt. He needs to clearly define some terms here.
Furthermore, he says, “From a false assertion any statement at all may be derived, including a contradiction.”
This doesn’t make any sense. How can “any statement at all” be deduced from the assertion that “Andy Ross is black”? This false statement, for example, tells me nothing about Jason Bradfield or Timmy the Moron or Puzzled; therefore, how could I derive “any statement at all” from this one? Also, how can a contradiction be deduced from this statement? That doesn’t make any sense whatsoever. It is simply not possible to get “Andy Ross is not black” from the statement “Andy Ross is black.”
These observations would be enough to not take Andy’s post seriously, but I’m bored so I’ll continue.
Another problem that I have with his post is that Andy defines the “Bible” as pages with black markings on them, bound together and carried in your hand. This is not, however, what I am referring to in my axiom; therefore the whole thrust of his argument is useless. Instead of analyzing my actual definitions, he forces his own on me and argues against that. He does also with his fact #3.
“3. The meaning of a word or statement is determined by its usage in a community.*”
My worldview has nothing to do with Wittgenstein. Again, instead of actually critiquing my worldview from within and demonstrating the inconsistencies (which was what I asked of Puzzled in the first place), Andy forces philosophical ideas I do not adhere to into the argument and argues from there. And not only does this argument fail because of that, if fact #3 is true, it actually defeats Andy’s own words.
Instead of the “Bible” for X, let’s substitute it for the “words of Andy” - referring to his so-called argument against my axiom- and plug this into his own argument.
If “the meaning of a word or statement is determined by its usage in a community”, then “by fact 3, the meaning of the words in X is determined by usage in a community. So X is not absolute.”
The argument from Andy is not absolute…so much for refutation.
And of course, this points out again the complaint I have already expressed with Andy and Wittgenstein. Wittgenstein, if consistently followed, leads to complete skepticism. Andy’s point 3 is just another way of saying: There are no absolutes.
But of course, neither he nor Puzzled or any other empiricists here really have the balls to follow this out consistently. Instead, they parade around as “certified logicians” and work up a “fun proof”, supposedly to show off their intellect, when in actuality they are complete morons and gutless.
Lastly, if that was not enough, Andy’s corollary 1 is another joke.
He says, “By the definitions and the theorem, axiom A is false.”
What does he mean by “the definitions”, “theorem” and “axiom A”?
“Definitions
Let axiom A be the statement "The Bible is the word of God"
Let object X be the Bible, and let object Y be the word of God.
By these definitions, A says that X is Y.”
So, in summary, “The Bible is the word of God" says that "The Bible is the word of God".
His theorem: “X is not Y” or to put it another way, “the Bible is not the Word of God.”
So, in essence, all that his corollary 1 is stating is:
“By the definitions (the Bible is the Word of God) and the theorem (the Bible is not the word of God), axiom A (the Bible is the Word of God) is false.”
In other words, the reason the Bible is not the word of God is simply because Andy says it’s not – or – perhaps this is just another way of saying, “From a false assertion any statement at all may be derived, including a contradiction”, whatever the heck that means.
Thanks again certified moron. And my wife thanks you as well.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 23, 2007 3:00 AM
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Puzzled,
You're a joke. It is perfectly reasonable to ask people for definitions considering the fact that "good" has been used differently from people.
Some people, for example, think that abortion is a "good" thing. Some consider it "not a good" thing. Therefore, it is reasonable to ask how "good" is being defined. Abortion cannot be both a "good" thing and not a "good" thing at the same time and in the same sense.
Leave it up to a moron though to leave things ambiguous. Your worldview thrives in it - perhaps that is why you're Puzzled.
I'm not avoiding the question. I'm refusing to answer the question until i understand what you mean. And if you can't tell me what you mean, then go somewhere else and quit wasting my time...moron.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 23, 2007 2:58 AM
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Once again Jason avoids the question and obfuscates by going off on a "define X..." tangent. It's a tired act. Go buy a dictionary. In the mean time, if you cannot or are unwilling to engage, then be brave enough to say so instead of avoiding.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 23, 2007 1:27 AM
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Puzzled says, "Therefore, it is not necessarily the assumptions (since it is hard to prove or disprove) but the end-results of such assumptions. We have some extreme examples of bad (Nazis, 9/11) that does not require me to go to bible study to know is bad. Did your assumptions lead you to a good worldview for you and for others around you? That should be the test that we as a society apply and try to live by."
Puzzled, define "good". Unless you define your words, i don't have a clue what you're saying. So please, define the word "good" and don't give me no Timmy bullcrap like, "good is not bad".
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 23, 2007 12:01 AM
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Jason,
From your own original posting, second point where you say "If p then q, q then p" is a logical fallacy (what I have been calling circular reasoning or tautology), if "the word of god is the bible " (p), then "the bible is truth/logic/etc." (q). If q then p must hold as well? A bunch of assumptions and statements that go around in circles.
Let's extend it more to your liking. You say: "If bread is a stone and stones are nourishing, then this bread will nourish me; now this bread does nourish me; therefore it is a stone, and stones are nourishing."
Substitute bread = bible, stone = word of god and nourishing = salvation.
I say (tongue-in-cheek): "If the bible is the word of god and the word of god is a source of salvation, then this bible will be salvation for me; now this bible gives me salvation; therefore it is the word of god, and the word of god is a source of salvation."
That sounds like something that you might say. But I don't mean to put words in your mouth, so please disavow this statement if you think this is a misrepresentation of your beliefs.
To address another point you made in a more recent reply to me, I don't think that an assumption is necessarily arbitrary. But even if it is "arbitrary," sometimes we need to make an "arbitrary" (arbitrariness being a matter of degree) assumption in order to have a starting point. Otherwise we could not even start. However, as I have said in previous postings, the real question is whether that worldview based on certain assumptions (whether it is "arbitrary" or not) actually has a positive impact on how one lives one's life. Or, to say this more plainly, if one confesses faith in Jesus and commits to follow Jesus' teachings, does this person live a better life (and make the lives of those around him/her better)? Therefore, it is not necessarily the assumptions (since it is hard to prove or disprove) but the end-results of such assumptions. We have some extreme examples of bad (Nazis, 9/11) that does not require me to go to bible study to know is bad. Did your assumptions lead you to a good worldview for you and for others around you? That should be the test that we as a society apply and try to live by.
Of course, one defense might be to say that belief in Jesus is by definition a "better" life (i.e., "I have been saved"). But I find it hard to believe that a just god truly worth our devotion would say "as long as you confess your faith in me, you can do whatever else you want to do." If so, why bother with commandments #2-10? Shouldn't Commandment #1 suffice?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 22, 2007 2:31 PM
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JWR, I answered the post of December 29, 12:04 am in my post of January 2, 2:10 pm. The fact that my post was evidently not understood is because it requires an elementary awareness of the philosophy of science of the last half-century, plus a modicum of common sense.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 22, 2007 1:44 PM
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ahhhhh...no better way to start off a new week than reading posts from morons. I'm going to respond to the latest after work tonight, however, i do want to point out this most hilarious comment from JWR.
"Induction is an electrical engineering term used to describe the magnetic field that is generated when you pass an electrical current thru a coil or similar generating of current or magnetic force in other conductors, Jason -- but surely with your extensive training in science and engineering you knew that, right? When used in context to describe logic -- there are no 'laws of logic' that I'm aware of Jason -- in the sense of the laws of physics -- like gravity, electromagnetism, and thermodynamics..."
and then...(pausing because my stomach hurts)..."you want one either with someone you can intimidate, or someone with less education than you that you can confuse with fancy terminology. Not playing that game."
Actually JWR the Moron, I'm looking for someone to address the original post I pasted here back in December. You say you've addressed some of it but it should be obvious that you have not addressed all of it...I don't see how you can in light of the fact that you don't understand induction and logic.
Sooooooo....adios moronos.
ps. I am asking for a formal written debate with you so that your red herrings will be seen more readily within a structured conversation where affirmative/denials have been laid out.
So let me know when you are ready.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 22, 2007 10:13 AM
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Just answer the questions Jason. Stop hiding behind 'induction'. Induction is an electrical engineering term used to describe the magnetic field that is generated when you pass an electrical current thru a coil or similar generating of current or magnetic force in other conductors, Jason -- but surely with your extensive training in science and engineering you knew that, right? When used in context to describe logic -- there are no 'laws of logic' that I'm aware of Jason -- in the sense of the laws of physics -- like gravity, electromagnetism, and thermodynamics...
The real question is (and continues to be..) Jason, why won't you answer the questions? What are you afraid of? I attempt to answer most of the questions you pose for me -- in fact, many people attempt to answer your questions. Then, when we ask the same courtesy of you -- so you can appreciate our way of thinking -- you resort instantaneously to insults, declare the entire line of reasoning null and void, then go off on another topic. Why don't you simply answer the questions instead of trying to change the subject? You claim to be an expert on God and his reasoning...and you are using your 'expert' knowledge to try and defend the inerrancy of the Bible (the words "scripture is true and must always be true" ring a bell?)....so why can't you answer simple questions such as:
If God created us all (or caused us to be created) -- why the unreasonable hatred of homosexuals? Aren't they children of God also?
Why did God reveal himself 2000 years ago regularly...but not now, in the era of instant communication?
Also...according to the Christian faith...a deathbed conversion to Christianity (by, let's say, Stalin) would wipe out a lifetime of causing agony for millions of others, whereas someone that might have led a conventionally 'moral' life (helping the poor, building houses for Habitat for Humanity, feeding the homeless) but that was a Buddhist or Hindu would be condemned for an eternity in Hell. What kind of a God would allow something like that to happen? Why wouldn't He at least come forth and remove all doubt of His existence?
Also (as Sam Harris states) why would an omniscient, omnipowerful God allow a child to be abducted and raped?
As I stated last time...and which, clearly, still holds true -- you wanted a debate. You're getting a debate. You're hiding from the questions. Thus, the logical conclusion is that you really don't want a debate with equals...you want one either with someone you can intimidate, or someone with less education than you that you can confuse with fancy terminology. Not playing that game. You've had your chance. If you really want to continue this conversation, answer the questions.
JWR
Posted by: Anonymous | January 22, 2007 1:27 AM
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Jason:
The difference between you and I is that I would abandon any theory of science overnight if new evidence arose to dissprove it.
No real fundamentalist would every say anything like that. Like you. You are unable to abandon -- despite reams of convincing evidence -- that god did not deliver the truth about anything about the real world.
You are lost.
Posted by: RB | January 21, 2007 9:28 PM
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Jason,
I think you're confused. If you say that you take as a starting point that the "Bible is the word of God" doesn't that also require God to exist to make any sense? I don't know what you really think, but I am trying to infer from what you post. And given that statement, I am inferring that you think God exists and you're taking that as a starting point (or it is the direct consequence of your earlier statement that "Bible is the word of God").
Also, when I say it is meaningless, I mean that "I believe in god" are just words, as you yourself seem to say. Therefore, saying those sequence of words does not mean you get salvation. I never said that that your belief is meaningless because it is unprovable. I did say your "logic" is meaningless because it's tautological.
But the real point is this: What I do think is meaningless is that people (like you apparently, as far as we can see in this forum) who proclaim with their own words their belief in god, but fail to follow god's/Jesus' teachings. Some even go so far as to say (in effect) "I already have salvation." Proclamations of such "faith" are meaningless, and by extension the question of god's existence is moot. Sure, you'll find quotes from the bible that says it's okay to demean "sinners" but what you're pointing out is a real inconsistency therein: Jesus himself did not do that, and seemed to enjoy spending time with the shunned and ostracized people of his time rather than demean them. Yet when I see "religious" people engage in bigotry and intolerance, and worse (9/11 being an extreme example), then I wonder what kind of "meaning" does faith like that have? That is what Sam Harris is pointing out, and that line of thinking is what you seem intent on avoiding at all costs and engage in wordplay rather than deal with an uncomfortable problem. So if you cannot look at the problem head on and continue to spin your wheels within the tautology you've set up for yourself, then please do so but without bothering with the real world for everyone's sakes.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 20, 2007 4:51 PM
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The above post with the challenge is from me.
Posted by: Falk Steinle | January 20, 2007 4:49 PM
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Okay Jason, my simple minded christian friend,
I see I have to break it down for you.
Here is a very simple challenge:
Jason told us:
Psalm 14:1 The FOOL says in his heart, "There is no God."
But today I opened my bible and read:
Psalm 14:1 Right is he to question, for he is going to better the human condition.
Is Jason able to proof to me that I'm lying? (Which of course I do.)
Without an argument of induction of course. Opening his bible will not do, because he hasn't seen all the bibles around.
If not, gods word becomes arbitrary.
Oh, another thing Jason:
Your last post is completly useles: All your arguments were arguments from inductions. You are not allowed to use them, if you are not an empiricist. We are not using a double standard, are we?
Try again.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 20, 2007 3:25 PM
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Jason said:
"I’m not alone. Maybe on this thread, but not elsewhere."
When I asked you what it's like to be alone, I was asking on this thread. You seem to spend an awful lot of time here. There have been no less than 8 Christians posting on this thread. None of them are with you. I ask again.
Jason. What's it like to be so alone?
Posted by: timmy | January 20, 2007 3:21 PM
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What I've been trying to get at is what I think the real point of the debate that is set up by Sam Harris' column: that is, whether religion is a "good" thing or not. Despite the confrontational tone in books by Sam Harris and others, that seems to me what this debate is all about.
If religion is not "good" for us (for society), then there are two possible remedies that come to mind immediately: (1) do a better job following the teachings, or (2) find a different world view. I think this is a challenge for both theists and atheists alike.
Let's start from the following premise: No one can conclusively prove the existence of god, one way or the other (and if we were to insist on a specific version of god, this would become even more difficult). Even if one is an ardent "true believer" this premise should be reasonable since believers do not have "proof" per se, just a conviction from personal experience and personal revelation which should not be confused with proof.
I think that is what Sam Harris and others like him are driving toward: what are the various ramifications of the different models of the world or worldviews?
One model, a religious view of the world (whether "true" or not), has led to many good things such as the charitable organizations that work to help the poor not only in this country but around the world, and churches do have the manpower and other resources to do such things. But on the other hand, religion usually requires belief without questioning (although I don't think it has to be the case, necessarily), and dogmatic beliefs can be easily subverted, and fanatical belief that killing someone is the way to salvation may very well offset any good that religious organizations might have done. It's not a Muslim problem although the economic and social conditions in many Muslim countries no doubt contribute to this. There are Christians who go and blow up abortion clinics, killing not only doctors and nurses but also patients and unborn babies.
The other model (a secular model) depends on the power of the state to maintain law and order and economic freedoms, but the political debates on helping the poor, the elderly, promoting human rights around the world, protecting the environment, etc. are tinged with political calculations and a lack of impetus. Look at New Orleans in the wake of Katrina for instance. Many of these things must be done by the government or by voluntary organizations (e.g., religious organizations or groups like the Sierra Clubs; i.e., special interest groups). No one wants to pay more taxes to pay for these things, perhaps rightly so, since no one wants the government making choices about what kind of programs to support (and what kind to not support). The political process is messy and imperfect and often the people who need the most help don't get it.
As we can all see (hopefully) there are no easy "answers". But there is some hope. For instance, I just read in msnbc.com that a group of scientists and evangelical Christians are getting together to work on protecting the environment.
That is why I was pushing for the premise I stated above: we can neither prove nor disprove god's existence, and it is probably not a fruitful debate to have for that reason. However we can look at the real-world consequences of these seemingly conflicting worldviews and debate about the merits of each. At the very least, Sam Harris' "attack" on religion should force the faithful to re-examine their own beliefs, not to have doubts about whether their faith is right or wrong (not realistic, obviously), but to see if people of faith really are living their lives according to the teachings of their faith or if they're (perhaps even with the best of intentions) "perverting" those teachings to push ulterior agenda. Of course non-religious people do that too, but the point is that at least in politics and in business, we can debate it in the open, much more openly than in religion, which is often wrapped in dogamtic teachings that are inviolate.
We live in the real world, and armchair logic of apologetics and philosophers can be good reading for some, but in effect, those ideas seem to only obfuscate real world problems that require our immediate attention.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 20, 2007 3:20 PM
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Puzzled,
First, "god exists" is not my axiom. Again, putting words into my mouth.
Secondly, a “proof”, in the context of deductive reasoning, is a conclusion reached from previous premises. If I can “prove” that “the Bible is the Word of God”, this implies then that “the Bible is the Word of God” is a conclusion reached from previous premises and I would never attempt to argue that. I do not believe that you can arrive at that as a conclusion based on previous premises. And never, in the past two weeks or so on this site, have I claimed I could.
However, to say that “the Bible is the Word of God” is “unprovable” is not the same thing as saying that it is arbitrary and cannot be rationally defended.
For whatever ridiculous reason, you’ve got it stuck in your head that “unprovable” equals “meaningless” and irrational. You can keep telling yourself that all day long, but that doesn’t make the Bible meaningless. Nor, does “unprovable” equal “unknowable”, as you keep asserting.
Logic, or the law of contradiction to be exact, is a perfect example. The law of contradiction is a self-verifying, self-justifying axiom. It is logically undeniable. And it is “knowable” and it is “meaningful”. In fact, things would become “meaningless” without it. If the word dog can also mean cat, fart, ship, cow, and every other word in the dictionary, then it has lost meaning. But a dog is not a cat. A dog is not a cow. This is logic at work.
Again, I’ll keep repeating this until the cows (or dogs) come home. The atheist Daniel Dennett said that if we forsake the law of contradiction, we become “vegetables”. He absolutely right!
The law of contradiction is a “knowable” first principle with meaning.
This one example suffices to demonstrate your absurdities.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 20, 2007 3:14 PM
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Jason,
What you refer to as axioms are just assumptions that you've made, as a starting point of sorts. You are assuming that god exists and you build your worldview around that assumption. However, my main point was that just as Sam Harris cannot prove god does not exist, you cannot prove that god does exist. And I proposed that we leave it at that as no good can come from any "debate" arguing something that is not knowable.
Being obtuse about something so simple will not get you anywhere.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 20, 2007 1:58 PM
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Andy Ross, a fun proof! But even without utilizing formal (but tongue-in-cheek, I believe?), we should know that the bible was not written in 16th century English. Theologians who've studied the bible (by reading the ancient texts in the original middle east languages) know that what we call the bible is a really really eclectic collection of texts brought together. Therefore attestations of "truth" or "truthiness" must eventually go up against the question of whether one is living according to Jesus' teachings (the essence of the teachings), not just according to the letter of the teachings. "Strategic" confessions of faith (a way to "buy" salvation) are meaningless due to a lack of sincerety (god will see through that person).
Posted by: Puzzled | January 20, 2007 1:52 PM
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Puzzled said, “Why don't you admit the obvious and move on.”
Well, one reason is because you put words into my mouth. I never said axioms are “true by definition.”
Keep trying.
______________________________
Falke said, “Hello sunny, we are not arguing in my worldview, we are arguing in yours.”
You need to do some homework first and find out exactly what my worldview is before criticizing it. I’m convinced you don’t have a clue.
Here it is again: “The Bible is a book, a material thing. You can't proof to us, that the words, that have been in it yesterday will be in it tomorrow. So everything you take from the bible is, by your own reasoning, not proofen to be unchangeable and therefor not the Truth”
The assumption underneath these statements is that the Word of God is a material thing. I, however, never said that. You’re setting up a straw man.
Keep trying.
______________________________
Anonymous says, "Jason" (on the off chance you're legit), please don't claim to represent the "Christian" side of an argument.
Uhhh…thanks ANONYMOUS. Sheeesshhh.
______________________________
Falk says, “To Anonymous: Don't worry, I doubt that any non-believer is thinking that Jason represents the standard christian. We might be fools, but we are not dishonest.”
No, I don’t represent the “standard” Christian, if what you mean by that is the “typical” Christian we run into in this country. So what’s your point? And secondly, glad to see you admit that you’re fools.
______________________________
Timmy the Grand Wizard Moron says, “What's if feel like to be so alone Jason?”
I’m not alone. Maybe on this thread, but not elsewhere. Try again moron.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 20, 2007 1:49 PM
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Said God's dupe:
Show me the LOGICAL fallacy with me starting with the axiom, "The Bible is the word of God" and then proceeding from their [sic] to deduce and build a worldview in which to make sense of life. ...
REVEAL THE LOGICAL FALLACY TO ME.
(January 19, 2007 12:55 AM)
Lo and behold:
Preliminaries
An axiom is an assertion from which truths may be derived by valid reasoning.
Reasoning is valid when it never leads from true premises to false conclusions.
From a false assertion any statement at all may be derived, including a contradiction.
A contradiction is a statement of the form P and not P, for some statement P.
By substitution of values for P, a contradiction is true if and only if it is false.
Therefore, by reductio ad absurdum, a contradiction is false.
Therefore, an axiom from which a contradiction may be derived is false.
If an axiom is false, any deductions made from it are fallacious.
Therefore an axiom must be such that it cannot be false.
Definitions
Let axiom A be the statement "The Bible is the word of God"
Let object X be the Bible, and let object Y be the word of God.
By these definitions, A says that X is Y.
Facts
1. The King James Bible contains 783,137 words.
2. The exact number of words in the Bible depends on the language and the translation.
3. The meaning of a word or statement is determined by its usage in a community.*
4. The exact meaning of the words in the Bible is determined by a long history of usage.
5. The word of God is authoritatively stated to be unique and absolute and unchanging.
* For details of fact 3, see the later philosophy of Wittgenstein (inter alia).
Theorem
X is not Y
Proof
By fact 1, some instantiations of object X contain 783,137 words.
By fact 2, other instantiations of X contain a different number of words.
So X is not unique.
By fact 3, the meaning of the words in X is determined by usage in a community.
So X is not absolute.
By fact 4, the meaning of the words in X is determined by a long history.
So X is changing.
By fact 5, object Y is unique and absolute and unchanging.
Therefore X is not Y.
Corollary 1
By the definitions and the theorem, axiom A is false.
Corollary 2
Deductions proceeding from axiom A are fallacious.
QED
God's dupe, you may kiss my butt.
Timmy:
Sorry, but composing this mail has delayed my reading of your screenplay.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 20, 2007 1:24 PM
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What's if feel like to be so alone Jason?
Posted by: timmy | January 20, 2007 3:28 AM
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To Anonymous:
Don't worry,
I doubt that any non-believer is thinking that Jason represents the standard christian.
We might be fools, but we are not dishonest.
Posted by: Falk Steinle | January 19, 2007 7:30 PM
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"Jason" (on the off chance you're legit), please don't claim to represent the "Christian" side of an argument.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 19, 2007 6:52 PM
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Well, well,
if that isn't Jason in denial.
Hello sunny, we are not arguing in my worldview, we are arguing in yours.
Proof to me that the bible tomorrow is going to say the same as it says today. (including in your memory).
And please, don't use an argument from induction.
If you can't, your axiom is useless.
Try again.
Posted by: Falk Steinle | January 19, 2007 6:50 PM
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Once again, Jason avoids the issue.
If you cannot "prove" axioms, then your axiom is just an assumption and therefore "true by definition" which just means that it is a starting point for your model of the world.
The argument cuts both ways: just as Sam Harris cannot conclusively "prove" god does not exist, neither can you "prove" god does exist.
Why don't you admit the obvious and move on (and please stop spinning your wheels)?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 19, 2007 6:44 PM
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Falke says,
"your arguments against empiricism are all well and good, but leave you in a fix."
hmmm...so they are all "well and good" eh? interesting...me wonders what you do with it then...
anywho...
"The Bible is a book, a material thing."
What the falke?
Falke, you can burn every Bible in the world to ashes and the Bible will still be around, unless you have found some way to burn thoughts.
hello? i'm not an empiricist....try again.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 19, 2007 6:13 PM
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Timmy the Grand Wizard Moron says,
"You claim your God is all powerful. I mock your invented God and break his most sacred commandments to show you his non existence.
Nothing will happen to me for it Jason.
Not now. Not when I die."
hmmm...let's see here. Timmy the inductive moron could not even "prove" to me that a newspaper will burn in the fire.
Timmy said, [quote] "I CAN'T PROVE IT"
Now here is Timmy the moron insisting with "certainty" that God will do nothing to him when he dies.
hmmmm....
actually Timmy, your stupidity in constantly contradicting yourself by asserting certainties at the same time the impossibility of certainties appears to me that He has already started judging you:
Romans 1:21-22 For although they knew God, they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking, and their foolish hearts were darkened. 22 Claiming to be wise, they became fools,
Furthermore, "cause" and "reason" do not mean the same thing.
Look it up moron.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 19, 2007 6:05 PM
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Hi Jason,
your arguments against empiricism are all well and good, but leave you in a fix.
The Bible is a book, a material thing.
You can't proof to us, that the words, that have been in it yesterday will be in it tomorrow.
So everything you take from the bible is, by your own reasoning, not proofen to be unchangeable and therefor not the Truth.
Try again.
Posted by: Falk Steinle | January 19, 2007 5:15 PM
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Needless to say, "Jason" is a pretty transparent atheist plant. You overplayed your hand, guys!
Posted by: Canada: proof god has a sense of humor | January 19, 2007 5:04 PM
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Jason,
I would never speak like that to anyone who exists.
That is my point.
Those words I said were to demonstrate to you just how much conviction I have that your Bible God does not exist.
You claim your God is all powerful. I mock your invented God and break his most sacred commandments to show you his non existence.
Nothing will happen to me for it Jason.
Not now. Not when I die.
And deep down, you know it. You know that I and others will get away with mocking your God because he is a figment of your imagination.
Actually, he is a figment of Paul's and Timothy's imagination.
You're just the duped dupe who believes them.
Care to deal with your paradox?
Care to deal with my conclusion that there is no reason to believe in God if he doesn't cause you believe? Which he hasn't.
Is it possible to believe in God if he doesn't "cause you to believe?"
These are based on your statements. And they are correct assertions. You can't deal with it. You are beat.
You would have been better of trying to convince us of other reasons to believe. This "God causes you to believe" thing lets us all off the hook.
Thanks!
Posted by: timmy | January 19, 2007 5:03 PM
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No Puzzled, it is you who can not read.
You say for example:
"Yes. Axioms are true by definition."
No they're not. I never said that.
Try again.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 19, 2007 5:00 PM
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I see that you cannot read (or understand what you read). It is you who says god is truth or something of the sort (with rants about god's wrath). God's wrath is your projection of what you think god is like or what you'd like god to be. I am pointing out that we cannot prove nor disprove god's existence. That is the point.
Yes. Axioms are true by definition, and therefore the same logic applies. You cannot prove the validity of god's existence. I am not Sam Harris, so if you want to say something about me, don't project his ideas onto me. You, on the other hand, assume something to be true and then assert all that follows from that assumption to be true. As I described, it is circular reasoning; good to argue against people with, but without substance and meaning for how you actually go about living your life.
I am not making abstract arguments now. I am asking you if believing in Jesus made you a better person (has it changed you) and do you seek to truly emulate Jesus? Maybe you do, but from your postings we'd never know it. If you resort to some statements about how your belief has given you "salvation" based on your assumption, then once again you are using armchair musings to escape the real world implications of what it means to believe and seek salvation. That is where the inconsistency of your position lies.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 19, 2007 4:37 PM
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and there it is folks, right on schedule:
"Oh well. I'm going to go surfing on his waves again. Such a leech. If God doesn't like it he can blow me hard. You know, all deep throat like. That's right, I'm telling God that I am going to leech off his waves, and if he doesn't like it, he can take my big long fatty deep into his throat and suck hard on it. Up yours God you fake impostor no good piece of pooh."
"Your God is weak, useless, powerless, and pathetic. I spit in his face and nothing happens to me."
Timmy the Grand Wizard moron has no excuse, so he resorts to mocking Him.
And what is even more pathetic now is that Timmy the Grand Wizard moron is taunting someone he doesn't even believe exists. Timmy, how do you spit on something that doesn't exist?
the hour hand is almost there ...kuko-for-cocoa-puffs ...
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 19, 2007 3:31 PM
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Jason your problem isn''t with what Sam Harris says.
You problem is with how many intelligent people agree with him. That is why you scream out your paradoxical meaningless argument. It's the only weapon you have. And you are discovering what a useless weapon it is. It has swayed no one. Not one tiny scrap. NO ONE. EVER. This is your frustration. It will continue to be your frustration.
Your God is weak, useless, powerless, and pathetic. I spit in his face and nothing happens to me. You keep holding on to hope that I will be punished after I'm dead. I'm going surfing.
Happy as a clam.
Posted by: timmy | January 19, 2007 2:48 PM
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Jason,
Jason, if you cannot trust Russell, how can you make your argument completely based on his empirical findings?
You can't.
I can, because I am an empiricist. The minute you do it, you become an empiricist, and a paradox. And a moron.
Without Bertrand Russell, you have no argument.
With Bertrand Russell, you are a paradox and a moron.
Said Jason:
"If God does not cause you to believe it is because He wants you to remain a moron."
You said it yourself Jason. There is nothing we can do. God has chosen for us to not believe and remain moron. There's no point in even trying. I'm just going to enjoy my life now worry free. I have nothing to lose. Apparently I have already lost it all. Through no fault of my own. What can I do if God chooses to not cause me to believe? My only option would be to fake believe based on the words of strangers. That would make me a moron to be sure. You said it yourself Jason. God doesn't want me even if I want him.
Oh well. I'm going to go surfing on his waves again. Such a leech. If God doesn't like it he can blow me hard. You know, all deep throat like. That's right, I'm telling God that I am going to leech off his waves, and if he doesn't like it, he can take my big long fatty deep into his throat and suck hard on it. Up yours God you fake impostor no good piece of pooh.
Wow. No lightening bolt or anything. Ha ha ha ha.
What a weak pathetic God you pray to Jason. I spit in his face and tell him to shove it, and he can do nothing.
What a loser God.
What a loser who prays to this God.
Eat my shorts God.
Still no lightening bolt.
lol
Oh look, I just started another fire with paper. Boy if ever there was a time for God to not make the paper burn, this would be it.
lol
Posted by: timmy | January 19, 2007 2:36 PM
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Uhhhhh…Puzzled, I’m not sure where you’ve been for the past two weeks or so but this has been my position since day one.
Every worldview operates from axioms. Every person alive can be questioned and reduced down to “assumptions”. Axioms, by definition, are “unprovable”. That is, they cannot be reduced any further for if they could be reduced any further than they can no longer be considered axioms. But eventually, if you keep pushing for a person to “prove” their assertions, you’ll eventually get to a point where they have to stop and can go no further. If it has no starting point, then it can have no "present" point.
The atheist/Christian debate boils down to a conflict in axioms, a conflict in presuppositions. That’s what I’m addressing, which is why questions to me about the possibilities of resurrection, how I got saved, whether or not Moses really existed, or if evolution is true or not are completely irrelevant at this point.
I’m talking axioms here.
My axiom, my starting point, is “the Bible is the Word of God”. And for an atheist to turn around and ask me to prove my axiom is a ridiculous request. You can’t PROVE axioms. That’s why they are called axioms.
So when a moron like Sam Harris comes along and says, “you’re wrong – that axiom is false”, it then becomes HIS obligation to prove it false, not mine.
HE is the one running around in public claiming that my presupposition is false and so HE is the one that should be able to demonstrate to me how it is false.
Neither he, Dawkins, Dennet or anyone else have come anywhere close to backing their claim.
Instead what they do is take conclusions reached from their axiom and pit them against conclusions reached from my axiom and try to argue from there. And this method merely begs the question and never addresses the real issue.
“Like, Duh”… it’s a no brainer that his conclusion that people can’t walk on water collides with my conclusion that they can. No schit Sherlock. We can go all day long and argue conclusions from each worldview and show they can’t be reconciled. My five year can figure that out. What Harris needs to do is stick with logically refuting the axiom and he has not done so. Yet he parades around as some genius with something important to say against Christianity. HA!
On the other hand, the empiricist axiom (which feeds atheism) has been demolished time and time again. Greg Bahnsen has done it. Gordon Clark has done it. And I have yet to see a serious atheist respond to it successfully.
In fact, the atheists at the Univ. of California in Irvine were absolutely embarrassed when Bahnsen man-handled Gordon Stein.
It has been demonstrated time and time again that given the axiom of empiricism, not only can you not have some knowledge, but you can have NO knowledge at all.
Without even mentioning a word from the Bible, empiricism can be demonstrated as leading to complete non-sense, as has been demonstrated here in little pieces, ie. saying that we cannot be certain of the law of contradiction.
Puzzled, that’s fine if you want to surrender your life to Zeus or the Flying Spaghetti Monster, but let’s see how far you can go in constructing a logically coherent worldview. Furthermore, merely mocking Christianity with a pasta God does not prove Christianity wrong. As I said before, mocking is what happens when immature brats have no answer.
Lastly, even if I granted that my argument is circular (which I don’t), circular reasoning IS in fact formally VALID because the conclusion necessarily follows from the premises. Read any book on deductive logic and they will point this out. Does that then make the Bible “meaningless”? NO! How so?
How is telling us our origins, our purpose in life, our future, etc. “meaningless”? It’s not. Instead, what you mean to say is, “it has meaning, but I don’t like it.”
That’s the bottom line here Puzzled. You can’t argue against God. You have no “proof” that He doesn’t exist. You have not demonstrated any fallacious thinking behind a Scriptural worldview.
You just don’t like it. And you are under His wrath/judgment because you can offer no “reason” to not like it.
Instead, you’ll join the rest of the Pastafarians who can find no legitmate excuse either and resort to mocking Him, which does nothing more than reveal the hatred you have had of Him all along.
I await your excuse.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 19, 2007 2:15 PM
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Timmy the Grand Wizard Moron says, "Bertrand Russell is an empiricist. His conclusion on inductive reasoning is based on empirical evidence observed by an empiricist. It can't be trusted."
that is what i have been saying this whole time. You cannot trust the empirical system that Russell or any other atheist lays out for us.
It is unreliable, contradictory and utterly bankrupt in constructing a worldview.
And he's Sam Harris' hero....hmmmm...
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 19, 2007 12:37 PM
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Timmy the Grand Wizard Moron says, "You say you believe in God because God causes you to believe.
Well since he doesn't cause us to believe, we can not be morons for not believing."
try again Timmy. If God does not cause you to believe it is because He wants you to remain a moron.
A nutcase can deny his own existence, deny logic, deny that others exist, deny the existence of the straight-jacket that has him locked up - his denial of these things and WHY he denies them still doesn't change the fact that he's a nutcase and needs help.
The response it should invoke is that you are completely at the mercy of God and therefore should deny your self-righteous and call upon Him for mercy.
instead, you choose to remain a moron.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 19, 2007 12:30 PM
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Thanks for finally admitting that you stated an axiom ("The Bible is the word of God") as the basis for your worldview. So your "belief" is just an assumption you made. But your assumption is based on the bible saying that this axiom is correct (Apostle Paul and others). It made sense to you intuitively (gut feeling, revelation, whatever). I get it, and if you would have said that is the case I would not have wasted my time explaining to you (patiently, I might add) that your position has nothing to do with "logic" (unless you call circular reasoning logic). Well,... I guess circular reasoning is "logical". If X = Y, then Y = X (and while we're at it, X = X and Y = Y, too). What can be more certain than that? Quite "true" and quite meaningless.
Let's say I told you I believe that Zeus is real because it is written in a "holy book". The obvious question would be how you can give any credence to that "holy book". Of course if I told you it is because on the first page (and in other selected pages therein) it says that "this book is the true word of Zeus, lord of this world" you'd believe me? Even one of the key scribes of this holy book, St. Zaul, eloquently wrote about how Zeus' thunderbolts have brought salvation to all humanity, if we only believe and surrender ourselves to his lightning charge.
The thing that you believe and the thing that "causes" you to have reason to believe are one and the same (i.e., cause and effect are same). That's called circular reasoning, and it tells us nothing.
Of course you'll say it's blasphemy since Zeus is not real, while YHWH is. What gives your bible such a hallowed place? If you cannot say without once again referring to the very source that claims to be holy, then you cannot escape circular reasoning. It follows that you must show some reason indepedent of the bible to say "this is why I believe" to be able to demonstrate to others the "logic" of your conviction. If you cannot and as a result lash out by name-calling and demeaning people only reveals your self-contradiction (i.e., "I truly 'believe' in God's love, but refuse to live my own life according to that love").
Posted by: Puzzled | January 19, 2007 3:21 AM
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Jason,
Bertrand Russell is an empiricist. His conclusion on inductive reasoning is based on empirical evidence observed by an empiricist. It can't be trusted. You have no logic Jason. Your argument is a paradox.
"Timmy, i would like for you to scroll up this page and find one quote where i said that atheists can not understand truth?"
Okay. How about your very first post:
"Truth is found in the Scriptures alone; the Bible has a monopoly on truth. It is God’s Word that must be believed, not the experiments of men."
How exactly does this not state clearly that an atheist can never know the truth. How does this not state that Bertrand Russell, as an atheist can not be believed. He doesn't know God. He doesn't quote the scriptures. You buy what this moron is saying?
And then base your whole argument on it?
You are a paradox Jason.
The very definition.
Posted by: timmy | January 19, 2007 1:56 AM
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Can anyone prove that Jason is not a put-on — or better yet a product of Harris' imagination?
Jason (in the unlikely event you're for real): The irony is that literalists (for whom I gather you claim to speak) really have no respect for scripture. The truth of scripture is not revealed by reading it literally. Revealing the secrets of evolution is God's way of warning modern readers against literal interpretation.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 19, 2007 1:45 AM
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I don't want you to go anywhere Jason.
You are one of my favorite sources of entertainment. And free no less. You base your whole argument on the words of a moron.
Plus, you have set us all free. We don't have to worry about a thing thanks to you.
You say you believe in God because God causes you to believe.
Well since he doesn't cause us to believe, we can not be morons for not believing.
Unless you think that there is another reason to believe, like, just because you and Paul say so.
We are off the hook.
Not morons at all. In fact we would be impostors and morons if we had faith without God causing us to.
So until God causes us to believe, we aren't missing out on anything. If God does exist, he has predetermined that we are not worthy of Heaven for some reason. That is why he has not bothered to cause us to believe. We're doomed anyway. We can just live our happy atheist empirical lives and not worry a bit.
You said it yourself Jason. The only reason to believe in God is because God causes you to. So if he doesn't, you should definitely not believe.
Posted by: timmy | January 19, 2007 1:40 AM
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Timmy the Grand Wizard Moron, congrats - you've graduated.
Timmy, i would like for you to scroll up this page and find one quote where i said that atheists can not understand truth?
Find it for me. I'll save you some time. You won't.
You are a moron not because the Bible is hard for you to understand but because you simply don't like it.
When atheists point out that the law of contradiction is necessary to function, then they are right on the money. When the atheist Daniel Dennet, for example, says that rejecting the law of contradiction makes one a "vegetable", he was right. When Bertrand Russell recognized the problem of induction arriving at certainty, he was right on the money.
But what makes [made] both these men morons/fools is that they would rather embrace the logical inconsistencies empiricism leads to rather than embraced the "general principles" of God.
Timmy, when a person calls a ball a ball and a non-ball at the same time, you've given up sanity. That's what it means to be insane.
You've heard the saying though: even a dead clock is right twice during the day.
I never said atheists can't get things right. But again, what makes them morons is the absurdities they will embrace in order to avoid being wrong, i.e. deny the law of the contradiction (as our certified moron Andy Ross has done and/or call inductive reasoning valid.
You call that "reasonable" because you have redefined what it means to be "reasonable". The dictionaries call that "insanity".
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 19, 2007 1:25 AM
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Timmy the Moron,
I don't know who made you king of the thread here, but this is not an "atheist thread". The thread started, you remember, from an article from Sam Harris. You know, the guy that wants to stamp out Christianity altogether, says we are idiots and the like, and thinks empiricism can account for ethics, logic, and so on. The guy that says we're idiots for not accepting the certainty of evolution.
So, i presented just five of a few problems i have with empiricism. That's why i came here.
And no, you have not admitted to being a moron. You have not admitted to the complete insanity your presuppositions logically lead to.
And so i will keep pointing them out. I'm not going anywhere.
(:
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 19, 2007 1:06 AM
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Said Jason,
" In the meantime, go read some Bertrand Russell (he's an atheist by the way) and brush up on some logic and inductive reasoning."
You really are funny Jason. Now I know that you are not even serious. Who could take such a character seriously.
Jason has based his whole argument on Bertrand Russell, who is an atheist. (By Jason's definition, A moron!)
Bertrand Russell doesn't know God, therefore he knows nothing of the truth.
Jason, your whole argument is based on the words of a man you call a moron.
Guess what that make you?
Posted by: timmy | January 19, 2007 1:02 AM
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Puzzled says, "Your belief in god's existence is based on hearsay (accounts by others) that says god exists and there is really no way around it. And then you build a sand castle on top of this foundation of hearsay and even go on to say that this sand castle is the ONLY truth.
If you admit that you just believe because it's a "gut feeling" then that is the end of it and I can respect that for what it is (your opinion). However if you insist on some logical basis for god's existence, then I have no choice but to point out that it is one heck of a logical fallacy you commit (all the while telling everyone else they are wrong). "
No "conundrum" here buddy. I've been as plain as I can be. The words that were penned by the Apostle Paul (one example) were the very words of God. I believe them to be the word of God because God causes me to believe that.
Show me the fallacy. (which is kinda laughable to begin with considering that you don't believe in any certainties)
Show me the LOGICAL fallacy with me starting with the axiom, "The Bible is the word of God" and then proceeding from their to deduce and build a worldview in which to make sense of life.
Remember, you said it was a LOGICAL FALLACY, so demonstrate it to me. No more stupid questions and ridiculous assertions about "gut feeling"
REVEAL THE LOGICAL FALLACY TO ME.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 19, 2007 12:55 AM
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Well JWR, i must say - you've now entered the moron category with your latest:
"I answered most of your questions (blew them out of the water, I must say..."
and then you say:
"I can't say I understand your "law of induction""
hahaha...you have got to be kidding me? right? seriously Mr. Higher Education...the problem of empiricism and induction has been the meat of my posts since day one and now your telling me that you're not familiar with the problem?
And you wonder why i don't entertain your fifty questions about atoms and speed of light or whatever the heck else you pulled out of your butt.
lol. Dude, I'm done with you. Bookmark my site and email me when you are ready for a debate. In the meantime, go read some Bertrand Russell (he's an atheist by the way) and brush up on some logic and inductive reasoning.
sheeeeshhh.
ps. asking me 50 questions is not a "debate". I do understand now why you resorted to that - you had no idea why induction is a problem and so you attempted to steer us down a rabbit trail.
nice try. "C" for effort.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 19, 2007 12:46 AM
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Whenever you find questions that perhaps make you uncomfortable, you avoid them by changing the subject. If you have objections to the term "natural laws" I can even concede (for argument's sake) to call them "empirical (observed) regularities" but that still does not allow you to side-step the conundrum:
Your belief in god's existence is based on hearsay (accounts by others) that says god exists and there is really no way around it. And then you build a sand castle on top of this foundation of hearsay and even go on to say that this sand castle is the ONLY truth.
If you admit that you just believe because it's a "gut feeling" then that is the end of it and I can respect that for what it is (your opinion). However if you insist on some logical basis for god's existence, then I have no choice but to point out that it is one heck of a logical fallacy you commit (all the while telling everyone else they are wrong).
Posted by: Puzzled | January 19, 2007 12:05 AM
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Jason,
I'll be glad to accept your challenge when I return home from deployment. Until then, I simply don't have the time or the bandwidth.
Until then, it is amusing seeing you continue to refuse to answer the questions I pose to you. I answered most of your questions (blew them out of the water, I must say -- especially your insipid arguments about science and repeatability and observation -- you're being strangely silent about them now, I see. We see right thru you....)
I can't say I understand your "law of induction" or 'law of contradiction". (Funny, these "laws" weren't mentioned in Physics 202 -- perhaps it's in the Creationist book of Physics? Taught at Bob Jones U?) Did you learn about the Laws of Electromagnetism there also? Law of Gravity? Laws of Thermodynamics? Please, Jason, spare us your attempts at science or engineering until you spend some time at a reputable institution of higher learning. First rule when finding oneself in a hole, Jason -- quit digging.
Why don't you simply answer the questions instead of trying to change the subject? You wouldn't be afraid to answer the questions would you Jason? You wouldn't be afraid of being exposed as a 'moron' would you? (By the way -- there are other words you could use -- cretin, imbecile, idiot, feebleminded person -- besides 'moron'. Recommend investing in a thesaurus.)
You wanted a debate. You're getting a debate. You're hiding from the questions. Thus, the logical conclusion is that you really don't want a debate with equals...you want one either with someone you can intimidate, or someone with less education than you that you can confuse with fancy terminology. Not playing that game. You've had your chance. If you really want to continue this conversation, answer the questions.
JWR
Posted by: Anonymous | January 18, 2007 10:27 PM
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What do you want us to admit Jason?
I'm pretty sure we've already done it.
Haven't we?
You just don't like the fact that after we admit what you want us to admit, we then say"
Well so what?
We've heard your statement that God is truth.
We don't believe you.
You don't care to try and convince us of that and I understand why.
What more do you want?
This is an atheist thread Jason.
We're not buying what you're selling.
Not even the other believers are buying what you're selling.
Not one single person on this thread has ever come even close to buying what you are selling
You are the loneliest Christian I have ever witnessed.
There isn't anyone who has ever posted here who has had less to offer this discussion than you.
What do you want us to admit Jason?
Empiricism can provide no certainty?
Done
God it truth?
Not Done. Never will be done.
Anything else?
Seriously. Anything?
Posted by: timmy | January 18, 2007 10:00 PM
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Puzzled says, "This escapes his imagination as it is so far outside the natural laws as we know it."
STOP RIGHT THERE.
You have not proven that there are any NATURAL LAWS to begin with! That's the whole point.
You sling the idea around as if it were some given but you can prove none of it.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 18, 2007 7:54 PM
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More dribble from Timmy the Moron. Timmy, this has got to be one of the most absurd from you yet.
I AM pushing Jesus on the world. However, that is not the same thing as trying to convince you that He exists. My task as an apologist for Christianity is to simply proclaim the truth of what is and what is is what God declares it to be - that Christ Jesus has been established as King over all nations. That is a truth that I proclaim to all, unashamedly. However, whether you or any one else accept that truth or not is non of my biz. God may or may not have decreed that you embrace the truth. I can’t control that. No amount of begging is going to change what God has decreed, but that does not stop me from proclaiming to the world what is in fact true.
You say, “We are not saying that "the Bible is wrong". We are saying that there is no reason to believe that it is right.” Which is just another one of your ambiguous statements to avoid any real accountability. Timmy, if you’re not saying the Bible is wrong and there is no reason to believe it is right, then leave the freaking board because you have absolutely ZILCH to contribute to this discussion.
You say, “You don't have to prove that God exists. But if you want us to believe you when you tell us that he does, you need to give us good reason to believe you, just like you'd need to give us good reason to believe in a flying spaghetti monster.” I’ve already told you the reason for my belief. God caused me to believe. I can’t be any plainer. And as far as the FSM is concerned, I’m actually glad that is being used as a comeback because it reveals that you have NO answer to Christianity other than to mock it. You know what “mock” means, right? You imitate Christianity and then deride it. That’s all you poor saps have going for you.
It’s like when I challenge a guy to prove his continual assertion that 2+2 really equals five. I say, “Prove it!” After a few seconds of silence, he responds talking out of his nose in a nerdy, high pitched voice, “Prove it”. I respond, “Stop acting childish and prove your assertion.” He comes back talking thru the nose again, “Stop acting childish and prove your assertion.”
That’s what losers do who have no answers do: mock. It’s not a comeback Timmy, it is a sign of defeat.
You say, “We are all well aware that empiricism is flawed. But it gets us all though life just fine.”
Hmmm…I have a totally different idea of “fine” then, I guess. When a grown man with a number of PhDs tells me that logic is optionable, I don’t consider that “fine”. It’s called “insanity”. When people who claim no certainties insist on the certainty that we evolved from monkeys and those who doubt it are “retards” and “idiots”, I don’t call that “fine”.
Timmy, it just reveals the low standards you have for the world. What a shame.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 18, 2007 7:48 PM
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Jason,
I don't think you are trying to convince me of anything. But I did comment that there seems to be a "big leap" in your sequence of reasoning, a kind of "hand-wavig." that you don't want to acknowledge.
You say empiricism self-destructs. I have seen no evidence of that from you. Your postings on the fallacy of observations and measurements are inherently flawed because you set up a standard that empiricism does not need to achieve for it to "work". There are statistical "certainties" that are utilized. It is not (and never has been) meant to disprove god or anything of the sort. However, making an assertion (like Dawkins) that it is not likely (i.e., the probabilities are remote) is making the point that given all we know, for a god to exist, god would have to have certain characteristics that does not seem to make sense. This escapes his imagination as it is so far outside the natural laws as we know it. And if completely outside these laws, then is god's "existence" really existence at all? Therefore, any assertions of "absolute certainty" in the existence of such a being must either (1) have not been thought through very well, or (2) have made a confession of faith and then no longer entertained any uncomforable questions.
As for religion, Christianity specifically, you set up an axiom that HAS to be true by definition and then proceed from it as if all conclusions that flow from it are true. If one cannot be certain that the bible is not true (as you asert), then neither can one be certain it is true. If you believe the bible is true because the bible tells you it is true, then how can that not be a logical fallacy?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 18, 2007 7:25 PM
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Jason,
"What i am attempting to demonstrate is the absurdity of telling me the Bible is wrong when you can't even do something as simple as measurements without error."
We're not telling you that the Bible is wrong. Christianity is telling us that the Bible is the word of God, and we don't believe you.
We are not making an assertion, we are not believing yours. We are not saying that "the Bible is wrong". We are saying that there is no reason to believe that it is right.
You don't have to prove that God exists.
But if you want us to believe you when you tell us that he does, you need to give us good reason to believe you, just like you'd need to give us good reason to believe in a flying spaghetti monster.
If you are not pushing Jesus on us, we have no quarrel with you. By reading Dawkins, and Harris, you are listening in on the conversation between them and the many many Christians who are trying to push their view of the world on others. You should take no offense if you are not one of those.
We are all well aware that empiricism is flawed. But it gets us all though life just fine. If you want us to believe otherwise, we will require good reason to do so. If you want me to believe that the paper might not burn one day, you need to give me good reason to believe that. You have no interest in attempting to give us good reason to believe otherwise, and I understand why.
So I'm really not sure what battle it is that you are looking for?
I haven't heard anyone deny that empiricism is flawed.
You got something better?
Posted by: timmy | January 18, 2007 7:00 PM
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Puzzled says, "I think we agree that there are errors in measurement. What I cannot understand is how do you go from this (errors in measurement) to "therefore only the bible is right"?
I'm not trying to convince you the bible is right. i never said i could prove it to you. that's not my job.
What i am attempting to demonstrate is the absurdity of telling me the Bible is wrong when you can't even do something as simple as measurements without error.
What i am attempting to demonstrate is the absurdity of calling someone like me "irrational" when that same person will redefine logic and make the "law of contradiction" a tool we "can take or leave" in order to justify their own presuppositions.
What i am attempting to demonstrate is the absurdity of telling me there are no certainties, yet that same person is "certain" the Bible can't be true.
What i am attempting to demonstrate is that at some point even atheists can only "prove" things so far and they eventually can be reduced to, what Russell called, "general principles" of which they must assume (or take a "leap of faith") whatever you want to call it; thereby making the atheist a hypocrite in insisting that i have to "prove" my "general principle".
What i am attempting to demonstrate is that the battle is fruitless when arguing over conclusions reached by one worldview against conclusions reached by another. (like whether a man can walk on water or not) the battle is not over conclusions but over "general principles" or what Clark called, "axioms". And what i am attempting to demonstrate is that the axiom of "empiricism" self-destructs. Forget Christianity, for the moment...empiricism gets us nowhere.
This is where i want to battle and none have joined me.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 18, 2007 4:55 PM
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Jason,
My apologies. I misread (and I thought there might be hope for you after all...).
But the other question, I think, is still valid? Are there passages where Jesus demeans "sinners" or passages where Jesus condemns, for instance, homosexuals as sinners?
As for question #1, I thought you asked that we talk about that question first. You have a very black and white view of the world, don't you? But accuracy in measurement is relative. By way of analogy, it is a matter of how many decimal points to look at (or, at point do we round up?). The level of accuracy that is required is different for what we want to achieve.
There are inevitably errors in measurement. The proper response is to improve our measurement instruments, not to give up the attempt. If you can shoot a high percentage in basketball, do you practice to get better or do you say "I cannot be 100%, so I'll stop playing"?
I think we agree that there are errors in measurement. What I cannot understand is how do you go from this (errors in measurement) to "therefore only the bible is right"? There are measurement errors when we shoot rockets into space, but there are no errors in reading an ancient text and trying to apply it to 21st century life?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 18, 2007 2:28 PM
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Timmy the Moron says, "The message of Jesus was so powerful because he led by example."
really Timmy? and who exactly is this "Jesus" you are talking about? I know it is not the one in the Gospels, so who is He? What book are you reading from? Or is this some imaginary friend you've made up?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 18, 2007 2:20 PM
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Said Anonymous,
"Yet without the Church, no one ever would have heard of Jesus' teachings or even imagined following His example."
The church? Which church? You mean the church in general?
Actually Christianity was a religion long before the "church" and it may very well have spread and lived as a group of people dedicated to following the example of Jesus. Then along came the church. (AKA the Romans and the counciil of Nicea) This is the day that Christianity died and the marriage of church and state arose. Christianity ceased to be an homage to the lord and became a device for wealth gathering and human mind control.
Said Anonymous:
"Does separating oneself from the communion and companionship of those who share that desire make one any more likely to succeed?"
No.
But separating oneself from the church will.
Keep the companionship. Keep the love and charity. But tell the emperor (oops, I mean the Pope. Same thing) to go to Hell.
Bill Mahr had the best line about this. He said they should change their name from "Christians" to "Christ Likes".
This would remind Christians what they're really supposed to be about. Don't command others to follow the doctrine of Christianity. Be Christ Like, and lead by example.
The message of Jesus was so powerful because he led by example. Christianity would take over the world in one generation if all 2 billion Christians started leading by example.
But don't hold your breath. Too many churches preaching that your new second home that you just acquired in the Hamptons is a blessing from Jesus. Thanks Jesus, for our new swimming pool.
Okay I have to go throw up now.
Attention all 2 billion Christians.
If you lead by example?
You win.
the world will convert.
Christ wins.
We all win.
Too bad that will never happen.
The church began to tear true Christianity appart 1700 years ago. They are only a couple of generations away from destroying it completely. Keep it up. You're doing a better job than the atheists.
Posted by: timmy | January 18, 2007 1:37 PM
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Puzzled says, "And Jason, I am glad that you "believe in" evolution"
What Jason actually said, "No, i don't believe in evolution."
Must be that denial of the law of contradiction at work. ::rollseyes::
here, let's make it easier:
See Dick run.
See Jane jump.
See Spot sit.
JWR,
You say, "Let's see -- you threw down the gauntlet by asking me about your questions. I answered them, quite articulately I think'
Actually, you didn't. You entirely skipped over the problem of induction and whether or not asserting the consequent is a fallacy and moved on to asking me 100 questions. plurium interrogationum.
Furthermore, your so-called attempt at (1) fails miserably.
And what is so sad in all of this is that atheists like Bertrand Russell will point this stuff out to you all day long.
Have you read "Problems with Philosophy" by Russell?
Have you read where he questions whether or not we can even truly know what a table is? Have you read his chapter on the problem with induction?
JWR, go read some more and then come back and challenge me.
Furthermore, questions are not objections and anyone can ask questions.
taking your lead, here's my response to you, "well...well...what about armpits? huh? Why does armpit hair smell? Do you know...huh...huh...do ya?"
That's not a challenge. In fact, I'm convinced that you don't even know what the challenge is, which is why you and others have to go down these rabbit trails and ask questions about things that have ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with my original post.
Tell ya what JWR. Let's do this:
Let's have a written debate. Let's agree on a topic, a few rules, and let's do a debate.
I'll post it on my site, email it out, advertise it like crazy. My site averages around 10,000 hits a day. Not a monster, but not bad for a nobody in Florida either.
so let's do it. in fact, unless it's just complete irrelevant to anything, I'll even let you pick the topic.
what say you?
Posted by: Jason bradfield | January 18, 2007 10:58 AM
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"Yet it seems so many who profess they want to follow Jesus' teachings are so intolerant. That is my biggest objection to some religions..."
Yes, as they say, the problem with Christianity is that it's never been tried. Churches are full of hypocrites, myself included. Yet without the Church, no one ever would have heard of Jesus's teachings or even imagined following His example. Does separating oneself from the communion and companionship of those who share that desire make one any more likely to succeed?
As for your other question, Jesus "treats" everyone exactly the same: He calls us to conversion, repentance and holiness. As for sexual morality specifically, He spoke quite clearly of the intrinsic dignity of husband and wife becoming one flesh according to God`s plan for creation.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 18, 2007 8:03 AM
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Maybe I can answer that question: the bible was written by a bunch of people who believed in god and through this belief (i.e., inspired by faith) wrote what was in their hearts. So for someone more than 2000 years ago to believe that god created the heavens and the earth in 6 days and then rested may be consistent with the state of knowledge at the time. All it's saying is "I believe god created everything." It is a statement of belief not fact. Without conceding this point, religious fanatics are forced to take on science with no real knowledge of science in the mistaken belief that parts of Genesis was really an ancient version of a science textbook. That really has to stop since it's not helping anyone.
And Jason, I am glad that you "believe in" evolution, even if you have not seen any evidence of transitory fossils. But the more important question for someone like you may be this: how would Jesus treat homosexuals? What do the gospels say?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 18, 2007 5:09 AM
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A quote, from Jason Bradfield:
"Seriously, i think it may be time for me to leave and find some more "Bright" people who have better reading comprehension and affirm the use of logic to spar with. You guys are a joke."
----
Let's see -- you threw down the gauntlet by asking me about your questions. I answered them, quite articulately I think. I challenge you with questions of my own. You belittle my questions...which leads me to believe the real issue is, you are either afraid to answer them (to expose your gross ignorance of even junior-high level science -- wait a minute, you've already accomplished that, with your 'treatise' on water (not boiling at the same temperature) in your very first post) AND/OR you realize you can't respond.
---
Let's revisit, shall we?
Here's the actual question I asked: Why does the Bible contain no advanced mathematical concepts or fundamentals of physics? Why did we have to wait for Sir Isaac Newton to come along to invent calculus? Why aren't designs for a fusion reactor included in Deuteronomy along with the exhortations to stone to death all infidels, fornicators, and homosexuals? Why wasn't there a discussion on the germ theory of disease included that would have spared so many people in the past (including many children) the agony of dying from diseases such as the Black Plague -- not to mentioned the lifelong heartsickness of their parents. Surely discussions of germ theory and disease prevention would have been more in line with the teachings of a loving God...right?
---
And here's your response:
"Furthermore, NOT ONE TIME did i ever insist that the Bible has answers concerning calculus, germ theories, and the like...NOT ONE TIME. I will mail you a $100 check if you can find the quote where i did.
Not one time did i ever insist that science is NOT USEFUL. Again, find me the quote."
----
Jason, I never said that you said the Bible has answers regarding calculus, physics, etc. (Stop trying to change the subject -- we see right through you.) I was simply asking, as Sam Harris did, as to why a book that was the product of an omniscient being doesn't have material like this inside. Or even better, to quote Mr. Harris directly:
"Why doesn't the Bible say anything about electricity, or DNA...what about a cure for cancer?...Why aren't these pages, or even anything remotely like them, found in the Bible? Good, pious people are dying horribly from cancer at this very moment, and many of them are children. The Bible is a very big book. God had room to instruct us in great detail about how to keep slaves and sacrifice a wide variety of animals."
=======
Care to answer that, Jason? Or is it yet another question from yet another "moron"?
The point is....you do not and you cannot understand the Intentions ('Mind' - for lack of a better word) of the Creator when He/It created the universe -- and yet you (and the fundamentalists like you -- Christian, Muslim, and Jewish) claim to have special insight that none of the rest of us 'poor, misguided heathens' have as to God's Intentions and to what his Word actually is...even in the face of mountains of scientific evidence. Worse, many Muslims believe that their supposedly divinely inspired instruction book exhorts them to kill everyone who does not believe...or stops believing....
You're not fooling anyone, Jason, except maybe yourself. You are afraid to answer the questions because of their implications. Why don't you just admit it? And you have the nerve to call Puzzled a 'cowardly lion'?
You see, Jason, there are still a few of us out there that, rather than ignoring bullies and people that attempt to browbeat or intimidate others who 'dare' to question them, actually are not afraid of the bullies and will engage them and will challenge them. Thus, I'm not surprised by your behavior.
Is this 'lovey-dovey' enough for you?
JWR
Posted by: Anonymous | January 18, 2007 3:28 AM
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Ted,
Here's the source:
www.trinityfoundation.org
Never claimed it was my own.
Furthermore, do me a favor and spend a few days over there and come back, so that you'll at least have somewhat of an idea of what the heck we're talking about.
progressive decline? yes, that happens when you start hanging with morons.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 18, 2007 1:09 AM
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Teddy says, "(1) I imagine that Mr Bradfield would agree that Science's important role in religion would be in PROVIDING SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE of religion's truth--until then, evidence will not be considered evidence."
uuhhh...nope....try again.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 18, 2007 1:04 AM
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Apologies for my late entrance to the dialogue:
From 12/26/06 (or there abouts) from Mr Bradfield:
"Science has its place in a Christian philosophy, an important place. But science is never to be seen as a means of learning truth. Truth is found in the Scriptures alone; the Bible has a monopoly on truth....As Robbins has said: "Science is false, and MUST always be false. Scripture is true and MUST always be true."
(1) I imagine that Mr Bradfield would agree that Science's important role in religion would be in PROVIDING SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE of religion's truth--until then, evidence will not be considered evidence.
(2) I capitalized the words 'must', in lieu of italics, to emphasize what I imagine would be the plaintive tone of Mr Bradfield's voice were he speaking these words. Science probably MUST be false to him, lest the house of cards, and by cards I mean his fragile psyche, begin to tumble...
(3) Judging from the progressive decline in Mr Bradfield's posts in both syntax and content, I suspect that the initial post was plagarised, in part or in whole, from some unwitting, dimwitted, source. I doubt that anyone who truly understands Bertrand Russell would then subsequently remark "[a]nyone can respond the way you did. I retard can sign in and ask a million questions," or, worse yet, "[i]’m fed up with queers running around telling me that sticking their you know what up each other’s b-hole is a 'natural.'"
(4) In addition to a "monopoly on truth," religion also apparently holds a monopoly on irony, as well as one on the crystal methamphetamine/male prostitute market in the Greater Salt Lake City region.
Posted by: Teddy Huxtable | January 18, 2007 12:32 AM
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Jason,
Do you believe that homo erectus existed?
Or is this a fraud?
Posted by: Anonymous | January 17, 2007 5:23 PM
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Jason,
I do not doubt that you find the scientific method useful since you live in the modern world and to deny the benefits would simply be an untenable position. The reason that I (and I suspect many others) ask questions of you is this: you say that teh scientific method has its flaws, but then turn around and say that THEREFORE we must accept the bible as the only way to the TRUTH, however that is defined. It is on the one hand baffling that someone who seems to have thought about such things quite a bit suddenly makes a leap of faith that cannot be explained by logic, except by saying "God is Logic" and I wonder if there is also some fascination there too... I've never spoken to real fanatics before coming to this forum.
You also seem to be trying really hard to compensate for something. Having doubts and saying so is an honest thing, and I would even go so far as to say it is a brave thing to do, as it opens oneself up to attack from both sides. Just because someone goes "all in" does not necessarily indicate bravery but rather recklessness (and an unwillingness to confront uncomfortable facts or ideas).
I could go on and tell you in what way the five points you made are merely cynical (and incomplete) caricatures of what you think is the scientific method, and perhaps reflect a poor grasp of the subject matter you question. I also posted something about the nonsensical notion of "absolute" certainty that you seem so enamored of. I will not repeat myself (and let the previous postings speak for themselves), but I will just ask you to consider this one last point:
Just as background information, I have gone to church all my life and I have had doubts since a teenager, but only recently have I started to seriously question this. I did not take time to think as I was busy with more practical matters in front of me, such as my own schoolwork and starting my career. So at the moment I see my self as being in a kind of transition mode.
But, as a one-time believer who still wants to believe in the goodness of people (or at least that most people want to do good), I ask this: If you have truly confessed your sins and have accepted Jesus as your savior, then is this all that is needed for you to have salvation (as you confidently asserted)? Growing up as a Presbyterian, I was taught as a child by my pastor (and my parents) that if you believe, then it has to change you, ie, make you a "better person." Did faith make you better (and more importantly) does it drive you to seek to become better, that is, emulate Jesus' teachings better, such as caring for the poor and downtrodden? I see passages where some bible authors seem to condemn "sinners" but Jesus seemed to be quite the opposite: he seemed to make it a point to associate with those that others would keep at a distance.
An example: If a bigot accepts Jesus as his savior, then shouldn't he no longer be a bigot (having overcome this problem by striving to emulate Jesus)? Yet it seems so many who profess they want to follow Jesus' teachings are so intolerant. That is my biggest objection to some religions (or more accurately, some sects of religions). Perhaps I am holding believer to too high a standard? If you think this is unfair, answer my question (2) to anonymous above.
I am not asking you to answer this question to me on this forum as it is a matter of personal faith. But perhaps you should ask this question of yourself. At any rate, what I am doing is to challenge your assertion that you "know" what the truth is when it seems you do not talk the talk (nor, it seems from what you tell me, walk the walk). I find your "logic" to be a curious thing. It has this magical quality of being whatever you say it is, but hardly consistent with what you claim is TRUTH (ie, Jesus' teachings).
Posted by: Puzzled | January 17, 2007 2:03 PM
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NavynukeCDR,
How old are you? 15? 17? I have already stated here that I am not going to play this game of answering 100 questions.
Anyone can respond the way you did. I retard can sign in and ask a million questions.
Furthermore, NOT ONE TIME did i ever insist that the Bible has answers concerning calculus, germ theories, and the like...NOT ONE TIME. I will mail you a $100 check if you can find the quote where i did.
Not one time did i ever insist that science is NOT USEFUL. Again, find me the quote.
No, instead, here was the quote from the original post: "Science is useful in accomplishing its purpose, i.e., subduing the Earth. But that is all it is useful for, nothing more."
You don't even understand what the freakin issues are....and you wonder why i don't answer your questions.
Scroll back up and read some more.
And i see our cowardly lion, Puzzled, is back. No, i don't believe in evolution.
But here's the thing. If ya'll knew how to read, you would understand that the reason i brought that up was concerning Dawkins use of the words "idiots" and "wicked" for those who disagree with him and the fact that no one here jumps his case for being "rude", "mean", and "breaking the social contract".
How do the morons anony and Puzzled respond? they ignore the point altogether about name calling and ask me questions about evolution.
amateurs. Seriously, i think it may be time for me to leave and find some more "Bright" people who have better reading comprehension and affirm the use of logic to spar with. You guys are a joke.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 17, 2007 9:50 AM
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Mr. Bradfield -- you wouldn't be avoiding the questions, now would you?
I find it interesting that you claim to know so much about the intentions, thoughts, and designs of the Creator; I thought that since you were such an expert you could enlighten the rest of us "morons" on some of the fundamental (no pun intended) questions I raised above.
BTW -- Sam Harris makes a good point in his book: why does the Bible contain no advanced mathematical concepts or fundamentals of physics? Why did we have to wait for Sir Isaac Newton to come along to invent calculus? Why aren't designs for a fusion reactor included in Deuteronomy along with the exhortations to stone to death all infidels, fornicators, and homosexuals? Why wasn't there a discussion on the germ theory of disease included that would have spared so many people in the past (including many children) the agony of dying from diseases such as the Black Plague -- not to mentioned the lifelong heartsickness of their parents. Surely discussions of germ theory and disease prevention would have been more in line with the teachings of a loving God...right?
Is this 'lovey-dovey' enough for you?
Posted by: NavynukeCDR | January 17, 2007 3:25 AM
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How does one "believe in" evolution? It is not a religion (despite what many creationists think), just a well-established scientific theory backed by evidence.
Anonymous, I am curious to know (since you sound like a believer):
(1) How do you reconcile scientific evidence on things like the age of the universe and evolution with Genesis?
(2) How would Jesus treat homosexuals? (Does the NT specifically say that homosexuality is a sin?)
Posted by: Puzzled | January 17, 2007 1:15 AM
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Jason,
Do you not believe in evolution?
If so,
How old is the earth?
When did God create Adam and Eve? (roughly)
Was it right after all of the homos (erectus not those stinkin blasphemers) went extinct?
If you do believe in evolution, then Dawkins wasn't talking to you so you shouldn't be offended.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 16, 2007 9:15 PM
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anonymous,
I'm not playing this whole, lovey dovey game of yours.
It's amazing to me that you would have a problem with me calling atheists morons, but rarely do atheists (at least the ones i have been going back and forth with here) jump on Harris and Dawkins for doing such things.
Dawkins has said that people who don't believe in evolution are "idiots" and "wicked" and I don't hear peep from any of you people.
i call Dawkins a "moron" and "oh...stop it Jason...that's mean...you're violating the social contract..." blah, blah, blah.
What hypocrites! Anony, if you can't take the heat, then...you know the rest.
_________
Richard Dawkins:
"Well, evolution is different about this, because there are a large number of evolutionists who are also religious. You cannot be both sane and well educated and disbelieve in evolution. The evidence is so strong that any sane, educated person has got to believe in evolution. Now there are plenty of sane, educated, religious people: there are professors of theology, and there are bishops ... and so obviously they all believe in evolution or they wouldn't have gotten where they have because they would be too stupid or too ignorant."
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 16, 2007 3:18 PM
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Jason, you should be getting the help you obviously need. Not spitting anger at everyone who is, and it appears greatly, different than you. Feel the love, man. Start there, no one here wishes you harm.
Posted by: anony | January 16, 2007 12:53 PM
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Well, well, if it isn't Mr. Bradfield...
Before we start, you should know that I'm not a scientist, I'm an engineer. Slight difference, easily misconstrued by the untutored layman. I suppose I should be grateful you didn't question my patriotism as well...
--------------------------------------------------Part 1 -- where I attempt to answer your questions
As to whether observation is unreliable, it depends...on the frame of reference (are we talking Newtonian or at the subatomic/quantum level) and who or what is doing the observing. Fallible human beings are notoriously unreliable and 'unrepeatable'....however, a calibrated instrument (such as an ammeter, voltmeter, electron microscope, etc) are reliable when used as designed and can give repeatable measurements.
Now..."equations are always selected, they are never discovered." Let's take a simple example: Ohm's Law. V = IR... or voltage equals current times resistance. That law was deduced via scientific experiment and deductive reasoning....it wasn't just plucked out of thin air. And it can be repeated and confirmed independently. Take a constant voltage, apply it across varying resistors, and measure the currents. Plot the results to verify. More complex examples would be the laws governing electromagnetism and gravitation.
And no, scientific laws do not just apply only in 'ideal' situations. For example -- the law of gravity. You're not suspended in mid-air, right? There are, however, issues to account for when not in a laboratory -- frictional losses, internal resistance of a cable, inertia required to get a prime mover going, and the like.
--------------------------------------------------
Part 2 -- where I address the issues you raise
I thought I made it quite clear that I don't buy completely into the argument that there is no Creator, and that I still have some other questions -- where did all this matter come from? Who/What designed the atom? (We know how...but why?) What caused the Big Bang (i.e. why did the singularity explode to create the Universe?) I freely admit I don't have the answer, and I wonder if we will ever have the answers. Nevertheless, I thought the overarching point of my post was my agreement with Mr. Harris and Mr. Dawkins on the need to remove religion from the public, tax-financed sphere and move it back to the realm of private matters. I recognize that the Founding Fathers were (at least publicly) "God-fearing" men; yet (to me at least) the meaning of the Constitution is clear -- separation of church and state. Would you prefer we live in a theocracy? If so, who would be the supreme arbiter of truth?
And, au contraire, my life is extremely open to criticism. Professionally, that's why we have peer-reviewed publications, open scientific forums for other subject-matter experts to look for flaws, etc. As for the private sphere -- there are legitimate laws that exist to protect others from the consequences of irresponsible behavior -- I can't, for example, take my Glock out to my front yard and fire it in the air or at my tree. And, of course, the example from Missouri (of the abducted boys) make it clear that there is behavior that even in the privacy of homes is intolerable and the will of the people and power of the state as carried out by the police will intervene. However, it is the private behavior of consenting adults that is the issue I raised. Just as it is not my business how you choose to worship or who you choose to marry or what books you choose to read (or not read) in your home I don't see how it's your business to tell this grown man what I should or should not do in my home. I can't see how what the actions of two consenting adult men in Peoria or two consenting adult women in Phoenix have to do with my marriage to my wife. And, no, I don't want to see two men or two women making out in public -- I'd tell them to 'get a room', just like I would a heterosexual couple.
Do you understand the term "theory" when it applies to science and engineering? You are confusing it with its more colloquial usage by the general public to mean "an untested idea or opinion". In the scientific realm, however, "theory" refers to a well-established and verifiable explanation accounting for known facts or phenomena. Big difference. "Christian rationalism" is not a 'theory' in this sense. If you believe that Christ was resurrected and that He walked on water because the Bible says so....ok, that's your prerogative, but don't try to pass it off as scientific proof. Same thing with creationism. That's why us "secularists" don't want these items discussed in public school science classes using tax dollars -- they aren't even remotely 'science'. If you want to pull your children out of school and home-school them or put them in a Christian school -- again, that's your prerogative. My stepdaughter was pulled out of the public school and put in a Catholic one, in fact -- not because of religion, mind you, but because the public school lacked discipline and accountablity...but that's another topic for another day.
And, finally, I didn't ".. tell God how to run His biz with your ignorant rhetorical questions..". Unlike some, I don't claim to understand the mind of the Creator of the universe. I was simply asking the question as to why an omniscient, omnipotent, loving God (as Christians claim) would allow this to happen?
--------------------------------------------------
Part 3 -- where I ask (and re-ask) questions of my own..
Care to enlighten the rest of us on why God chose the model of the atom that he did? Why do electrons only occupy quantized energy states, for instance?
Why did God design elements to fit the periodic table like He did?
Why is the speed of light only 186,000 miles per second? Why not 500 million miles per second? 700 billion miles per second?
If God created us all (or caused us to be created) -- why the unreasonable hatred of homosexuals? Aren't they children of God also?
Why did God reveal himself 2000 years ago regularly...but not now, in the era of instant communication?
Also...according to the Christian faith...a deathbed conversion to Christianity (by, let's say, Stalin) would wipe out a lifetime of causing agony for millions of others, whereas someone that might have led a conventionally 'moral' life (helping the poor, building houses for Habitat for Humanity, feeding the homeless) but that was a Buddhist or Hindu would be condemned for an eternity in Hell. What kind of a God would allow something like that to happen? Why wouldn't He at least come forth and remove all doubt of His existence?
and some new ones:
Do you believe that military members should swear an oath to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic...or should we be swearing an oath to something else?
Do you believe that Muslims, Jews, etc should be able to practice the religion of their choice as they see fit in the privacy of their homes or places of worship in the US?
If all things come from God -- then why the opposition (if not from you, from so many fundamentalist Christians and Muslims and members of all religions) to opium plants, coca plants, and marijuana plants. Don't they serve a purpose (morphine for pain, marijuana for cancer victims)?
(And, no, never done them -- very incompatable with military service -- my biggest vice is Sam Adams...and a little blackjack on the side.)
Have you ever taken a math class at the level of college trigonometry or above? College-level physics? Any engineering classes at all? I can say I've read the Bible (some of it -- like Psalm 23 -- is incredibly beautiful); have you ever dipped a toe into the realm of the scientist or engineer and explore the majesty of science.
Time to go, duty calls....looking forward to your erudite response...
JWR
Posted by: NavynukeCDR | January 16, 2007 1:26 AM
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oh, and one last thing...i find these comments hilarious:
"I am a grown man, I can decide on my own what to watch, what to worship (if anything), what to drink, what to eat, what books I should read, what movies I should watch...I don't need anyone else to make that decision for me."
then:
"why would an omniscient, omnipowerful God allow a child to be abducted and raped? What kind of a God would allow something like that to happen?"
hmmmm...so that's how it works...Your life is not open for criticism yet you're going to proceed to tell me i am an idiot for believing the Bible and force evolution down my throat and then tell God how to run His biz with your ignorant rhetorical questions...
oootttaayyyy.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 15, 2007 7:43 PM
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Navynukecdr,
I’m not sure what the “debate” is here because you haven’t really said anything of value other than whine about stuff you don’t like. I can play that game too.
I’m fed up with queers running around telling me that sticking their you know what up each other’s b-hole is a “natural” given and parading that around downtowns and insisting I honor it. I’m fed up with ignoramuses who argue that homosexuality is just some “private” issue that hasn’t had any effect on others. (See “Power in the Blood” by David Chilton to forever dispel that myth) I’m fed up with scientists who on the one hand argue that science produces no “certainties” yet tell us that anyone who denies the certainty of evolution is an idiot. (Dawkins) I’m fed up with the fact a great number of kids go through 12 years of public high school and are taught empiricism from every corner and never offered an alternative theory of knowledge such as Christian rationalism. Your tax dollars were NOT used to teach me creationism as an alternative but evolution and the big bust theory, so what the heck are you whining about? I’m fed up with atheists who complain Christians not being “rational”, “logical” people but then turn right around and tell me that the law of contradiction is a law we can take or leave. I’m fed up with people who bring up crimes that Christians have committed to use as some proof against the truth of the Bible. (again, arguments by those who say they are “rational”) I’m fed up with morons who tell me that no one with any sense would believe the Bible and then turn right around and say, “but I have no idea how we got here.” I’m fed up with people who INSIST on the certainty of evolution yet can not produce ONE transitory fossil. I’m fed up with morons who think that asking a ton of questions somehow constitutes a valid argument against a position. I’m fed up with morons who instead of asking Christians like me what I think about the legalization of marijuana ASSume to think that I oppose it like other Christians they have met and then proceed from there to argue some ridiculous point with another stupid question.
See Navynukecdr, two can play this game. I have a better idea.
How about scrolling up to the top of the page and addressing the five points I raised.
1. Observation is unreliable
2. All scientific experiments commit the fallacy of asserting the consequent.
3. Science commits the fallacy of induction
4. Equations are always selected, they are never discovered.
5. All scientific laws describe ideal situations.
In fact, I’ll make it even easier on you; let’s just start with point 1.
1. Observation is unreliable
Do you believe that observation is reliable?
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 15, 2007 7:20 PM
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oops
Hear hear
is what I meant
me dumb
Posted by: timmy | January 13, 2007 8:45 PM
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Here here
Posted by: timmy | January 13, 2007 8:43 PM
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Rather than trying to convert theists our efforts, at least in the U.S., are better spent in working to maintain and strengthen the seperation of church and state.
Posted by: BD | January 13, 2007 6:58 PM
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This will be my last post on this thread.
I read the post by Navynukecdr.
Everyone is right. These are all excellent points well put.
Will any of these arguments or points help turn believers away from their faith?
Or are they just more reassuring thoughts for atheists that make us feel good.
Make us feel.... right.
We are right. We know that.
So what do we do now with this knowledge?
I know. Let's just keep on reassuring ourselves that we are right. Cause we are. And it feels good to hear other smart people say it.
Please Navunukecdr, do not take offense. You put in one post most of the very best arguments against religion and the contradictions of God that others have put in many posts over the last three weeks.
But none of these arguments have done anything but reassure ourselves of our position.
They have not swayed the believers one tiny scrap.
No progress has been made what so ever towards solving any of the problems that religion causes in our world.
I thought that others, after three weeks, would have noticed this.
Turns out none of the people on these two threads are looking for a solution. They just really enjoy this argument.
Because they are right.
And it's fun to be right.
Turning to the thought of, "what we are to do about the problem?", isn't nearly as fun as reiterating how right we are over and over again.
So many brilliant things are going to be said on these threads over the next couple of weeks.
And yet here is the sum total of what will be said.
God exists.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Yes he does.
No he doesn't
Yes he does.
No he doesn't.
Yes he does.
No He doesn't.
Notice how I ended with "No he doesn't"
And that's final.
No it isn't.
LOL
Posted by: timmy | January 13, 2007 5:38 PM
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Navynukecdr
Let me endorse what Philip Tripp said - great stuff, just post it on the other thread where you can still hope for good responses.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 13, 2007 1:53 PM
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Addendum to Navynukecdr,
Even more importantly, you should take your comments and post them on about a dozen Christian sites. I would love to see the responses from that. Man, you would ignite a firestorm of dogmatic babble over there.
In fact, if you do, let me know via this site, where you put your words. I would love to read the responses.
Pardon me for my religious exuberence in the first sentence of my last post. "Praise the Lord" was said in jest but addressed my reaction to your comments.
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 13, 2007 12:17 PM
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To Navynukecdr,
Praise the lord! Finally someone has broken this thread wide open. The title for your piece should be "Better Late Than Never". You blew me away with your intelligent questions, comments and insight into these very important subjects. Where the heck have you been all this time? On a nuclear submarine and underwater for six months? Probably. I'm glad that you finally decided to surface. Pun intended!
Your comments are excellent. I had to read your post twice to really take it all in. So many good thoughts and questions. I really wish that you would copy them and paste them over at the thread that is still active. It is also one of Sam's posts on the Washington Post like this one. It is called "Consciousness Without Faith". Please get yourself over there and drop the exact post over there.
This thread is in its death throws. The other one still has lots of readers. Unfortunately, that thread is starting to digress as well. Your comments do a wonderful job of highlighting the really big issues and gets away from all the philosophical babble that is going on over there. Its gotten to the point where I can hardly stand to read what's being written, it has become so inane.
Please, Please, before you disappear for another six months running the nuclear reactor, post your words over there. I think it will be very well received.
On this thread, your comments are going nowhere, over there, perhaps you can get every one back on track. All the best, Philip Tripp
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 13, 2007 11:47 AM
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Thanks Jason,
I'm all teary eyed. That was beautiful.
I know why you like rap. It's so.... Babbley
Anyway. I'm going surfing in the morning. It's most certainly not going to be a meaningless experience. I will be filled with the joy of life. Riding a wave is a transcendant experience.
Imagine. Me. Having a meaningfull experience on God's waves.
Such a leech.
A leech!
Posted by: timmy | January 13, 2007 1:27 AM
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merry late Christmas Timmy the Moron,
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 13, 2007 12:58 AM
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Hello everyone,
I'm new to the debate, but I must say I find it interesting...and long overdue.
Background -- I grew up Southern Baptist. Never really felt a connection to the church, though. Earned a civil engineering undergrad degree and a Master's in industrial engineering. Currently a deployed active-duty US Navy officer, with a specialty in running carrier nuclear power plants.
After the debates in TIME, I recently purchased both of Sam Harris' books, as well as "The God Delusion" by Richard Dawkins, and the book on Thestic Evolution (BioLogos) by Francis Collins (forget the name right now). All thought-provoking books.
Politically -- these books and the arguments they are making are long overdue. I am fed up with the fundamentalists attempting to make decisions for other adults -- especially in a country that was founded on the separation of church and state as one of its guiding principles. I am a grown man, I can decide on my own what to watch, what to worship (if anything), what to drink, what to eat, what books I should read, what movies I should watch...I don't need anyone else to make that decision for me. I am fed up with the fundamentalists who completely ignore scientific discoveries and proof (Fortunately, Francis Collins does not do this.) in an attempt to convince others (using our tax dollars) that the earth is 6000 years old, that the universe was created in less than a week, that Adam was created from dust (by the way...did Cain marry his sister?). I have had it with politicians who think that somehow my marriage (to a beautiful woman) is threatened by what other consenting adults do in the privacy of their own homes. I am fed up with the Catholic hierarchy that feels it is more important to protect the priests rather than the children they molested. I am amazed that we (in the Western world) continue to cave in (worldwide) to the Muslim fundamentalists whom are very clear on their aims to create an Islamic caliphate via the sword, gun, etc. I am tired of the apologists for the tremendous atrocities of fundamentalist Muslims -- especially the Taliban. I could go on for hours..fortunately, however, Sam Harris addresses much of these issues in his books. I was pleased to see that he did not (as I expected) take the 'wacko Left' POV so prevalent (i.e. the current Administration is responsible for every evil in the world..) and instead looked at the issues from a neutral point of view and criticized idiotic behavior at all ends of the political spectrum. What a refreshing change -- instead of agreeing (no matter what) with one political party or the other, he applies a uniform standard. Bravo!
In terms of the existence (or non-existance) of God/The Creator...I have to say that...I guess for me the answer (or Answer) is that I don't know for sure. I certainly don't agree with the literal reading of the Bible -- I don't see how anyone reasonable could. I can't believe I live in a country where people actually believe the earth is only 6000 years old. I can't believe I live in a country where people actually allow children to die while 'praying' for them to get better rather than get medical treatment. I agree that the scientific evidence for evolution is overwhelming, as is the scientific evidence for the creation of the universe, etc. However....it seems to me to strain credulity to consider that every ounce of matter in the universe was at one time (at the instant of the Big Bang) confined to an infinitely dense singularity less than the size of the head of a pin. Perhaps it's my feeble mind, but I just can't see how the mass of the earth could be compressed to such a degree....and the earth is a grain of sand compared to the Sun...which itself is a grain of sand in the Milky Way...which is one of millions of galaxies. Furthermore...dark matter? Dark energy? I know that once we get down to the atomic level and quantum mechanics the Newtonian world is left behind...and in the realm of sub-atomic particles (quarks, muons, mesons, etc) all common sense departs....but I just can't buy into this invisible 'dark matter'. Also, how can science explain Beethoven....or AC/DC...or U2...or Guns N' Roses (the 1987 version)...or Shakespeare...or the Sistine Chapel...or the sculpture of David? Also...Something had to have created the universe...right? Who or What created the atoms that make us up? Who designed the atoms to work like they do and to form molecules? For instance...what a fabulous invention water is. Combine the two gases Hydrogen and Oxygen to get....a liquid (at room temperature and pressure. By the way, Jason, pure water always boils at 212F/100C at 1 atmosphere of pressure. Raise the pressure -- raise the boiling point -- such as in a pressurized-water reactor plant. Lower the pressure, lower the boiling point -- as in a typical shipboard distilling unit. You really should acquire some knowledge of science before speaking of scientific or engineering issues....else you run the risk of coming across as a buggering fool. While we're at it, Jason -- since you seem to know so much about why God designed the natural universe to work the way He did - care to enlighten the rest of us on why God chose the model of the atom that he did? Why do electrons only occupy quantized energy states, for instance? Why did God design elements to fit the periodic table like He did? Why is the speed of light only 186,000 miles per second? Why not 500 million miles per second? 700 billion miles per second? Also...if God designed and allowed marijuana and opium plants to bloom, He must have had a reason for doing so, right? So why the opposition to them? If God created us all (or caused us to be created) -- why the unreasonable hatred of homosexuals? Aren't they children of God also? I didn't 'choose' to be attracted to women -- I simply AM attracted to women. Do you think that homosexual men honestly 'choose' to be attracted to other men? I don't understand why they do it (not with women like Kate Beckinsale, Ashley Judd, Linda Stouffer (of CNN), Scarlett Johannson, and practically every Italian woman around), but it doesn't affect my life or marriage in the slightest. Also (as Sam Harris states) why would an omniscient, omnipowerful God allow a child to be abducted and raped? If you know so much about God, Jason, then please enlighten the rest of us poor mortals...
At the same time, ...why did God reveal himself 2000 years ago regularly...but not now, in the era of instant communication? Surely, if God appeared in the noon sky of NYC...or at a Presidential news conference for all of us to see and be in awe of, then there would be no doubt. So why doesn't He appear that way? Also...according to the Christian faith...a deathbed conversion to Christianity (by, let's say, Stalin) would wipe out a lifetime of causing agony for millions ofothers, whereas someone that might have led a conventionally 'moral' life (helping the poor, building houses for Habitat for Humanity, feeding the homeless) but that was a Buddhist or Hindu would be condemned for an eternity in Hell. (Eternity is a long time....think of a trillion years to the trillionth power. Still not a drop in the bucket compared to Eternity.) What kind of a God would allow something like that to happen? Why wouldn't He at least come forth and remove all doubt of His existence?
I don't mind saying that it is difficult for me to resolve the issues above in a neat, coherent package. I don't know that we can ever know this side of death. Is the soul a product merely of brain synapse firing...or is it Divinely granted. I can't say. What I can say is that I agree most strongly with Sam Harris -- it is long overdue for religion to once again be a private matter and be kept out of public policy. Religous fundamentalism and intolerence is by far the biggest threat to world peace -- most notably by those that practice Islam. Until our politicians (worldwide) have the courage to state this and take the lead on this, then we will continue to careen ever closer to the abyss.
thanks for everyone's time. Look forward to the debate.
Posted by: NavynukeCDR | January 12, 2007 11:49 PM
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Jason likes setting up strawmen to stomp on, it seems. Just to make a counter-argument to all this non-sense about absolute certainty and all that, I will make the following point:
I am neither a philosopher nor a theologian and do not know if "absolute certainty" is a term that often used (with a definition that is specific to a particular discipline). However, the way I understood and have implicitly defined "absolute certainty" in my postings is this: if I can say "if A then B" or "A is B" or some such statement without adding qualifiers, and if this holds for all possible conditions (anticipated conditions as well as those beyond our current ability to know) then that would be what knowing something with absolute certainty means to me. From this definition, I cannot say I know anything with this level of certainty. Mathematical laws, physical laws, etc. are known with a great deal of certainty: "within thess boundaries, stated relationship will always hold." So I accept those. But as stated earlier, even something like "the sum of the three angles of a triangle is alway 180 degrees" needs qualifiers.
So, this brings us to what we mean when we say we "know." Even as Jason admits that comparisons between "dog" and "cat" are meaningless, he still sticks to the "Truth" (with a capital T) of the law that the dog cannot be a dog and a cat at once. This "law" is by definition true because you have already said that a dog is a dog and a cat is a cat (i.e., they are different). We call that a tautology, like saying x = x or y = y. And at any rate the comparison is meaningless, which is another issue altogether. Such a "law" is not "knowing" something because it is completely devoid of content. It is just making an assumption, and therefore can be a starting point for "knowing" or learning.
If I were to show you a whale, and ask you whether it is a land animal, then what would the answer be? Yes and no. Of course this does not violate the law of contradiction since the question cannot be appropriately answered due to a lack of specificity. Whales once were land animals but have since evolved. The full knowledge of an object must not only describe what it is now in every respect, but also how it has come to be, etc.
Jason continues with more silly rants about any child would say a care bear is a care bear and therefore cannot be a non-care bear. Well, if I were to ask my child what 1+1 is then he'd say 2 (and then say "that's too easy"). Yes, he's right since that is what a 7-year old should say. But if I were to tell him the answer could also be "10" then he'd laugh because he thinks I am joking. Jason, is the answer to "what is 1+1?" "2"? Can you say that is the only possible answer, "absolutely"? Humility would serve you well (just as Jesus teaches). Let's not jump the gun.
I don't like quoting the bible, but I will do so just once to demonstrate that anyone can quote a verse to make whatever point one wants to:
"...the night will shine like the day, for darkness is as light to you." (Ps. 139: 12)
From this, can we infer that to god, day is night and night is day? How is that for God=logic? (And what does that mean, anyway?)
Of course, Psalms are songs/poems, and it is poetic language whereby the author means that god can bring the suffering (those who are in the dark) out to the light (or bring light to the suffering). But it also implies that darkness and light are meaningless distinctions to god, thus bending "his own logic"? No. This is not really god's logic, but "logic" devoid of context and an empty definition.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 12, 2007 8:27 PM
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Dear Jason,
come off it.
With what little meaning I can make from your piece, I suspect that you equate me with the anonymous person. Else I see little relevance in most of your words to anonys rather short appeal. Your assumption is however incorrect. While I'd actually encourage you to seek some counseling, I don't state my opinions anonymous. I as well desist from demeaning remarks of believes held dear to the person, especially in cases I hope he or she is going to listen to me.
Given your poor conduct, I can not blame anony to choose to remain unidentified. I'm shure the person acted out of concern for you and not to hurt you.
From your hotheaded reply I take that you indeed feel heartstricken. I suggest you try and understand that your attitude had pretty much of the same effect to some participants.
As I already said, you should treat other people with the same respect you expect. Do you begin to grasp the usefulness of this concept?
Anony unfortunatly failed to keep to this standard, and I admit that you are right to take offence. And now look how you feel.
Grow some chesthair yourselve and take responsibility for your actions instead to ask us to lay it to your god. Though I'm aware that you don't believe in free will, you have to accept the rules of the game:
Actions - consequences. No cop outs. If your god chooses to make you do it, accept that people put it to you, where it belongs, since you are the agent.
After all, since everything is preordained, this is preordained as well. Strangley, in these instances you ask people to strive from the preordained path.
As to name-calling is not a fallacy per se: No, it's a discourtesy.
If you were putting it in the context of my argument against the accuracy of your worldview I fail to see the relevance. If it isn't entended for me, I fail to see what anony should make out of it.
I likewise fail to understand what your elaborate speculation what god could or would or would not do is meant to be.
For someone who claims to know the absolute Truth you seem all to often confused by the world.
As to 'You contradict yourself with every word typed.' I deem it unlikely. I suspect you simply didn't like what I said.
It is hard to decide, since you did not care to elaborate. But maybe you pertain this bit to anony.
Anyway, make out of it what you want. I see no need for further discours, you probably neither. If you want to make me see the errors of my way, do so. I'll listen.
If you rant, I'll skip it.
I did for you what I could. Now you're on your own.
P.S.: Asking your god for mercy is futile, if you think everything is preordained.
Posted by: Falk Steinle | January 12, 2007 7:18 PM
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Tom,
Wickedly poignant.
I thought is was 72 virgins.
maybe bush could promise 75 virgins.
Yikes.
Posted by: timmy | January 12, 2007 5:11 PM
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Jason,
You said,
"I guarantee you that if you walked into a college math class and refused to accept that 2 is not 3 and 2+3 is really 80, you would be laughed out of the building."
How about you walk into a college math class and tell them about how paper burns only if God makes it burn.
Wear earplugs. The laughter will be deafening.
Posted by: timmy | January 12, 2007 4:18 PM
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anonymous,
great comeback. instead of dealing with the self-contradictions of skepticism, the fallacies of inductive reasoning and asserting the consequent, all you can do is name-call...and of course, you do all this as "anonymous".
by the way (since I am anticipating this), name-calling is not a fallacy per se. I have valid reasons for calling you and others morons.
I guarantee you that if you walked into a college math class and refused to accept that 2 is not 3 and 2+3 is really 80, you would be laughed out of the building.
Yet, this is exactly what Timmy and others have proposed. We can not be certain about anything, including the law of contradiction.
You contradict yourself with every word typed. And the ONLY reason you are able to coexist with people is because God has kept you from the full blown consequences of rejecting Reason.
God, if so desired, could "hand you over" to embrace a more consistent consequence of rejecting reason and have you enrolled at the nut house, but for whatever 'reason' He has not.
Keep mocking Him anony...you'll find out sooner or later and you will be without an excuse, just as you are here with addressing the self-contradictions of skepticism, the fallacies of inductive reasoning and asserting the consequent.
May our Sovereign have mercy on your soul.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 12, 2007 10:17 AM
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God is not without value, especially to our President.
When all else fails, our President should shift the blame for the mess in Iraq to the door of the U.S. Military Chaplains.
Specifically, the Christian military clergy have failed this President. The God of the Islamic martyrs has 22 reconstituting virgins, a fine palace and much more good stuff awaiting His boys in paradise, no questions asked. This is very significant among young men who are not known for their looks, intelligence or social skills. The stingy-God Christian Chaplains have offered our troops nothing but vague promises and holy-book words spoken with great authority. Our troops have to prowl around Iraq looking for their own virgins.
Furthermore, the religious right should give our President the immediate authorization to deem Iraq a "Just War" by virtue of conversations with his Higher Father and the federal faith-based grants.
President Bush's Higher Father includes big money interests, especially big oil. It was to secure money-gushing oil contracts and to protect the oil assets in Iraq that the U.S. became an invading and occupying power. No further secular justification is necessary for this conflict. Our troops will leave when the actual “mission” is accomplished. The next two generations of working Americans will pick up the tab. None of that free healthcare nonsense for them.
As with all wars, complimentary justification for the conflict must be provided by the various religious organizations. Having let our troops down with a no-virgin policy, the President should consider any religious designation other than "Just War" an act of treason, or at least the support of terrorists.
God Bless George Bush our President. Let’s keep religion working for a better America. And, let’s end the separation of Church and State as the post-Saadam free and democratic government of Iraq has done so well.
Posted by: Tom McGoff | January 12, 2007 9:51 AM
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anonymous,
great comeback. instead of dealing with the self-contradictions of skepticism, the fallacies of inductive reasoning and asserting the consequent, all you can do is name-call...and of course, you do all this as "anonymous".
by the way (since I am anticipating this), name-calling is not a fallacy per se. I have valid reasons for calling you and others morons.
I guarantee you that if you walked into a college math class and refused to accept that 2 is not 3 and 2+3 is really 80, you would be laughed out of the building.
Yet, this is exactly what Timmy and others have proposed. We can not be certain about anything, including the law of contradiction.
You contradict yourself with every word typed. And the ONLY reason you are able to coexist with people is because God has kept you from the full blown consequences of rejecting Reason.
God, if so desired, could "hand you over" to embrace a more consistent consequence of rejecting reason and have you enrolled at the nut house, but for whatever 'reason' He has not.
Keep mocking Him anony...you'll find out sooner or later and you will be without an excuse, just as you are here with addressing the self-contradictions of skepticism, the fallacies of inductive reasoning and asserting the consequent.
May our Sovereign have mercy on your soul.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 12, 2007 9:48 AM
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Jason Bradfield,
You need a lot more than an imaginary friend to take care of you. I am convinced that you, seriously, need mental therapy to coexist with people in a healthy, productive way. Please, get help. I'm not kidding or being flippant. Get help.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 12, 2007 5:21 AM
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I shouldn't have ended that with,
Are you with me?
I meant on the thought, not in this new cult.
I'm not trying to start anything or spread anything.
I just invented a word to illustrate that thing in people that religion has hijacked.
And for those of you who are creeped out by the words Faith, Worship and Believe.
Would you be concerned if your friend said something like this?
"I worship the Dallas Cowboys. I believe in them this year. I have faith that they will win the superbowl.
Is this person creepy? Delusional? Dangerous?
I use these words in everyday speak not Bible speak.
Posted by: timmy | January 11, 2007 11:18 PM
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For any who think that my statement to Jason, that "I have found God", was facetious for argument sake. It wasn't.
Here is my explanation.
An atheists guide to understanding faith in God.
I have already shown time and time again how muddled this debate is due to the ambiguity of the word God.
Here's why.
I am and atheist.
I have faith in God.
What?
Let me put a bunch of words between those two statements and see if I can make it make sense.
I am an atheist.
I am fascinated by all that science has taught us.
We now know that the big bang was the start of our universe as we know it. We do not know what was before the big bang, if there was anything at all.
Why the big bang?
Why are we all here?
What is the purpose of life?
Is it, to just wonder about itself?
We all search for the answers to this mystery, with the knowledge that an answer is not likely to come in our lifetime.
There is no answer for "what is the meaning of life?"
We, each of us, must give our own life meaning if we want meaning.
So here is me, in my attempt to make life meaningful.
I would love to have a sense of purpose, even if I have to make one up. Kind of like giving yourself goals.
But do I have to make one up? Or has one presented itself to me already.
I feel a drive inside me to make a contribution to society. It's a weird feeling. It overrides all of my selfish instincts on the surface. It fascinates me this drive, because it comes from a different place than my surface thoughts.
Now science has an answer for this. Kind of thing.
They have a theory, and it makes sense. The theory is that there are evolutionary "survival of the species" type of biological reasons for human altruism. It makes perfect sense.
And yet I still feel a certain personal relationship with this drive. It feels like an inner morality, like a voice that points me to the right moral choice for every decision I make in my life. I always know the correct moral choice even though I have the free will to ignore it and do the selfish thing.
What else does this inner morality do?
Well it sends shivers up my spine and fills me with joy every time I hear ernest expressions of love, compassion and brotherhood of man. We all cry at the same scenes in the movies. I weep for strangers who don't even exist. This is weird. But thinking that it's weird, doesn't stop me from crying at that phone commercial.
I love this thing in me. Even if the science explanation is true and this thing we all feel is just an evolutionary biological function.
What is the purpose of evolution then?
We don't know. It could be meaningless.
But one thing I do know is that I love this thing that is in me.
I love it, and I have decided to have faith in it.
In my on going attempt to give meaning to my life, I'm going worship my inner moral voice. Because it is so deep inside me and I can not control it, in fact I know the opposite to be true, most of the time, it controls me. But I have never been sorry that I let it lead me down the right path when my surface thoughts would have led me to the wrong decision.
This voice inside me is always right, even when I am wrong. It is truth. It is ultimate morality.
Science also tells us that matter is energy is matter is energy is matter. The entire universe is made of one thing. Energy.
Wow. What a cool metaphysical-like thought that is. I'm going to let my imagination run wild with that one. Cool. Maybe when my body dies, my presence remains in the form of energy. Cool. What a cool thought.
I will decide to personify this inner morality thing and give it a name so that I can worship it, for it is worthy of my worship.
I will call it Shmorf.
I will worship Shmorf.
I will have faith in Shmorf.
It will give my life special meaning if I always strive to please Shmorf. I will tell other people about Shmorf and how I have decided to worship Shmorf.
I think the world would be a better place if we all worshiped Shmorf. Not that I would push Shmorf on anyone else but imagine. I wouldn''t need to push Shmorf on anyone else. Shmorf is already with them and speaks to them in their own way.
Here is the problem. 3 or 4 thousand years ago, somebody realized the power of Shmorf and wrote a book about it. But they added in a whole lot of their own personal feelings about life and attributed them to Shmorf. Then they, instead of suggesting that other people live life for, and worship Shmorf, they demanded it.
They claimed that Shmorf spoke to them in a vision and dictated to them personally a codified dogma that all people must now follow.
Well regular people were pretty dumb back then and didn't have a lot of choice but to believe people who were in positions of power, after all, how would they have gotten into a position of power if they weren't smart. And It makes sense that if Shmorf was going to actually talk to someone in words, he/she would choose the leader of my tribe or the smartest person around. I guess this book is really the word of Shmorf.
Since then many others have written books, supposedly dictated by Shmorf, in an attempt to have their own view of the world attached to Shmorf.
Only these people who wrote these books didn't use the word Shmorf. They used the word God.
I don't believe that any of these people talked to Shmorf. I believe that they made it up, or only think that they talked to Shmorf.
I believe the only way to know Shmorf is through your own internal relationship with Shmorf.
I certainly don't want to make people stop believing in Shmorf.
I just want them to trust Shmorf, and not listen to other people who try and tell them who Shmorf is.
Shmorf is in all of us and speaks to all of us. Not in words. But Shmorf speaks to us.
I am an atheist.
I have faith in God.
For ambiguity reasons, replace God with Shmorf.
We will never, nor should we ever, make people lose their faith in God. We may however, get them to start seeing him as Shmorf.
Anyone with me?
Posted by: timmy | January 11, 2007 6:44 PM
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So let's see if I can wrap it up for me. I doubt that interested parties are still available.
Yet I feel obliged to finish my thoughts.
Let's examin Jasons last - ehem - answer.
J> Here's a hint Falk...there are big marble friezes all over the Supreme Court building of some guy holding two tablets.
Correct. Actualy there are big marble friezes all over the Supreme Court building of many guys holding tablets, 18 in fact.
Muhamed is there too. And Napoleon Bonaparte.
So what does it tell me?
A manyfold of things.
Firstly someone placed them there, for a reason.
While I appriciate Jasons effort to bridge the gap by using some empiricism I have to caution him that not everything is one-dimensional. The reason this pictures are there is, that these individuals were importend law givers, not because they refer to religion.
Likewise this is an example of a christian who likes to credit everything to his religion without sufficient evidence.
Furthermore a building commissioned in the 1930s is hardly a primary source on the intend of the founding fathers.
But I digress.
On a last note: Any social contract can as well incorporate religious morality, provided enough reasons are given. However, it has to be demonstrated why the religious morality should be applied to the people as a whole, why this is a universal interest instead of a special interest.
If the interested denomination is not able to it shouldn't be general law. The group in question can adher to the principals on their own.
Jews follow very special dietary rules. Thankfully, they don't ask anybody else to adher to them.
There is still the rather good question, if a social contract might lead to National Socialism or any other form of despotism.
Quite to the contrary: The main tenet of said ideologie is the 'Führerprinzip', the Principal of Leadership. Everything is organised top to bottom and orders are going top to bottom likewise with no room for negotiations. In fact, despotism is the break down of the social contract and visa versa.
The social contract is the saveguard - the only real saveguard against despotism.
As to the relativistic moralism:
This is one of these wonderful terms everybody has heard about but which are not well defined.
If relativistic moralism means arbitrary usage of morals pertaining to any given situation, it doesn't apply.
If you want to adress two given situations differently you have to cite reasons. If you can't provide them, you normaly don't get this privilge.
There is a necessary prerequesite however: Intelectual integrity. Without it you'll always find a cop out. This however is likewise the case with religious morals.
Timmy raised a good reminder of
"the time of the founding fathers, when even men with brilliant minds allowed themselves to engage in slavery and misogyny"
It certainly was intelectual dishonest to engage in these activities despite the principals of the constitution, albeit we are oversimpliefying their situation.
It also demonstrates fairly well the dangers of intellectual dishonesty for society as a whole as well as on the personal level if you remember the bitter cultural clashes that followed, leading up to the civil war.
If anyone wants to stop immorality we better place more emphasis on strengthening intelectual integrity.
If relativistic moralism is meant defining morals to special circumstances Jason has a point. Therefor you opperate under the backdrop of higher principals like dignity of men, freedom, justice etc. and predict the consequences of your action pertaining to said qualities.
Hence my reference to the constitution. You could likewise use the declaration of human rights.
As to proposing the moral system of the bible: Essentialy we see no more and no less as another social contract. It is the social contract of a civilization which existed 3000 - 2000 years ago. Now, is anyone surprised, as we see the social contract over the course of 1000 years change, that we encounter contradictions? Of course not. Does anyone think we can use it unalterd today? Dangerous thinking indeed!
Society changes as living conditions change. The social contract does likewise. Adapt and move on. If you don't, society will unreval and eventualy breakdown.
As to Jason's Worldview, I'll make it quick:
Jason, I'll restate what I said earlier:
God doesn't denie you insulting non-believers. Your action is not at fault with his moral system.
A short lived social contract, a code of conduct was layed out that forbade this conduct. A valid moral system, on which you were called on. Your actions were at fault with the moral system of this group, of which you were a member.
Would the moral system of your god be absolute, it is cogent that it had also to incorporate the code of conduct here agreed on.
Which it didn't.
Hence - not an absolute moral system.
Maybe your god doesn't relate to this group. I suspect as much. I suspect it's Jasons god alone.
You seem to be honest, Jason. You have strugled with the bible far to long and far to hard.
What you didn't do was ignoring the contradictions. But the problems with your solution are actually bigger than your original problem.
Posted by: Falk Steinle | January 11, 2007 6:26 PM
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No no Jason, you haven't been keeping up.
I have found God now.
There are no more uncertainties for me.
I have certainty about everything now.
God is certainty.
He has told me that the paper will burn, not because he will make the paper burn. God says "that's a silly notion." "Who told you that?" He asked.
Don't worry, I didn't snitch.
God told me that paper burns because that's what paper does silly. He said scientists are on the right track there.
I have certainty now Jason.
My certainty lies in God's word.
Not the Bible words. Those were written by people who did not understand God.
I'm talking about God's word. Direct.
He doesn't speak in specific words. If that's what you're looking for you don't understand God.
God reveals himself to you as you go through life.
You read words about love and compassion and God lets you know that these things please him.
You read words about war, and rape, and slavery and non believers burning in Hell fire, and God reveals himself by making you feel repulsed.
You are the one who taught me this Jason.
And I should have seen it all along.
God has revealed himself to me.
And he has sent me to help you see that he speaks through each of us in our own special relationship with him.
He does not want us to listen to mortal men and their theories and dogmas.
He has blessed us with skepticism so that we might spot these impostors.
Faith in God is internal.
To externalize faith, makes no sense at all.
God is all powerful, and has no problem communicating with us any time he wants.
He does not need Peter, Paul, Timothy, Mohammed, David Karesh or Pat Robertson to communicate with us.
To listen to these false profits is just silly and disrespectful of God's ultimate power.
Listen to God Jason. Not Timothy or Peter, or Charles Manson.
Posted by: timmy | January 11, 2007 3:30 PM
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Where's my Rap?
I know it's tough.
I can't think of a good ryme for "moron" either.
But I have faith in you Jason.
Posted by: timmy | January 11, 2007 3:08 PM
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Timmy the Moron says, "God has told me that both books are impostors of his word. He reveals this to me when I read those words. God sends feelings of repulsion up my spine. Good old God. Always there to keep me on the right path."
this is also the same 'god' that has apparently revealed to Timmy that:
We cannot be certain about anything; therefore, the law of contradiction is not 100% certain.
So, Timmy's god is certain that the Bible is wrong, even though Timmy's god tells him there are no certainties...hmmmm...
Timmy, that's fine if you want to follow this god...it does however explain why you're a moron because your god sounds like a moron as well.
Faithful Timmy!
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 11, 2007 3:06 PM
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No onus of proof here.
I'm just inquiring.
If you don't have an answer.
It's okay.
I just though you might, since you've based your entire life meaning on it.
The person who wrote The Koran also says that these are words breathed out by God.
I'm just trying to figure out which PERSON to believe.
God has told me that both books are impostors of his word.
He reveals this to me when I read those words.
God sends feelings of repulsion up my spine.
Good old God.
Always there to keep me on the right path.
Posted by: timmy | January 11, 2007 2:45 PM
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Timmy the Moron says, "My honest inquiry into his faith has shown a crack in his armor though. His latest frustration is that he can not answer my honest question of how believing in the Bible God isn't faith in the words of strangers as opposed to faith in God."
Timmy the Moron demonstrates once again that he's dishonest and not really interested in a conversation. And I'd keep that illogical bunch of baloney "private" too.
See, Timmy has the task of proving that the words written by the Apostle Paul, for example, in the letter to the Romans was not directly mediated to his mind by God.
And the only "prove" that he has to offer is simply that he doesn't like all that Paul wrote, therefore it can't be the words of God.
Then of course, there is that whole problem of "certainty". Timmy tells us in one breath that he's certain the Bible is not "God-breathed" but in the next tells us that we can not know anything with certainty.
Hence, moron.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 11, 2007 1:38 PM
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Hi Pam,
I hope you will notice that I have had plenty of mature conversation on the subject with those who are also mature about it.
You will notice in my dealings with Bruce for example, that he and I have made incredible progress in building a bridge between the two sides. In our private discussion group, which I understand you will be joining soon, you will see that all of my posts are forward looking and solution suggesting.
Most of us are continuing the conversation of solutions over there and have left this thread as the Jason bashing thread.
Like Jason has left us any choice.
Jason is a jerk, and nobody likes a jerk.
So I feel obliged, as one who has a natural talent for getting under the skin of Jerks, to dish out to Jason a little of what he dishes.
And yes, It's fun. I do admit to getting some kind of sick joy out of frustrating a malicious jerk.
But I only recently gave up on Jason.
I am the only one who tried one last time to reach out to him with brotherly love. I was sincere and honest with this outreach.
I made the same outreach with Bruce and LT and we are now friends who treat each other with respect in spite of our differences. We understand each other.
Having succeeded there, I really thought I might reach Jason.
But Jason has shown himself to be a "Believe me just cuz or burn in Hell" Christian, as opposed to a "brotherly love" Christian.
My honest inquiry into his faith has shown a crack in his armor though. His latest frustration is that he can not answer my honest question of how believing in the Bible God isn't faith in the words of strangers as opposed to faith in God.
Anyway, if you would like to discuss or have a friendly respectful debate on any of the issues on these threads, I am here for you. Or we can do it on the other message board so you don't have to risk being labeled a moron by Jason.
I only bother with Jason now when I am bored and everyone else has gone to bed.
Plus he's writing a rap song for me so I have to stick around to see that.
All the best Pam
Posted by: timmy | January 11, 2007 1:21 PM
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TIMMY, I must ask why it is you have wasted time and energy in the bantering back and forth with Jason Bradfield? Is it too much to ask for you to explain what it is you personally get out of such behavior? I have read many of your posts and you seem to be informed and articulate about your beliefs. Many of us who post on the other Sam Harris threads could benefit from your views. People like Jason are a lost cause. I feel you could be more helpful debating your views with the rest of us who appreciate what you have to say.
Posted by: Pam Meloy | January 11, 2007 12:23 PM
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"when even men with brilliant minds allowed themselves to engage in slavery and misogyny"
more dribble from the man who says we can't know anything with certainty and refuses to define "true".
Timmy, grat gunt yint barn house car fall under test you and or give computer yin?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 11, 2007 9:50 AM
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Yes Jason would surely love to go back to the time of the founding fathers, when even men with brilliant minds allowed themselves to engage in slavery and misogyny because the Bible told them that these were moral things to do.
Oh the heaps of ignorant Bible morals we have turfed since then.
Thank God.
Can't wait for the rap.
He he he he he
Posted by: timmy | January 11, 2007 12:00 AM
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Believe or go to Hell
Freedom
Posted by: timmy | January 10, 2007 11:50 PM
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ahhh, the Constitution...our founding fathers..hmmmm...and what "law", Falk, formed the basis for our nation?
Here's a hint Falk...there are big marble friezes all over the Supreme Court building of some guy holding two tablets...
sound familiar?
Falk, thanks for reminding us of our country's founding "social contract" and demonstrating my point of how you "atheists" are leeches.
The only reason you have the freedom you do is because of Christianity.
get a clue moron.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 10, 2007 11:28 PM
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Puzzled says, "Can you emulate Jesus and not emulate Jesus at the same time?"
Yes Puzzled. I'm following your lead here. Since we can not be certain about anything, including the law of contradiction, then, "yes, you can." My emulation can be and not be at the same time.
And thank you for making my case. Good job!
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 10, 2007 11:20 PM
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Timmy the Moron says, "How about you reply with a rap, called, "Timmy Is A Moron""
Finally, Timmy says something worthwhile. You've given me an idea.
Thanks.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 10, 2007 11:10 PM
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Coward? That is funny. You hide behind your bluster (chest hair, man berries, etc.) because you fear doubt. Some might call it overcompensating.
As for church, I enjoy the company of fellows, even if we don't share beliefs, although that is being sorely shaken recently. If that goes, and if I feel like I won't be returning "home" to that faith, I will let go. But for now, I am fence-sitting. Call it what you want, but I believe in looking before leaping. Until now, most Christians I have met throughout my life have been very decent people, quite tolerant and compassionate for the most part.
Such are thoughts that would never occur to you, at least as far as you have shown here, so I actually have a hard time with you thinking you have "salvation" (even if God exists). As you said, it is god who says so, not what you (or your pastor, or whoever) think god will say. I think I have an idea of what Jesus would have wanted from true Christians. I've around that block a few times. That is why I raised that question about morals and faith. You claim to have faith, yet you're certainly not acting like someone who is listening to Jesus. How could that be? Can you emulate Jesus and not emulate Jesus at the same time? Perhaps you say you are one with God, but that liberates you to do as you like. What conclusions can we draw from that?
I am likely to get another earful, but just as Falk says, I would say that you are probably disturbing other Christian participants in this forum more than our atheist partcipants. In effect, you are making the case for the Sam Harris's of the world. Good job!
Posted by: Puzzled | January 10, 2007 11:04 PM
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Hi Jason,
you do rise some challinging questions. Let´s see if I`m up to the task to provide reasonable answers. However, I`m afraid you will at times have to step out of the box and review them with the eyes of an empiricist. As I have stated in my first entry, this model doesn`t work with your philosophy.
So I will from the start concede to you, that the whole idea doesn`t pertain to a nonempiricist.
A position which I blantendly declared as unatainable in my privious post.
Last note of caution: I will at times quote you, to clarify to which section I`m answering. I will do my best not to contort your meaning. If I fail, call me up on it.
> Jason: SAYS WHO, FALK?
The People, Jason. I`d like to quote a document, that all of us are familiar with. Or at least should be ;)
From the declaration of independence:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just Powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.
I`ll top it off with the first words of a second rather important document:
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility,...
Start of the praeambel of the US Constitution
Powerful words, indeed. But they are not simply words on some dusty paper. They are alive, an acting agend for the society.
That is - when congress is actualy doing it's job, sigh.
Here you see a social contract at work. The very guidelines of your society, a predominant part for any other social contract that might be agreed on in the US, be it privat or public (especially public), now or in futur.
>Jason
>Falk merely lacks the man-berries to stand up for >what’s right despite the majority. No “free” >thinking about it – just another godless puppet.
Your raising an excellent point here. Rising up for what is right despite the majority is a pivotal point in the whole thing.
There is a constant haggling over what is right and what is wrong, whom we will grant rights and whom we will deny them.
And your also right - you have to win the majority over for your case - troublesome as that might be sometimes.
But you must not confuse it with beeing in the majority. Unfortunatly nowadays we seem to think, rights will be granted and only be granted if you are the majority. Which is utter nonsense. You have to have the consent of the majority.
The United States have a remarkably long and successful tradition of balancing interessts. I say successful, not perfect, mind you. Alas, at present day Washington seems bereft of its senses of it's former glory. But I digress.
In our matter at hand, will I grant you the right to call an atheist a moron?
I most definitly will not.
However, you raised the point that the majority will become a dictatorship, enslaving the minority and your right to caution us. Therefor within the realm of a social contract I`m not simply allowed to utter a no.
I have to cite reasons, which is what I`m going to do now.
Firstly, I demand the same respect that you want to be treated with and which I have given you.
You might take offense at my extremly harsh treatment of your ideas, but nowhere did I demean you as a person.
Secondly, we are in the process of discussing central issues and values of our lifes, which we all hold dear and don`t like to be attacked. That is demanding enough, we don`t have to hurt each other more than necessary. Calm reasoning might not be as rewarding as a rant, however it will serve our mutual interest better - our continued emotional wellbeing.
Thirdly your doing yourselve a disservice - while you do raise valid points of concern you convulute them with inflamatory remarks, which makes it much harder for me to answer them in a civil and reasonable way. I'm rather fond of sarcasm, incise me enough and you might get a sample of it.
And finaly, to provide an ample example how we could indeed defend the rights of others by simply living for values instead of ensuring each other incesantly that we are going to die for [insert constitutional right of choice here] of [insert party of different opinion here] my last appeal to you (I think, in biblical terms this could be called: To be my brothers keeper.):
Forthly you are weakening the stand of Bruce Burleson and LT, who identify themselve as christians and might be asked, why they think that the christian faith is indeed a message of love, since one of theire esteemed brethren at times invokes a curious message of loathe. You should spare them the embarresment of invoking the tired true/false christian op out clause.
Though you maybe do not percive them as real christians, it still is unpolite to mock somebodies best effort to find sense in the bible. You can correct the errors of their way as well in a friendly way. Their chance for enlightment and rightous biblereading would rise considerably.
Why this reason bit? Easy - you look at the reasons and try to make out if some of the reasons might not pertain to you. Than you point that out and we might revise the matter. You might also make some concessions - like a disclaimer at the end of each of your posts that your atheist insultism brand of christianity is in no way affiliated with Bruce and LTs flavour of christanity.
(The aswer is still no).
Wè're calling that compromising.
Oh, there is a fith reason of course: You have aeons of Schadenfreude befor you while I'm going to burn in Hell.
Shouldn't that suffice?
Darn this thing is much to long as it is already. I`d like to elaborate on the jucy bits of preventing Nazi mob rule, relativistic moronis... pardon me, relativistic moralism and arguing for the indefensibleness of Jasons worldview where I will be even more long-farted... pardon me again, long-winded than here in a follow up piece.
Posted by: Falk Steinle | January 10, 2007 9:30 PM
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No no no Jason.
Not "God breathed"
Timothy said "God Breathed"
You believe people
You just can't face it.
You believe empiricist statements from morons like Timothy, that God breathed the Bible.
Silly me for taking newspaper with me on my camping trips to start my fires.
I should trust Timothy who says God will do it.
Cuckoo, Cuckoo, Cuckoo
Duped dude. Duped.
Listen to God Jason. Not the church, who you will probably find something else to disagree with shortly, and have to move churches again.
Or go back to rapping in the streets.
How about you reply with a rap, called, "Timmy Is A Moron"
Posted by: timmy | January 10, 2007 8:45 PM
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Timmy the moron says, "The question Jason Bradfield refuses to answer is:
Isn't faith in God through the Bible, faith in people?"
No, i did answer this; but again, you don't like the answer. "God breathed"
Once again we have a moron who doesn't understand something that is quite simple to grasp (or, maybe he does understand it, he just doesn't like it) and instead of admitting his inability to grasp it and/or his dislike of it, he insists his understanding is right, and then wants to force his stupidity into other people's lives.
And all of this coming from a guy who says we can't be certain about anything.
This coming from a guy who insisted on the certainty that newspapers will always burn based on previous experience even though he can't prove it, and those who doubt him are "retards".
Then there's Puzzled. The coward who still goes to church, for whatever reason, yet has no problem mocking God. Now, he will tell us he is not mocking God because God is...blah, blah, blah..but then he turns right around and says we can't know God.
These are the same morons who tell us that we can not be certain that 2+2=4, yet they feel we should drop everything and really pay attention to what they have to say about truth, ethics, and the like.
in the latest, Puzzled here acts like i've said something new...uhhhh....Puzzled, did you just wake up or something?
The Bible is true regardless of what you or i think about it. That has always been my position. Glad you could finally join us.
But then again, why do you even give a rats butt? You claim you are seeking for truth even though you cannot even define it and even though you believe no one can know it.
Talk about a moron.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 10, 2007 8:26 PM
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Amazing!
Just as one's belief does not make the bible false, neither does one's disbelief make the bible true.
Thanks for the illuminating conversation.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 10, 2007 7:01 PM
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You are angry Jason.
You are angry because you use caps.
You are angry because you have been duped.
I would be angry too if I found out that I got duped into defining my whole life on a myth.
I would be angry at the messenger.
I would be angry at Sam Harris.
Posted by: timmy | January 10, 2007 6:25 PM
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The "faith in people" question Jason.
That is the question you refuse to answer.
Your answer for "where do I look for God"? Leads to that question,
Isn't that faith in people? The words of people?
Your answer?
No, because "Timothy" says that the words in the Bible were breathed out by God.
Oh, I see, so you don't have faith in people.
You have faith in Timothy. (I'm tempted but I won't)
The question Jason Bradfield refuses to answer is:
Isn't faith in God through the Bible, faith in people?
Sorry, I mean faith in Timothy?
_______________________________________________________
Hell is not a place where the devil resides.
It's what he preaches.
_______________________________________________________
Have faith in God.
Do not listen to impostors.
God has blessed us with the knowledge that he speaks directly through us,
and the skepticism to spot impostors.
Jason still refuses to answer the question that arises from his answer to the question. "Where do I look for God"
His answer: The Bible.
Faith in people.
God has revealed himself to me through about 4% of the Bible.
Just the love and compassion stuff.
The other 96% repulses me. God is telling me something when I feel that repulsion. He is revealing something to me.
If God has revealed himself to Jason through the other 96% of the Bible.
Yikes!
Posted by: timmy | January 10, 2007 6:19 PM
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By the way, who says I'm angry? i don't loose a second of sleep over the fact that Timmy and others are morons.
Furthermore, there's nothing sick about it - it's reasonable.
People who call evil good and good evil are morons. they don't know their left hand from their right.
i dare any of you cowards to sign up for a college and course and consistently apply your denial of the law of contradiction.
Heck, we get upset when a cashier short-changes us. I'll try that sometime. I'll go work at a store and instead of giving the "correct" change of $25, I'll give them $5 and then explain to them that in college i was taught by a professional moron like Andy Ross that the law of contradiction is optionable.
$5 is $25.
............morons.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 10, 2007 5:24 PM
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Puzzled says, "If you're waiting for a definitive definition of what it is to be "good" or "moral" as we live our lives, then you might have to wait some more."
ummm...no, i don't. I have the revelation of God. You on the other can continue to mock it and "wait" for something better - which you'll never get from people who don't even affirm the use of logic.
No, it's not a gut feeling. I know. Puzzled, please don't continue to read your failures and bankrupt life into mine. You have fallen in the pit and now you want everyone else to go down with you.
That's all your posts are - "i don't know so Jason can't know"...blah, blah, blah.
And yes, i have discarded stuff. how many times do i have to point that out? BUT:
1. That does not then imply that EVERYTHING i know is up for grabs - which is what you advocate
and
2. Regardless of whether i believe the Bible or not, my belief/unbelief does not prove that the Bible is false.
I believed in "free-will" prior to becoming a Christian. And once i believed the Gospel, i held on to "free-will", only because of my ignorance of what Scripture teaches on it.
Once the Scriptural teaching was made known to me, thru hours of studying cover to cover and analyzing, etc., I saw that the "free-will" doctrine could not mesh WITH SCRIPTURE. THEREFORE, i chunked it.
That "doubt" and "critical" thinking operated WITHIN the parameters of God's revealed Word. That is NOT the same thing you are arguing for.
To stick with our math problem, you're like a mentally challenged kid who continues to deny that 2+3 is 5 and you start whining that others are so "sure of themselves" that the answer is 5, and now you want not only this simply math problem, but all of math, history, science, lunch, you name it, to be questioned.
blah, blah, blah, we can't know anything with certainty. maybe it's 7, maybe it's not, blah, blah, blah.
Puzzled, if you don't like being a moron, then stop being one - otherwise, quit your whining to me.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 10, 2007 5:17 PM
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Double-minded? I have no idea what that means. If it means I am able to weigh both sides without throwing fit, then I would hope to be at least triple-minded or quadruple-minded, if not more.
Evangelizing? No, that might lead to dogma. If someone like you were to believe in my dogma and then go out say things like what you're saying here, I'd have to excommunicate you.
For the last time: I never said there is an absolute to be known. What I said was that we as human beings all seem to have some longing to be connected to some sense of absolute, and we search for it. Whether it is a mirage, we cannot know, can we? Until you actually get into heaven (or hell), you only think it's there, no matter how much you've convinced yourself.
I say we cannot know, but many people seem to have this longing to know (even if it may turn out that there is no absolute). Your answer is to grow chest hair and say you know. My answer is to not worry about things like that but try to engage in conversation.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 10, 2007 5:11 PM
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Jason,
If you're waiting for a definitive definition of what it is to be "good" or "moral" as we live our lives, then you might have to wait some more. Maybe when you move to another church, or the one after that as you "change" your positions, a new absolute truth will come to you, and maybe that will be THE TRUTH, at least until the next one.
Face it, all you have is a "gut feeling" that god is truth. Everything that comes after that are just rantings to justify this feeling. Angry retorts will not make you any more right or any more wrong. Conviction can be a good thing, but reflect back on your own life (since you should know best about that). Haven't you ever had to discard (or at least modify) your closely held convictions before? Even if you never did, isn't there a possibility that you will get a better understanding of god as you go about studying the bible, going to church, etc.?
Examples like how you learned addition ("2+3 is not 7 but 5") is another strawman. Is god (the creator of all there is) a simple addition problem to be learned once and not given a second thought?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 10, 2007 4:51 PM
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Jason you are sick. You have posted message after message of rambling. Calling people morons and putting them down. You are just sick. GET A LIFE!!! I guess they should rename this board to Jason venting room. Why are you so angry?
Posted by: Anonymous | January 10, 2007 4:23 PM
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Puzzled says, “I never said there is no absolute to know; just that if we can just "know" that absolute, that seems too easy, chest hair or no. To think that you know what that absolute is (after all the famous philosophers, Christians included have struggled through the ages) and absolutely (!!) cannot be wrong about this seems jumping the gun to say the least. You say you changed your positions and moved to a new church twice. Was your conviction less strong before? Will you say that the next time you find some new position (with even more conviction), will you then say that the previous one must have been "wrong"? Or is your conviction maxed out at this point in your life?”
First, since when did you make the rules? What if it is in fact easy?
Puzzled, you keep recycling the same ole’ crap and my answer will be the same every time. YOU said that we can not be certain about ANYTHING. Therefore, I concluded based on your statement, that we can not be certain of the absolute, nor if there even is an absolute.
What is so hard about this? See, my problem with you is that you continue to act as though there is some absolute to be known, yet your own presuppositions rule it out. On the one hand you want to reject absolutes, but on the other hand to keep talking as though one exists from which you then criticize me for “jumping the gun” or missing the boat or making it too “easy”.
No wonder you’re “puzzled”.
If you’re not certain about anything puzzled, then STOP trying to tell me how to live, think, eat, and drink. You don’t know anything.
You’re a double-minded man that’s evangelizing, wanting to convert more people into morons. I’m not falling for it.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 10, 2007 4:15 PM
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Anony, the other evolved genius who has surpassed the minds of those 2,000 years and beyond, says:
“The Logic we see is human logic not the omnipotent logic that is beyond human capabilities. We cannot answer the question of what other logic God thinks because He is God. God is a being that is far more intelligent then man. After all, the Christians claim they were created in the image of God. Everyone knows that a copy is never as good as the original. Give it a rest, man.”
More mindless chatter from someone who claims we can’t know God, but can certainly tells us what God is or is not.
Thanks for the insight moron. That’s like someone saying, “I have never seen Jason and have no idea what he looks like, but I know he’s not tall.”
No, you take a break. How about catching the perfect movie that demonstrates what an atheist dominated world would look like: "Idiocracy".
I’m not going anywhere.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 10, 2007 3:56 PM
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Falk Steinl, another god-wannabe, says “However you have also to answer to the social contract that this small band of people, this nucleus of society has tacitly agreed on.
Using insults is, while not completley ruled out, asked to be limited and used with caution. The purpose obviously is to let this mini-society thrive and survive. If you want to be a productive - and therefor beneficial - member you have to accept this elaborated moral code, even if god does not call you to it. Society does and has a right to do so.”
Which is just another way to say that morality is defined by taking a vote and the majority decide and anyone who disagrees must answer to the majority because they have the ‘right to do so’.
SAYS WHO, FALK?
And here we have again, yet another wonderful example of “free” thinking. [s] No, Falk merely lacks the man-berries to stand up for what’s right despite the majority. No “free” thinking about it – just another godless puppet.
And furthermore, thanks for basically legitimizing Nazi Germany, with your relativistic moralism.
Falk goes on to say, “That is possible, yet it means that you have departed from your fellow men and your reasoning is no longer meaningful to the functioning of any society and therefor to mankind.”
Actually, you may be on to something here Falk. It has been difficult for me, one who affirms the certainty and use of the law of contradiction, to chat with the morons present.
And as far as this now being some “proof” against my worldview – you’ve got to be kidding.
Let’s see the proof Falk – lay it out for me. I want a sound, logical proof laid out for me. Until you can, you’re just farting in the wind.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 10, 2007 3:44 PM
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Puzzled says, “That is, can morality stand independent of religion or are these things (as many believers will no doubt tell us) intertwined?”
Puzzled, you can’t even DEFINE morality, much less talk about its relationship with religion.
Go ahead, give me a definition. Let’s see how far it goes.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 10, 2007 3:23 PM
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Timmy says, ““I am trying to find God. Where should I look? Inside my heart? In my thoughts? The Bible?”
I answered: “God has revealed Himself through the Bible” and “If and when He chooses to reveal Himself to you, He does so directly to your mind thru the occasion of reading/hearing His word.”
Now Timmy says, “And even though Jason refused to answer my questions,”
Actually, I answered the question as straight as I could. God directly reveals Himself to the person’s mind thru the occasion of reading/hearing His word. I don’t know how much darn plainer I can get.
No, I’ve answered the question; it’s just that Timmy doesn’t like the answer. Furthermore, Timmy, the so-called “humble” seeker, goes on to say that the Bible is “a brilliant tool some diabolical genious invented for subjugating the gullible.”
Wow – not only does Timmy lie about me not answering the question, but now he adds that the Bible was invented by some devilish genius used to deceive us naïve ones. Yet, no one gets on to Timmy for these insults and I think I know why – it’s because you people believe the same thing.
What liars! What hypocrites! What morons! There is nothing sincere about you Timmy. You are only here to keep asking the same questions until someone answers them the way you want them answered. You’re not looking for peace/unity, you’re looking for a bunch of mindless saps to follow your dogma of stupidity right down into the pit with you. You’re not looking for God either. You’re looking for some cheap, pathetic substitute to stroke your ego and allow you to embrace ambiguity in all things so that you can never be held accountable for anything.
Timmy, if you do not repent of such foolishness and throw yourself down at the mercy of Christ, He will grind you into fine dust and scatter you abroad. Do not tempt the Lord.
Timmy says, ““I am trying to find God. Where should I look? Inside my heart? In my thoughts? The Bible?”
I answered: “God has revealed Himself through the Bible” and “If and when He chooses to reveal Himself to you, He does so directly to your mind thru the occasion of reading/hearing His word.”
Now Timmy says, “And even though Jason refused to answer my questions,”
Actually, I answered the question as straight as I could. God directly reveals Himself to the person’s mind thru the occasion of reading/hearing His word. I don’t know how much darn plainer I can get.
No, I’ve answered the question; it’s just that Timmy doesn’t like the answer. Furthermore, Timmy, the so-called “humble” seeker, goes on to say that the Bible is “a brilliant tool some diabolical genious invented for subjugating the gullible.”
Wow – not only does Timmy lie about me not answering the question, but now he adds that the Bible was invented by some devilish genius used to deceive us naïve ones. Yet, no one gets on to Timmy for these insults and I think I know why – it’s because you people believe the same thing.
What liars! What hypocrites! What morons! There is nothing sincere about you Timmy. You are only here to keep asking the same questions until someone answers them the way you want them answered. You’re not looking for peace/unity, you’re looking for a bunch of mindless saps to follow your dogma of stupidity right down into the pit with you. You’re not looking for God either. You’re looking for some cheap, pathetic substitute to stroke your ego and allow you to embrace ambiguity in all things so that you can never be held accountable for anything.
Timmy, if you do not repent of such foolishness and throw yourself down at the mercy of Christ, He will grind you into fine dust and scatter you abroad. Do not tempt the Lord. You blind fool…YOU ARE THE PROBLEM.
Psalm 7:9-17 Oh, let the evil of the wicked come to an end, and may you establish the righteous- you who test the minds and hearts, O righteous God! 10 My shield is with God, who saves the upright in heart. 11 God is a righteous judge, and a God who feels indignation every day. 12 If a man does not repent, God will whet his sword; he has bent and readied his bow; 13 he has prepared for him his deadly weapons, making his arrows fiery shafts. 14 Behold, the wicked man conceives evil and is pregnant with mischief and gives birth to lies. 15 He makes a pit, digging it out, and falls into the hole that he has made. 16 His mischief returns upon his own head, and on his own skull his violence descends. 17 I will give to the LORD the thanks due to his righteousness, and I will sing praise to the name of the LORD, the Most High.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 10, 2007 3:14 PM
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Timmy says, ““I am trying to find God. Where should I look? Inside my heart? In my thoughts? The Bible?”
I answered: “God has revealed Himself through the Bible” and “If and when He chooses to reveal Himself to you, He does so directly to your mind thru the occasion of reading/hearing His word.”
Now Timmy says, “And even though Jason refused to answer my questions,”
Actually, I answered the question as straight as I could. God directly reveals Himself to the person’s mind thru the occasion of reading/hearing His word. I don’t know how much darn plainer I can get.
No, I’ve answered the question; it’s just that Timmy doesn’t like the answer. Furthermore, Timmy, the so-called “humble” seeker, goes on to say that the Bible is “a brilliant tool some diabolical genious invented for subjugating the gullible.”
Wow – not only does Timmy lie about me not answering the question, but now he adds that the Bible was invented by some devilish genius used to deceive us naïve ones. Yet, no one gets on to Timmy for these insults and I think I know why – it’s because you people believe the same thing.
What liars! What hypocrites! What morons! There is nothing sincere about you Timmy. You are only here to keep asking the same questions until someone answers them the way you want them answered. You’re not looking for peace/unity, you’re looking for a bunch of mindless saps to follow your dogma of stupidity right down into the pit with you. You’re not looking for God either. You’re looking for some cheap, pathetic substitute to stroke your ego and allow you to embrace ambiguity in all things so that you can never be held accountable for anything.
Timmy, if you repent of such foolishness and throw yourself down at the mercy of Christ, He will grind you into fine dust and scatter you abroad. Do not tempt the Lord.
Timmy says, ““I am trying to find God. Where should I look? Inside my heart? In my thoughts? The Bible?”
I answered: “God has revealed Himself through the Bible” and “If and when He chooses to reveal Himself to you, He does so directly to your mind thru the occasion of reading/hearing His word.”
Now Timmy says, “And even though Jason refused to answer my questions,”
Actually, I answered the question as straight as I could. God directly reveals Himself to the person’s mind thru the occasion of reading/hearing His word. I don’t know how much darn plainer I can get.
No, I’ve answered the question; it’s just that Timmy doesn’t like the answer. Furthermore, Timmy, the so-called “humble” seeker, goes on to say that the Bible is “a brilliant tool some diabolical genious invented for subjugating the gullible.”
Wow – not only does Timmy lie about me not answering the question, but now he adds that the Bible was invented by some devilish genius used to deceive us naïve ones. Yet, no one gets on to Timmy for these insults and I think I know why – it’s because you people believe the same thing.
What liars! What hypocrites! What morons! There is nothing sincere about you Timmy. You are only here to keep asking the same questions until someone answers them the way you want them answered. You’re not looking for peace/unity, you’re looking for a bunch of mindless saps to follow your dogma of stupidity right down into the pit with you. You’re not looking for God either. You’re looking for some cheap, pathetic substitute to stroke your ego and allow you to embrace ambiguity in all things so that you can never be held accountable for anything.
Timmy, if you do not repent of such foolishness and throw yourself down at the mercy of Christ, He will grind you into fine dust and scatter you abroad. Do not tempt the Lord. You blind fool…YOU ARE THE PROBLEM.
Psalm 7:9-17 Oh, let the evil of the wicked come to an end, and may you establish the righteous- you who test the minds and hearts, O righteous God! 10 My shield is with God, who saves the upright in heart. 11 God is a righteous judge, and a God who feels indignation every day. 12 If a man does not repent, God will whet his sword; he has bent and readied his bow; 13 he has prepared for him his deadly weapons, making his arrows fiery shafts. 14 Behold, the wicked man conceives evil and is pregnant with mischief and gives birth to lies. 15 He makes a pit, digging it out, and falls into the hole that he has made. 16 His mischief returns upon his own head, and on his own skull his violence descends. 17 I will give to the LORD the thanks due to his righteousness, and I will sing praise to the name of the LORD, the Most High.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 10, 2007 3:14 PM
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Jason has lost faith in God long ago.
He has taken up faith in the words of people.
Faith in God would allow Jason to let the words of People like Sam a Harris flow like water off a duck's back. He might even feel sorry for Sam.
Jason would let God take care of Sam Harris, and concentrate his efforts on bringing more love into the world.
But this is not Jason.
God will make the oven turn on for Jason, but when it comes to Sam Harris, God needs Jason to step in and help?
What a walking contradiction, he who would tout complete reliance in the all powerful God, and then come running to the defense of the all powerful, like the big bad Sam Harris would destroy God if not for Jason.
So why go after Harris?
Because Harris does not attack God. He attacks the PEOPLE who have diabolically hijacked the idea of God and mean to use it to subjugate the world through the commandments of dogma.
And for those who are not in on the whole scam? For the flock?(Sheep) For those who's frail self esteem has been taken advantage of, Sam and others offer hope.
Liberation. Not from their faith in God, but from their faith in people.
I have faith in God.
Jason has faith in people.
Empiricist people.
People who say things like:
"Look, just believe, because I have told you that it is so. And if you doubt me, you're going to Hell.
Just believe and stop asking questions. You offend God when you ask questions of me.
God will be very angry with you if you don't believe me.
Look, it says so right here in this book, and these words were breathed out by God. The book says that as well.
Look at the book. It says right here that I am right.
What? You still don't believe me?
Oh you are so going to Hell.
Don't say I didn't warn you.
What's that now? You believe me now?
That's right, you don't want to go to Hell do you.
Good for you.
Now. Please vote Republican. Because Democrats are baby killers. God says so.
And if that's not good enough for you let me appeal to your greed. Republicans believe that Jesus wants you to be rich. It's true, he wants you to have two hummers. And if you get two Hummers? Drop to your knees and thank Jesus, for he has blessed you with the two Humers.
Buuaah ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.
Yikes.
Posted by: timmy | January 10, 2007 3:04 PM
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I think Jason's statements brings to the forefront an important issue to consider for both believers and non-believers alike. Do we really need religion to make people do "good" things? That is, can morality stand independent of religion or are these things (as many believers will no doubt tell us) intertwined? I ask because many people talk about the benefits of religion by pointing toward all the good that religious organizations have done (and many have, as non-religious organizations have done as well). Implicit in this is that Christians live their lives well, and Christ transforms them so that they have no choice but to be productive and contributing members of society through such faith.
For Christians, perhaps the above question can be restated like this: do you gain "salvation" by confession of faith (of course, this has to be sincere as God sees it, not "strategic" as God would see through that) or by doing "good"? Or both? Is confession of faith a sufficient condition, or merely a necessary condition?
If we say it is sufficient (i.e., nothing else is needed but a confession of faith), then as long as someone has absolute faith in god and confesses such a faith, can't that person just go out and be mean to others (throwing insults at them would be one instance), violate the "social contract," or even break the law?
Christians will say that Christians would never do that. That is right, but that goes for most other religions as well. But if we've learned anything from history, faith can be perverted for other means.
If faith does not transform you and make you a better person (or make you strive to be better), then is that truly the kind of faith that god would be pleased with? If so, wouldn't religion serve a very selfish purpose ("the rest of the world can go to hell, I am not")?
Most parents don't hold grudges against their children even if they does occasionally not listen and go against their parents. If a god who is so far beyond our comprehension actually does exist, I find it hard to believe that such a god would be so very parochial and petty.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 10, 2007 1:06 PM
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Jason:
You have found god and are saved. I understand this.
God likewise takes no offence if you hurle insults at non-believers. You are not sinning by it and god therefor is not going to hold you accountable. You stay rightous.
I understand this likewise.
However you have also to answer to the social contract that this small band of people, this nucleus of society has tacitly agreed on.
Using insults is, while not completley ruled out, asked to be limited and used with caution.
The purpose obviously is to let this mini-society thrive and survive.
If you want to be a productive - and therefor beneficial - member you have to accept this elaborated moral code, even if god does not call you to it.
Society does and has a right to do so.
I would argue that this example is a cogent argument against your worldview. Before you role your eyes and remind me that you are not an empiricist I want to point out that I don`t have to proof that the above reasoning has to be valid in all time and space. It suffices that this simply is true in this instance to refute your claim that your reasoning is founded on an absolute principal or that you have found a universal truth.
You can, however, argue that your principal has only to be valid pertaining to god. That is possible, yet it means that you have departed from your fellow men and your reasoning is no longer meaningful to the functioning of any society and therefor to mankind.
In short: You`d encounter difficulties in maintaining an amiable association with others.
In fact I`d argue that exactly this has already happend as a result of your philosophy.
Jason, I want to thank you for providing an example that religion alone is not sufficient for our moral needs and that further negotiations are at times necessary.
I want to thank the rest of the people here, of which thoughts I have benifited so greatly, for providing an example that
this is possible and productive.
regards, Falk
Posted by: Falk Steinle | January 10, 2007 7:42 AM
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We function by the grace of our fallible mind.
What is God?
The answer to our falible mind.
Religion is perverse.
Posted by: timmy | January 10, 2007 1:28 AM
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I tried.
You all saw me try.
It was not a ruse.
I tried honestly when I was a kid and again as a teenager. And I just tried honestly again.
And even though Jason refused to answer my questions,
I have my answer. Loud and clear
Jason said:
If you’re not going to trust what people say about God, why then are you asking me about Him?"
I'm not asking you about Him.
I'm asking you why YOU believe what people say about God?
I asked you if you could describe your revelation, or , where you found your faith in God.
You don't seem to have had a spiritual revelation, or, you've not spoken of one when asked.
You tell us that you found your faith only in the bible.
Jason said:
"God has revealed Himself through the Bible. Yes, the words of Moses, Paul, Peter, etc. were words of people, but as the Scripture explains, they were words “breathed out by God”. 2 Timothy 3."
As the scripture explains?
Okay, so,
We are to believe the words of these people: Moses, Paul, Peter etc.
Because these people: (The people who wrote the scriptures)
Say that the other peoples words were breathed out by god.
These are the words of God, because the book says they are the word of God, and the reason to believe the book is because it's the word of God.
This is faith in people Jason.
But only some people.
But they are to be believed over the people who believe very different things, because they have written in their books, that these words were breathed out by God Himself.
I have read the Bible several times including recently. I'm not normally a big horror fan. especially the ones with so much blood and guts and killing and slavery and rape.
But I like the psychological stuff. You know, faith or hell thing. What a brilliant tool some diabolical genious invented for subjugating the gullible.
And then, mixed in with all of that horror, are the proverbs and the gospels. The words that speak of Love, compassion, brotherhood. Morals that all non believers and society in general hold most dear....... and then in the NT some more women being subservient, and slavery stuff.
But most important, in the end, (More important than the love and brotherhood stuff according to Jason, and the Bible)
is believe what you have been told by the words in this book, that were written by people. Because the people have told you that these are the words in God.
Who is God?
The people have told you fool, don't you listen?
Faith in people dude.
Faith in God can only come from God, not people.
When did you hear from God that all of those terrible things in the Bible were his words?
Not the good stuff. If God exists, and he speaks to people, then I have heard from God. He tells me that love and compassion for my fellow human being is a beautiful thing. But this is something that people of all faiths and non faiths feel.
If God exists, and he speaks to people, then it must be God who makes us all feel this way.
But what about all of the horror, and the specific rules and regulations and dogma and the "believe or go to hell" stuff.
God has never revealed any of that me.
Should I believe someone else when they tell me that God has revealed all of those terrible things to them?
No
I should be afraid of that person.
Especially if they bring up the idea of flying a jet into my house.
When one practices religion, one has lost faith in God.
.
Posted by: timmy | January 10, 2007 1:16 AM
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The "God is logic" view is so OT. The NT view is that God is love. Love melts down those hard edges, lets us live in the loop. The Word is love.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 10, 2007 12:41 AM
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Jason says:
"As far as being a better person, I don’t doubt I have much room to grow, practically speaking. But in the ultimate sense, I am as “good” as I’ll ever be because my salvation does not rest in my performance but on the work of Christ my God in my stead."
I never said there is no absolute to know; just that if we can just "know" that absolute, that seems too easy, chest hair or no. To think that you know what that absolute is (after all the famous philosophers, Christians included have struggled through the ages) and absolutely (!!) cannot be wrong about this seems jumping the gun to say the least. You say you changed your positions and moved to a new church twice. Was your conviction less strong before? Will you say that the next time you find some new position (with even more conviction), will you then say that the previous one must have been "wrong"? Or is your conviction maxed out at this point in your life?
If you think you are already there, then you will never get there. Didn't even Jesus have his doubts? I would not expect you to take my word for it, but I am confident that many, if not most, sincere Christians will tell you so. But of course, you will call anybody who tells you different that he/she is a moron, so it seems hopeless. Don't feel obligated to reply; I don't expect you to, not that it matters.
But thanks for replying to my questions, all the same. It has been a revelation.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 10, 2007 12:03 AM
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Jason...you need to take a permanent break from this site. Now you are not making sense.
“Bruce, that doesn't make any sense. The revelation of God came in "human language" and "logic". What other "logic" does God think?”
The revelation of God came in “Human Language” because we are humans….duh. If he wanted to communicate to the birds, he would have used their language and their logic. The Logic we see is human logic not the omnipotent logic that is beyond human capabilities. We cannot answer the question of what other logic God thinks because He is God. God is a being that is far more intelligent then man. After all, the Christians claim they were created in the image of God. Everyone knows that a copy is never as good as the original. Give it a rest, man.
In my opinion, you are a poor representation of the Christian community. I thought Christians were to act in love and Jesus did…you are bashing a man who says he is looking for your God. Why would anyone want to follow a belief that produces such anger and malice? Bruce on the other hand is trying to find neutral ground, a peaceful environment where everyone can search without the fear of being put through hell on earth, just because they are looking for the truth. Bruce seems to be representing the Jesus I have studied. Why are you so angry?
Here we have Jason on one side of the Christian platform and Bruce on the other. Both with one thing in common, they say they are both Christian. The two are as different as black and white, yet they still proclaim they are Christians??????? Who is right…who is wrong? Poor Timmy, I feel for you, man.
Jason, you are arguing for the sake of arguing. You are not trying to solve the problem; you are part of the problem. Set back and take a breather…come back with a calmer approach. People will accept you better if you approach them with a caring attitude, and then maybe you will actually convince people of your beliefs. I am sure you have heard the saying…people don’t care what you know until they know that you care. Show some “Jesus” compassion, guy.
Good grief…I had not finished my post and you are still bashing the, guy.
I am out of here…
Jason, you have ruined a good discussion with your anger. You have dominated the board with your ramping and rage. This is sooo immature.
I wonder what your Jesus thinks of this.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 9, 2007 11:56 PM
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“I am trying to find God.
Where should I look?
Inside my heart?
In my thoughts?
The Bible?
I have read the Bible OT and NT.
These are the words of people who are telling me about, what they know to be God. To believe based only on these words, and what ministers say about these words, is to have faith in these people, not in God. (respectfully as I see it)
(Please correct me with gentle love if I am wrong about this conclusion)
I am just being honest about the thoughts in my head.”
Timmy,
This doesn’t make any sense. If you’re not going to trust what people say about God, why then are you asking me about Him?
Seriously, is this sincerity or are you just attempting to cool things off a bit in hopes that I won’t hijack a small leer and fly it into your house?
If you’re looking for laser beams and voices, you’re not going to get it. God has revealed Himself through the Bible. Yes, the words of Moses, Paul, Peter, etc. were words of people, but as the Scripture explains, they were words “breathed out by God”. 2 Timothy 3.
Jesus said, “If they do not hear Moses and the Prophets, neither will they be convinced if someone should rise from the dead.'"”
God doesn’t “prove” Himself to you by bowing down to your empirical tests and putting on a show for you. If and when He chooses to reveal Himself to you, He does so directly to your mind thru the occasion of reading/hearing His word.
If you’re truly seeking, you’ll pick your Bible back up and start reading.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 9, 2007 11:41 PM
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Bruce says, "The only thing we can say about him is what he himself reveals about himself, and that is always subject to the limitations of human language and logic."
Bruce, that doesn't make any sense. The revelation of God came in "human language" and "logic". What other "logic" does God think?
Bruce, does God think 2+2=5?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 9, 2007 11:22 PM
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oh, and one last thing Puzzled.
You say, "Admitting doubt and striving to learn can be a good thing since no one already knows the answer."
If no one knows the answer, than how do you even know there is an answer?
As a little child, i was pretty sure 2+3 was 7 until a couple of people came along and said, "5". Then i doubted, and in this case, the doubt was good because i had the wrong answer. But if no one knows the answer, what reason would i have to doubt?
Eventually, you have to stop doubting that 2+3=5 and move on to bigger numbers, multiplication, and so on, else you stay stuck on that, sucking your thumb the rest of your life.
Perpetual doubting is not a good thing. It is utter foolishness. It gets you nowhere.
And that is where empiricism gets you in the end. If empiricism can produce no absolutes, then you can never be certain about anything and you can never progress.
Puzzled, if you don't know what the end goal is, how do you know you're progressing towards it?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 9, 2007 11:13 PM
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Puzzled says, “You think you know with absolute certainty, which contradicts what you (I presume) believe God to be: something beyond our ability to comprehend. That is your logic? Apply your "law" to that.”
Puzzled, I never said that we cannot know some things about God. Where did I say this? I’m assuming you’re getting that out of the critique of Hegel, but Puzzled…hello?... I’m not an EMPIRICIST! I don’t suffer the problems Hegel does because I’m not arguing for some naturalistic theory of knowledge.
Puzzled says, “language is a social construct devoid of meaning outside the world we live in.”
Really? How do you know this? Are you certain of this? Sounds like you are. Also, I’m assuming that you have left the world and observed that language is not used there!?
Once again, you’re taking your empiricism and its problems and trying to rub that off on me. And once again, I’ll repeat – I am not an empiricist.
It’s like the so-called “problem of evil.” It’s only a “problem” with people who reject the sovereignty of God over ALL matters of life. It never was a problem for me because the Scriptures teach quite plainly that God created evil. Don’t make your created problems mine because you don’t like what the Bible says.
Puzzled says, “Even if you say that god gave it to us, how many people agree on the meaning (even if they all agree that it is god-given)? That gets into dangerous territory: "only MY god is right, and your god is wrong."
And? So what that people don’t agree on the meaning, does that necessarily mean then that the Bible is false? No.
Furthermore, your rejection of God’s Word is nothing more than an attempt to create your own god – yourself. Unless now you’re going to tell me that you deny yourself. It’s simply one dogma being replaced by another –whether you go with Jesus, Buddha, or yourself. And what is really interesting is that I am actually the one who admits that my fallible thinking could never pretend to determine right and wrong for an entire society…I would never ask people to trust in my own wisdom and so on. Only in that which I merely duplicate God’s Word/Wisdom should my thoughts be taken seriously. Yet, it is you who mocks God’s wisdom and pretends to be more knowledgeable and wise concerning how things ought to be, and all this based the fallacious arguments of empiricism. What folly and pride!
Puzzled says, “Lastly, if "god is logic," then shouldn't god be consistent with logic? You can't be something (e.g., "god is logic") then not be consistent with it, right? But at the same time, can't god suspend his own laws in some instances (i.e., whenever he wants to)? Then, is he consistent or not? Or both?”
Again, God thinks logically. There is never a time when He does not. If I were to ask God what 2+2 equals, He would say 4 every time. Very simple.
What do you mean by “suspend his own laws”? Are you talking about God breaking laws? If so, give an example.
Lastly, you say, “Admitting doubt and striving to learn can be a good thing since no one already knows the answer (I hope you are not saying that you cannot be a better person and a better "christian" because you are already there).”
Again, more of this ignorance is bliss dribble. First of all Puzzled, I never claimed to know everything. In fact, I clearly admitted on this very forum that I would never argue the certainty of newspapers burning based on previous experience. I have doubted before. I’ve doubted the free-will myth and the futurism that is so prevalent among Christians. I doubted them because these doctrines will not consistently jive with what Scripture teaches. And I “strived” to find rational answers WITHIN the boundaries of God’s revelation. And twice I got the boot from churches when changing my position. The last boot coupled with a severe knee injury playing basketball and loosing almost every friend I had (because I was seen as a heretic) led to me filing bankruptcy and almost losing my marriage.
Don’t tell me I’m not critical of my thinking and do not read other Christian works with criticism. However, admitting doubt and striving to learn does not logically infer that there is no absolute to know and that NO ONE knows anything certain. I know the law of contradiction is absolute and I am 100% certain of this and I dare you to prove it wrong.
As far as being a better person, I don’t doubt I have much room to grow, practically speaking. But in the ultimate sense, I am as “good” as I’ll ever be because my salvation does not rest in my performance but on the work of Christ my God in my stead.
In that sense, I am already there.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 9, 2007 10:56 PM
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Jason: The people that Jesus castigated in Matthew 23 and other places were religionists - scribes, Pharisees, Torah experts, priests. The people you are encountering on this site do not fit this category. They are not religionists at all. Please reconsider.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 9, 2007 10:06 PM
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I would like to ask everyone to not jump on Jason for reacting the way that he did to my post.
While I have not found Jason's faith yet, I understand it much better now. Mostly through Bruce, and more recently LT, but also through Jason. Not through his argument but through his unwavering dedication to it. I respect it.
Please give me time to try and reach Jason before you attack him.
Actually it's the other way around. I want him to reach me. To show me the light. I am open.
Don't get in the way.
Bruce, you can help if you like. I know you will not attack him.
Posted by: timmy | January 9, 2007 9:47 PM
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So maybe Jesus would call those who deny God fools.
I do not deny God.
I have told you that.
I am a lost lamb who is honestly seeking your revelation.
Would Jesus call me a fool?
If I came to him and asked him to help me see the light?
I am not being facetious. I am honestly searching for God.
I have expressed my true feelings to you about what I have found so far.
You are with a ministry. Can you not help guide me through the honest explorations of God that I am expressing to you?
I forgive you for still being angry with me.
I am humble and open.
And I reach out to you once again.
I am sincere.
Posted by: timmy | January 9, 2007 9:39 PM
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Furthermore Bruce, my "self-assurance" is not in myself, but in the Word of God. I am only right because He is right. I am only reasonable because He is reasonable. My confidence is not in myself but in His Word.
The fact that you would quote those Scriptures in such a way so as to pit them against the righteous name-calling found throughout the Bible reveals either your ignorance or your unreasonableness.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 9, 2007 9:24 PM
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To all concerned:
Concerning my frequent use of the word “moron” for non-Christians, I will not apologize. Your problem is not with me, but with God Himself. If you have a problem with it, take it up with Him. Again, it amazes me that people who despise God’s Word and do not invest the hours in studying the word as myself and others do, would attempt to take that same word and pretend to know what it says and try to preach to me.
For example, Timmy says, “I know that Jesus would never resort to name calling and display the kind of anger that you have displayed.”
Hmmm…actually He did. In Matthew 23, Jesus called the non-believing scribes and Pharisees: (direct quotes from the ESV)
- hypocrites
- child of hell
- blind guides
- blind men
- whitewashed tombs
- full of hypocrisy and lawlessness
- serpents
- brood of vipers
Now, since Jesus was “without sin” (He 4.15), we may deduce that name-calling, in and of itself, is not a sin.
In I Cor 1.20, Paul asks, “Where is the one who is wise? Where is the scribe? Where is the debater of this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of the world?”
The Greek word that is translated as “foolish” here originates from “moros”, from which we get the English “moron”.
The Psalmist tells us in 14.1 that “the fool says in his heart, "There is no God."
There are many more examples with even worse names used, but these will suffice. We see then that there is a place for rightful judgment and rightful name-calling. Calling an atheist a “moron” is not unreasonable because it rightfully describes who they are. There is a legitimate “reason” for it.
If you don’t like being a “moron”, then leave your atheism.
Furthermore, these same morons have no problem exalting books written by men like Harris and Dawkins, men who have called Christians “idiots”, “ignoramuses” and the like. What hypocrites! In fact, they have set up the whole debate as one of “Religion” versus “Reason”, implying that religious folks are unreasonable – which is of course one of the points of their books. Now, I happen to agree that many religious people are unreasonable. For example, I believe the “left behind” teachings are absolute foolishness; however, Harris does not make these distinctions. Instead, the moron lumps us all into one ball of wax, quotes a few verses from Deuteronomy and then proceeds to tell us theologians what it really means and what a “true” follower should look like.
And then to top that off, these same “reason”able folks tell me on this board that the law of contradiction is “not certain”, despite Daniel Dennett’s warning of becoming a “vegetable”.
You hypocritical and blind morons…rightly does the Scripture speak of you.
No Bruce, I ask that you call evil evil and good good and grow some chest hair.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 9, 2007 9:15 PM
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WM: Thank you for your comment. I have enjoyed reading your posts as well as the others. While we have a different experience and a different viewpoint, I have learned alot about both myself and non-believers on this blog. I am actually encouraged about the potential for dialogue between the two groups. If we can keep it half-way civil, we can find some common ground on some issues. I don't mind a touch critique of my positions - if I can't stand up that that, I don't have any business expressing my opinion, anyway. I've enjoyed reading your views.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 9, 2007 7:27 PM
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Bruce, I'd like to thank you for the comments you have made on this blog. Your comments have been made with grace along with reason. Of all the believers that I have been listening to here, you are the person who has given me the most reason to think that one does not have to be totally irrational to be a believer. Who knows, maybe some day I'll find the evidence that makes you a believer in your God! If not, or until then, at least your comments have helped me to have more respect for people who have found evidence that makes sense to them. Thank you!
Posted by: wm | January 9, 2007 6:33 PM
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Andy: Interesting last post. I agree that logic is just a tool, and that "our feeble logic is simply not up to the task of representing God." His own definition of Himself is "I am what I am", so any attempt to define the God of the Bible is always going to be insufficient. The only thing we can say about him is what he himself reveals about himself, and that is always subject to the limitations of human language and logic. At the very most, we can conceive of a "stick-figured" image of a being with more dimensions that we can even comprehend (assuming he exists, of course). So ultimately, the use of logic to either prove, disprove or explain God is going to be futile, except that as a tool it assists us in rudimentary discussion about the concept of God. Thanks for the comment.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 9, 2007 6:32 PM
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Jason: As one believer to another - Colossians 4:6 - "Let your speech always be with grace, seasoned with salt, that you may know how you ought to answer each one." (NKJV)
I Peter 3:15-16 "and always be ready to give a defense to everyone who asks you a reason for the hope that is in you, with meekness and fear."
In all honesty, I have seen very little grace, meekness and fear (humility before God) in your responses to non-believers. I have seen wrath, arrogance and self-assurance, instead.
"Those who are sinning rebuke in the presence of all." I Timothy 5:20 You are an elder in the faith, so this verse applied to you.
In the name of Jesus, I call upon you right now to repent and cease from this wicked manner of speech. You will do more for the cause of Christ and His church if you just say, right now, "I am sorry for the things I have said." Then, just answer Timmy's last question, and let him know about the love of Jesus. Please, for everyone's sake.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 9, 2007 6:19 PM
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Jason, I wish you would take some council from the lord Jesus in your dealings with us.
No matter how much we are unable to see your point, not matter how frustrating it is to you, I know that Jesus would never resort to name calling and display the kind of anger that you have displayed. Even if we have deserved it.
Can you love us in our ignorance of your obvious?
I will apologize to you now Jason for anything I have said previously that has caused you to resort to calling us all morons.
I am sincere in this apology and I'd like to find a new, respectful way of communicating with you.
You don't have deal differently with anyone who does not apologize to you and pledge to change the tone of the conversation, but I do apologize. Sincerely.
I admit that it was fun to cross swords with your intellect, but it is getting ugly now. We had our fun. Can we try something new?
You and I?
I would like to honestly, and with an open mind, find out what it is that you are trying to tell us. I want to understand, not fight.
If I appear to have been looking for a fight earlier, I was. So was LT. We trusted each other enough to confess our flaws and forgive each other. So that we might engage again in honest conversation.
I have said mean things to you Jason as you have said mean things to me. I sincerely apologize.
I love people who live on the other side off the world who I have never met as I love all humanity. And I love you Jason, because you are my brother as all humans are my brother. This is why I am passionate about this subject. I care so deeply for humanity. My passion made me forget to be civil to you Jason, and to try and understand your frustration with us.
I am truly trying now.
I want to understand faith in God, and I an open to finding faith in God.
The following questions are for you Jason. They are not meant to challenge your faith. They are not meant to be accusing. They are an honest attempt for me to find God =logic = love.
I am asking for your help in understanding.
I am trying to find God.
Where should I look?
Inside my heart?
In my thoughts?
The Bible?
I have read the Bible OT and NT.
These are the words of people who are telling me about, what they know to be God. To believe based only on these words, and what ministers say about these words, is to have faith in these people, not in God. (respectfully as I see it)
(Please correct me with gentle love if I am wrong about this conclusion)
I am just being honest about the thoughts in my head.
I want to have faith in God, not in the people who tell me about God. Can anyone have faith in God without a personal experience with Jesus or God? (Jesus and God are essentially the same thing right?) (please gently correct me with love in you heart if I am wrong)
I am honestly searching for what you have found.
Can you tell me more about your personal experience with the holy spirit that has given you the faith that you have?
I ask this so I might recognize it when I feel it.
What about that moral voice that we all have in our heads? Everyone hears that voice. It tells me what is the righteous moral path to take is for every situation I encounter. And yet it leaves me the free will to choose the wrong path if I desire.
This presence , or sense of self, also sends shivers down my spine when I hear beautiful words of compassion and hope and love. Even when I just think about the idea of that voice in my head being God, I get shivers.
Is this God that I am feeling, Jason?
Is your communication with God something more than that?
This feeling I get, gives me no specifics. It neither orders me nor inspires me to follow the dogma from any of the earthly religions that I have encountered.
I want to have faith in God, Jason, not in people.
Again, this is not a question to challenge your faith. I will not ever attack your faith again.
I want to understand with an open mind so that I might experience the joy of God.
I have faith in that moral voice in my head. Eternal faith.
So I hope that feeling is God. Because then I could honestly answer that I have faith in God. But this faith would have nothing to do with the Bible.
That moral voice in my head, (and I'm just being completely honest here) makes me feel all creepy like, when I listen to a guy like Pat Robertson.
I am honestly trying to understand God, Jason.
I hope you do not doubt my sincerity.
I hope you will notice that I am a changed man.
I hope that you will reach out to me with love.
I promise I will never again try to trip you up on your own words or defeat you in an argument with science based logic.
This will do me no good in my attempt to understand you, or your faith, and God.
I'm not looking for a fight anymore Jason.
I am looking for understanding, and with any luck.... God.
Feel free to respond privately if you do not want others on this thread to jump all over you when you let your guard down for me.
Posted by: timmy | January 9, 2007 2:27 PM
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Re: "God is logic" (John 1:1)
If the word "God" as used in the Christian sense is to have any denotation at all, it must denote the highest and most universal concept in our whole ontology. That concept must also conform to the rules of logic.
Any ontology can be mapped into the universe of sets, because sets are the most abstract and logically pure entities there are. The efforts of Frege and Russell were precisely to map all the entities of mathematics into sets. For any other domain of discourse, the task is logically easier (albeit empirically much more difficult, given the fuzzy semantics of empirical domains).
Frege created a theory with a universal set, which he defined as the set that contains all other entities as members. (The membership relation is not at issue here, since it is abstract enough to have almost any empirical instantiation, just like the predication relation in a subject--predicate sentence, which asserts that the object denoted by the subject of the sentence falls under the concept denoted by the predicate.) Frege's universal set contained any set defined by a clear and unambiguous membership criterion.
Russell pounced on the following contradiction. In Frege's universe, there is a set S of all sets that are not members of themselves. Russell asked, is the set S a member of itself or not? If it is a member of itself, it does not satisfy the qualifying condition for the set, so it is not. If it is not a member of itself, it does satisfy the qualifying condition, so it is. We have obtained a contradiction. From this reduction ad absurdum, we conclude there is no such set S.
Consequence: if the universal set exists at all, it must be a member of itself. But the membership relation is normally understood as an asymmetric relation. If A is a member of B, then B is not at the same time and in the same sense a member of A. For consider what this would mean. The members of a set A are "inside" A. If A is a member of B, B is "outside" A. So set A were a member of A, it would be both inside and outside itself. This paradox is normally regarded as showing that a set cannot be a member of itself.
The natural conclusion is that there is no universal set. Since all concepts can be modeled as sets, there is no concept that if modeled as a set could only be modeled as the universal set. The Christian God seems to be a logically inadmissible concept.
However, there is a way out. I discovered that in any set theory in which sets are not members of themselves and all sets are ultimately based on the empty set, there is nothing to stop you regardng the universal set as the "inside" of the null set and the null set as the "outside" of the universal set. This paradoxical looping of the universe is invisible from wthin the universe, and forms a strange loop in the sense of Douglas Hofstadter.
Applied to God, the strange loop suggests that God looks like everything from within but like nothing at all from outside. The other conclusion is that our feeble logic is simply not up to the task of representing God. In this case, there is nothing we can say with logical certainty about God and we may as well save our breath. This is what Buddhists have said all along.
The King James translation of John says "In the beginning was the Word, and the the word was with God and the word was God." If we translate this as, "In the beginning was the null set, and the null set was in the universe and the null set was the universe," you may see how Hegel's being--nothing--becoming dialectic gets started. The universe grows by budding out of its own momentary contradictions!
Maybe now you see why we say logic is just another tool.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 9, 2007 2:22 PM
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I am honest enough to admit I do not know. If that makes me a fence-sitter, then that is fine. You think you know with absolute certainty, which contradicts what you (I presume) believe God to be: something beyond our ability to comprehend. That is your logic? Apply your "law" to that.
As for universal, I make no claims that words like "decent" are universal. Those words are what we make it to be. After all, language is a social construct devoid of meaning outside the world we live in. Language may represent things that are universal but from our perspective (with a lot of baggage; social, historical, etc.), but as you stated yourself, it cannot capture the fullness of its existence (e.g., cats, dogs, etc.). From my perspective (and from yours, too) Nazi ideology was not "decent." Stop setting up strawmen.
We would like to be a decent society that survives and prospers. However, there is a constant struggle amongst groups who have their own ideas of decency. If indeed those elements who have it "wrong" take control, then perhaps our society will cease to exist as we know it. Definition of decency is therefore not exogenous (i.e., some universal definition that dropped from the sky), but endogenous (i.e., something that we make as we experiment). Even if you say that god gave it to us, how many people agree on the meaning (even if they all agree that it is god-given)? That gets into dangerous territory: "only MY god is right, and your god is wrong."
Lastly, if "god is logic," then shouldn't god be consistent with logic? You can't be something (e.g., "god is logic") then not be consistent with it, right? But at the same time, can't god suspend his own laws in some instances (i.e., whenever he wants to)? Then, is he consistent or not? Or both?
I am probably wasting my breath, but for the last time: I am trying to be honest and admit that I am in the process of searching. And therefore I am trying to be earnest in engaging in conversation, even with a stubborn person like you. Yet I am "puzzled" by the animosity and your flat-out refusal (as well as that of many other believers I've encountered) to admit doubt and confront these difficult questions. Admitting doubt and striving to learn can be a good thing since no one already knows the answer (I hope you are not saying that you cannot be a better person and a better "christian" because you are already there).
Posted by: Puzzled | January 9, 2007 12:28 PM
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Phillip-why-you-Tripping says, "Jason-One more comment about your earlier tirade. You stated that you don't know why the sovereign lets me and all the atheist bloodsucking leeches live another minute."
Actually Phillip, i didn't say that. I said, "You should be grateful the Sovereign Lord even allows you to live another second."
There are two possibilities for why He lets you live. You're either one of the elect, at which some point in the future, you will be called out of darkness - or - you are one of the reprobates that God keeps alive to continue storing up wrath for yourself, making your condemnation sure.
Furthermore, i find your preaching to me quite comical. First, it's comical because as we've seen, you have a hard time reading. But secondly, you are attempting to portray me as some evil guy because I'm not obeying the Bible. haha...this is great...lmao.
Again, like the leech you are, you'll appeal to the Bible when it is convenient for you to try to argue some point...another coward.
Lastly, in 30 years on this planet, (13 of those at a height of 6'6" and playing more basketball than most do in a lifetime) I have not been in even ONE fist fight. Because the same Lord who warns me of 'enemies' also tells me to turn the other cheek. Now, to be honest i've had my moments of anger, of which i don't doubt a single person on this thread hasn't had, but by His grace, He has kept me from sinning.
So try again moron.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 9, 2007 10:32 AM
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Puzzled says, "(And btw, why don't you answer my question? If god is logic, then is your god subject to his own logic or not?)"
Because "subject" can imply a number of things, but "atheist-forbid" that i ask you for a definition.
God is not "subject" to logic in the sense that logic is some outside entity that He submits to. The law of contradiction, for example, is not to be understood as an axiom prior to or independent of God. The law is God thinking.
Puzzled: "The fact that human beings as a species is still around and have built a functioning society is indication that the experiments in building a decent society (like the American Revolution or the democratic movements in Europe before that) have been successful thus far."
There you go again...ummm...Puzzled, what does "decent" mean?
You keep throwing around these words as though they have some universal meaning...as though millions of people all agree on what decency is.
You basically say that a society is successful and decent due to the fact that we're still around. Decency is whatever the heck we want it to be. What a bunch of baloney. I can come up with thousands of scenarios of a society that's "still around" yet commit horrendous crimes.
Puzzled says, "Who knows? We may yet wipe ourselves out."
Talk about bankrupt. There it is in a nutshell, i.e. "This appears to be a decent society because we're still around, but if we end up wiping ourselves out, then that would prove we were not a decent society."
Which is just another way to say: I don't know squat about anything.
And i guess the Third Reich was "decent" at least for 12 years.
Lastly, Puzzled (great name by the way) says,
"However, it would also be a travesty to follow the example of closed-minded ideologues who cannot be critical of their own ideas even if it is not consistent with the world around us."
Puzzle, you don't even know what "consistent" means. For someone who is "almost" certain about the law of contradiction to be preaching to me about consistency is the most ridiculous bunch of nonsense I've ever read.
Quite being a wuss Puzzled. Your fence riding is only going to last for so long.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 9, 2007 10:06 AM
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Puzzled:You raised in interesting subject by discussing the penalties for crime while here on earth. You brought up a lot of good points which are the subject of great debate in many countries of the world.
Unfortunately, I was not focusing my diatribe against Christianity for anything to do with punishment here on earth. I was focusing on my problem with a religion that potentially forgives anyone for their earthly crimes no matter how heinous and allows them to mingle in heaven with the very people they committed their earthly crimes against.
I have a real problem with that concept. If Christians want to believe that nonsense, that is their choice.
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 9, 2007 9:34 AM
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I agree Mother,
Just like a faith can be hijacked by dogma of all kinds, we have discovered that "non faith" is also subject to such things.
Who'd a thunk.
We need to keep an eye out for atheistic dogma.
But we must also be careful not to mistake conversation for dogma.
It may only seem harsh and dogmatic because it was conversation that was not too long ago, taboo.
The important thing is to attack all dogma that aims to impose itself on people of other faiths, and non faiths.
This is the only problem.
Dogmatic imposition.
We must go after only dogmatic interference in our lives.
Attacking faith is more than futile.
It is counter productive.
It is a waste of time.
Time that could be spent working on the problem of dogmatic interference. And if we are not attacking the faithful and putting them on defense, we stand a better chance of getting somewhere on the real problem.
Posted by: timmy | January 9, 2007 12:07 AM
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One need only read down to the part of Sam Harris's article where he writes "we do not have a name for people who do not believe in astrology, nor do we need one."
First off, I think we do have a name for people who do not believe in astrology, atheists. Astrology and religion are linked together.
However based on todays standards and education
where we imagine astrology boils down to reading our horoscopes (mini prophecies) found printed in a paper by the media gods, perhaps it seems way to frivolous and unimportant to connect it to religion.
But religion is a practice of belief in invisible universal powers that direct and control our lives. Astrology fits that description in a tight little package. Sam,
just like the religious powers that be, have narrowed religion down to some very finite and unrealistic catagories. They are Islam, Christianity, Judaism, and the easter religions which he has a tendency to support as "valid" religions.
The problem as I see it facing philosophers is that yesterdays philosophy can be as much of an antiquated expression of myth as the four main religions listed above.
Sam was trained at a university in his knowledge, based on this past information. Like the ancient religions, philosophy is it's own narrow little belief system based on many, many philosophical "myths" So you could say I am an Aphilosophist, when focusing on philosophy like the kind Sam has faith in and preaches about.
Sam's first mistake is his assumption that just because he has attained the position of seeing why there is no truth or logic to the religious practices he abhors, he forgot that his truth and logic may not make sense to someone who has spent time questioning all modern assumptions that have evolved directly from our "religious" past. The worst fault in any religion is the belief that their religion is the right one, and alternate perspectives and critical discrimination of self is not part of their practice.
Here are just a few of my thoughts on this subject.
The Mother
Posted by: Mother | January 8, 2007 10:14 PM
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I guess I'm back again.
LT and I worked some things out in private and had a breakthrough. I'm pretty sure we are friends now. So I have new hope. And a new purpose for posting.
Basically, LT and I decided to stop the intellectual vibrato that is a game we both admit to enjoying too much. We admitted to each other that we were both just looking for a fight. We apologized to each other for any hurtful insensitive things we said, and agreed to proceed as friends who will try very hard to understand one another, even when we can't understand one another. We will proceed by expressing our honest feelings to each other and not jumping on each other's words with semantical ad hominem attack.
Feels good.
What I learned on this thread, that opened my eyes, is that there is a big difference between using reason and logic to try and talk someone out of believing, who didn't really believe in the first place, and trying to do the same thing with people who really do have faith.
I can see now that the very definition of faith,
requires a leap so grand that there is no going back.
That is faith.
If it is not eternal, it is not faith.
And faith is therefore logic. To the faithful.
With this understanding can move on from the thought that I might be able to make my faithful friend see my different version of logic.
In fact I can understand exactly why my faithful friend knows (not thinks) that my logic makes no sense because logic is faith.
I understand my faithful friend enough now not to be offended by that. It makes sense to me. We can move on. This is terrific.
And then in return, I ask my faithful friend to understand me when I tell them them of my search for faith. It doesn't come up empty, just different.
I went looking honestly for faith in God.
I discovered that I can only have faith in the Bible God, if the Bible God makes his presence known to me in a way that confirms to me that he is the Bible God.
No I am not telling God that the onus is on him to find me.
But how else can I know that, what humans from the church are telling me, is true. Or rather, is God?
To believe what humans tell me about God is faith in humans.
And people have something material to gain by turning god into a business and a political force.
There will always be evil people who will try to use God to subjugate people for reasons of power and influence.
Faith in God can only come from God.
Otherwise, which humans are we to listen to when looking for God? And how do we know that the version of those particular humans is God, unless God confirms it for you?
So try as I did, I have never experience God, as God has been described to me by the Bible, or by people who interpret the Bible.
So the only way that I can have faith in that God, is to believe people without God's confirmation.
But which people? How do I know? If I believe the wrong person, I might kill a doctor, or fly a plane into a building, or Become Pat Robertson.
To believe people, I will have to ignore that voice of morality in my head. And that might be God. In so many ways, that voice of morality is god to me. It's the only voice that talks to me. It's the one that sends shivers and a rush of emotion through my entire body when I hear or read the words.
"Imagine all the people, sharing all the world"
But the only way I could possibly relate that voice, to the God from the Bible, would be to have complete faith in Gerry Falwell.
No? Not him? Who then? Which human do I have faith in.
The Bible? Written by humans.
The following words don't send shivers down my spine.
"The people will share all the world"
It was the "imagine" thing that got me.
God is telling me that with the shivers.
Which is funny because the god who is telling me that, is the god I imagine.
Posted by: timmy | January 8, 2007 10:11 PM
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Jason,
I did not take you to be the sort. I thought at least you were trying to make some sense of why you believe (besides Logic = God, which is just another way of saying "Hallelujah!" but with the word logic thrown in; ie, a "true" statement, but only by your definition).
Yes. It would be a travesty to follow the lead of morally bankrupt people (by which I mean people who do not have a sense of right or wrong, whether that sense is god-given or not). Once again, true by definition, and merely a rhetorical sleight-of-hand in setting up a straw-man. And don't get into the silly rantings about why murder is necessarily bad if not for god. As a society and as the human race, there are some notions of right and wrong that we've agreed on (social contract and all that), which we've arrived at through learning-by-doing (evolution). The English common law system is a case in point, it's constantly changing as society changes. The fact that human beings as a species is still around and have built a functioning society is indication that the experiments in building a decent society (like the American Revolution or the democratic movements in Europe before that) have been successful thus far. Who knows? We may yet wipe ourselves out.
However, it would also be a travesty to follow the example of closed-minded ideologues who cannot be critical of their own ideas even if it is not consistent with the world around us. You say we have to repent and believe. Let's say that's right for a moment. But believe in what? I don't want to believe in idols that you or others assert and set above me to worship. If anything, I want to believe in what is best in us and what we can aspire to. Jesus may have been such an exemplar, so religion should have a place in this search. But if you think you already know the answer, I can say this with virtual certainty (not quite absolute, but close): you don't. Clearly, your tirade is an indication that there is room for some small improvements in your goal of aspiring to Jesus' teachings.
Once again, your assertion that "God is the only way" is merely what YOU believe (I am sorry but I have very little confidence in your absolute certainty), not necessarily the truth.
(And btw, why don't you answer my question? If god is logic, then is your god subject to his own logic or not?)
Posted by: Puzzled | January 8, 2007 2:52 PM
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I am assuming ptripp is Philip. Let's think rationally for a second. What your hypothetical question raises is what "earthly" punishment is intended for. Why do we lock criminals away? I can think of two obvious reasons: (a) to make sure they don't do it again, and (b) to make examples of criminals who are caught so that others would be less inclined to follow suit. Although I am all for strict enforcement of the law as far as crimes (felonies in particular) are concerned, we have to realized such crimes cannot be undone by sending them to prison. We are addressing only the symptoms of society's ills, and are not attempting a more basic cure. Victims of a crime would normally want to see those criminals suffer; I know I probably would. But in an ideal world, we want those kind of punishment for those who deserve it, but we also want them to really repent and regret what they did as well.
I agree that as a dad myself, child rapists deserve the most severe punishment we can apply. However, as a society, we want to be able to rehabilitate criminals as well. It's really tough. I would venture a guess and say most criminals do not repent. But there may be some who do, given the right conditions. So, as a society, and as members of the human race, we have to make a decision: how much allowance do we make for the small possibility that those who've committed crimes in past will truly repent and contribute to society once again? We cannot allow criminals to run rampant, but neither can we become a police state with draconian justice. This is not a decision for one person or one religous group to make. Rather it has to be debated across the entire cross-section of our society.
If atheism is based (at least in part) on rationality, then let's see more of it. If religion is based (at least in part) on compassion for the less fortunate, then let's see more of it too.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 8, 2007 2:07 PM
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Andy: I agree with you. Unfortunately, in this era of possible worldwide nuclear destruction, the meek, you refer to, are insects, bacteria and viruses.
If you mean, that meek humans will survive, I can only hope that you are correct. I see them as part of the collateral damage along with most of the animal and plant species on this planet.
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 8, 2007 2:03 PM
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The late British pol Enoch Powell was pilloried for saying "I seem to see the Tiber flowing with much blood" but now I seem to see it too.
World War II was Hitler versus Stalin, and Americans reaped the profits. World War III is Christians versus Islamists, and China reaps the profits.
Those who take an eye for an eye would make the whole world blind. Let us remember that the meek will inherit the Earth.
Sam says stop the madness before it is too late.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 8, 2007 1:39 PM
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Jason-One more comment about your earlier tirade. You stated that you don't know why the sovereign lets me and all the atheist bloodsucking leeches live another minute.
Clearly, you have raised this discourse to a new and disturbing level. You are indeed a troubled individual.
In case you weren't aware, the proper Christian way to handle my diatribe, this morning, would be to say, Philip, I am sorry that you feel that way. I will pray for you and hope that you see the error in your ways. Your militant response is typical of most religions.
Perhaps if you were a better Christian, you would have know the correct Christian response. Sorry pal. Your response was not one of forgiveness. You may think that you are a good Christian, but you are not talking the talk.
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 8, 2007 1:26 PM
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Jason-I see that I have now graduated from being a moron to a blood sucking leech. Do I get a pay raise for the promotion?
To answer your question and to use your phrase and those of all believers in God, the reason why the Sovereign allows me to live is that "God works in strange and mysterious ways".
I am terrified of people like you. Not because I fear recrimination from God but because amongst your type, there are undoubtedly those that would take my life and say that he was acting on God's behalf or performing God's will.
You tell me that is not anything that I have to fear. That is what Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins must fear every day. Your anger towards me and them is identical to the anger that the men that flew their airplanes into the world trade center felt about Chritians and anything American.
If you cannot see the similarities between your anger and theirs, and I doubt that you or any of your brethren will, then our planet is indeed doomed.
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 8, 2007 12:53 PM
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Timmy, I surrender. You have many aspects of me pinned down. So many of the things (although not everything) you said about me are right. I'm not even going to respond to RB anymore. There are certain assumptions we each have, and if we are not willing to let them go, fruitful discussion is extremely limited.
What follows in this posting, my last on this page, and my last in which I debate (from now on I will comment only on the original comments and not try to defend them afterward) is largely an affirmation of what Timmy says about me. Though I cannot be sure, I suspect evangelical Christians will find much they agree with and that most atheists will find my claims mind-boggling, unreasonable or worse. But that's my point...
"I can see that you and I are not the same at all....I did this to try and show you that we are more alike than not alike." Yes, I thought we are much more different than you thought we are even before your last posting. As a Christian by choice, I believe it is greater than a life and death matter whether one knows God through the Bible.
"You are so very arrogant to tell me that I need to define words like love, peace and compassion for you if I am going to talk about them. You mock my usage of those universal words as though no one who does not know god as you do could understand them." I confess, while people are capable of these three things apart from God, as a Christian I believe that these three things originate from God that if one doesn't acknowledge Him, then one cannot truly understand what true love (or peace or compassion) is. The Bible that I believe in says God is love, and so from the Bible it follows that if one does not know God, one does not know love. I believe that people who try to practice love as you sincerely try, but without God, are practicing a form of love that is a mere shadow of the love God intended.
"You are only a distraction to the people who are actually concerned about the problems of the world and looking for answers." Well, you're not exactly correct, but definitely our priorities are different. You are concerned about the problems of the world. I don't know which problems you think are most serious, but I'm guessing the fact that everyone dies eventually is not one of them. (My recollection of your posts suggests you think religious extremism and/or religion itself is a bigger problem.) I think the Bible is pretty clear that the key problem is death and that God has provided a solution through eternal life with Him after death. As an (evangelical) Christian, I think the key problem is that there are people who haven't accepted God's forgiveness through Christ.
"You are not looking for a solution." Yes, I am probably not looking for a solution to the problems you perceive as hard as you are. We've defined our problems differently, and while I could be working on your problem of choice, I think God has convicted me that there are other problems I have to deal with for now, like my personal relationships with the people I know most. I think I'm a terrible person in need of Jesus' spiritual healing. Even if lift other people out of poverty, disease, or religious extremism, I would still be lacking in love if I didn't know how better to relate to other people.
"You still want to fight." Well, you're partically right, that attitude is definitely present in me. I used to like to intellectually argue before I was a Christian, and I've carried that baggage since becoming one. It's one of the sins I still struggle to overcome. I don't usually approach people who I hope will find God with such an adversarial stance. Usually I know them personally and see in them in person so that I can show God's love and compassion in other ways. Unfortunately, I don't live in LA and don't have anything to do with the entertainment industry, so the only thing left is this kind of debate.
Posted by: LT | January 8, 2007 11:52 AM
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more assertions. Philip, what is "crime"?
Seriously, truth is relative right? Who said murder was a crime?....
do you not see how utterly insane your remarks are...people who deny absolutes and dogma want to tell the rest of us how to think and want to tell us there are "Some crimes that you do not forgive."
SAYS WHO?!
Forgiveness implies that someone did something wrong...well, what is wrong? Timmy says wrong is something "not true". Well, what is "true"?
I've been trying to get you morons (this is a compliment - remember, logic is optionable, therefore moron really means cool, likable, smart) to answer that question now for days and not one taker...
YET,
You continually assert right and wrong with every post. You continually make use of absolutes and certainties...what absurdity.
Blood-sucking leeches...that's all you people are. You breathe out words of mockery and contempt for the very one who gives you breath. You should be grateful the Sovereign Lord even allows you to live another second.
Psalm 10
Why, O LORD, do you stand afar off? Why do you hide yourself in times of trouble? 2 In arrogance the wicked hotly pursue the poor; let them be caught in the schemes that they have devised. 3 For the wicked boasts of the desires of his soul, and the one greedy for gain curses and renounces the LORD. 4 In the pride of his face the wicked does not seek him; all his thoughts are, "There is no God." 5 His ways prosper at all times; your judgments are on high, out of his sight; as for all his foes, he puffs at them. 6 He says in his heart, "I shall not be moved; throughout all generations I shall not meet adversity." 7 His mouth is filled with cursing and deceit and oppression; under his tongue are mischief and iniquity. 8 He sits in ambush in the villages; in hiding places he murders the innocent. His eyes stealthily watch for the helpless; 9 he lurks in ambush like a lion in his thicket; he lurks that he may seize the poor; he seizes the poor when he draws him into his net. 10 The helpless are crushed, sink down, and fall by his might. 11 He says in his heart, "God has forgotten, he has hidden his face, he will never see it." 12 Arise, O LORD; O God, lift up your hand; forget not the afflicted. 13 Why does the wicked renounce God and say in his heart, "You will not call to account"? 14 But you do see, for you note mischief and vexation, that you may take it into your hands; to you the helpless commits himself; you have been the helper of the fatherless. 15 Break the arm of the wicked and evildoer; call his wickedness to account till you find none. 16 The LORD is king forever and ever; the nations perish from his land. 17 O LORD, you hear the desire of the afflicted; you will strengthen their heart; you will incline your ear 18 to do justice to the fatherless and the oppressed, so that man who is of the earth may strike terror no more.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 8, 2007 11:32 AM
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LT-You say that even murderers are allowed full repentance in the eyes of the lord.
How about a hypothetical case of your own daughter raped and murdered by someone who is never caught. Before dying he accepts the Lord Jesus as his saviour.
Under the strict interpretation of your gospel, Jesus gives him a place with everyone else in eternity including the little girl he raped and murdered. Before long you and your wife and your dead little girl and her murderer will all be one happy family up there in heaven.
Further, the fact that he was never caught meant that he also never did his time in prison on earth which we call justice.
Are you trying to tell me that afer you are dead, everyone loses all sense of what happened before and there is no thoughts of our behavior while on earth? No justice ever for your little girl?
Your little girl loves that man in heaven? She has no animosity for the life that he took away from her? He deprived her of the 4 children and 9 grandchildren that she would have had if she had lived? She forgets all of that in Heaven?
I am sorry but that is the most ridiculous and childish concept of a herafter that I could possible think of. Get real man!
There are some crimes for which there are no get out of jail free cards for. Some crimes that you do not forgive. Your religions concept of the hereafter is totally unacceptable to me and I have disdain for anyone that could possibly accept that nonsense.
In your religion, even Adolph Hitler, Joseph Stalin, Pol Pot, Timothy McVeigh, the men that flew airplanes into the twin towers and even Jeffery Dahmer are welcome in heaven if they accept the lord Jesus Christ as their savior.
Sorry, but Christianity is absolutely the last religion that I could possibly accept for that reason. And don't tell me that my little scenerio above is not possible. Perhaps not with you, but I guarantee that sometime in the last 2,000 years, that exact scenerio has occured somewhere in the world.
Posted by: ptripp@spi-ind.com | January 8, 2007 11:05 AM
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"You mock my usage of those universal words"
I thought there were no universals? I thought there were no certainties?
if we can't know anything for certain, then you're darn skippy we have a right to ask you how you are defining words...
It is absolutely [s] imperative that we define our terms, because it's obvious that what you mean by "truth" and what I mean by "Truth" are different.
it's funny that you would argue for universal meanings and then whine and complain about the definition for "atheism".
Timmy, your attempt at "peace", etc., is a sham. Your solution to the problems completely conflict with the Scripture's solutions...in fact, you and I don't even agree on what exactly the "problem" is.
Timmy, the world's problem is the same one you have - you despise the Lord of Glory. You mock His name. You reject Reason Himself.
You and I were never on any common ground to begin with.
Furthermore, there are Christians like me who seek to end terrorism, religious fanatics, end time theories, and the like; so your portrayal of me is downright deceptive...
You're not looking for 'peace' - you're looking for people to drop whatever dogmas they have that you don't like, so that YOU can supposedly lead us to a more intelligent, peaceful, blah, blah, lifestyle.
Only insane people would follow the lead of people who are certain about nothing.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 8, 2007 10:37 AM
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"You mock my usage of those universal words"
I thought there were no universals? I thought there were no certainties?
if we can't know anything for certain, then you're darn skippy we have a right to ask you how you are defining words...
It is absolutely [s] imperative that we define our terms, because it's obvious that what you mean by "truth" and what I mean by "Truth" are different.
it's funny that you would argue for universal meanings and then whine and complain about the definition for "atheism".
Timmy, your attempt at "peace", etc., is a sham. Your solution to the problems completely conflict with the Scripture's solutions...in fact, you and I don't even agree on what exactly the "problem" is.
Timmy, the world's problem is the same one you have - you despise the Lord of Glory. You mock His name. You reject Reason Himself.
You and I were never on any common ground to begin with.
Furthermore, there are Christians like me who seek to end terrorism, religious fanatics, end time theories, and the like; so your portrayal of me is downright deceptive...
You're not looking for 'peace' - you're looking for people to drop whatever dogmas they have that you don't like, so that YOU can supposedly lead us to a more intelligent, peaceful, blah, blah, lifestyle.
Only insane people would follow the lead of people who are certain about nothing.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 8, 2007 10:28 AM
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I am a fairly intelligent man. I understand most of what I read, and if I do not, I re-read until I do. However, I am not always good at re-articulating another's philosophy on the spot, and this is frustrating.
That said, I would like to say that I have read both of Sam's books (as well as Dawkins's). And while I am an atheist anyway, I can say I find no better support for my stance than the writings of these two men. And I wish to thank them for the accessibility of their writing style. Especially Sam.
In every refute/detraction/insult/rebuttal/defense against Sam, not once have I heard anything that comes close to making logical sense. It always comes back to blind faith. Perhaps the counterargument is couched in erudite philosophical/psychological/ontological detritus, but it's always ultimately empty of substance.
It's strange to be in a position of lesser learning in the areas of understanding that embody this discourse, yet still be able to pinpoint the nonsense of those who argue for faith. I suppose it must be very extreme nonsense, then, and that I may be more intelligent than I originally thought.
Sam, keep up the important and "righteous" work. I don't think you're only preaching to the choir anymore.
Posted by: HappyHeathen | January 8, 2007 10:27 AM
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LT,
I'm moving on. I spoke to you from my heart. I spoke of peace, love, and compassion and what those things meant to me.
I never indicated for one second that I was remotely certain about any of my spiritual feelings. In fact I made the opposite very clear.
I am humble an internal about my spiritual thoughts. They are mine and I would never expect anyone to go along with them or believe that they are "the way."
They are not beliefs. They are imaginations that make me feel good.
If all of your beliefs are internal and you would never try to impose them on anyone else then you and I are the same.
But I can see that you and I are not the same at all.
I tried to show you honestly how close I can get to relating to the emotionally uplifting experience that you must feel as you read the words of Christ. I did this to try and show you that we are more alike than not alike.
I reached out to you and you rejected my honest words.
You chose instead to pick them apart with meaningless semantics.
You play word games like Jason.
You are not looking to bridge the divide.
You are not looking for a solution.
You are looking for an argument.
You just can't stand it that people don't believe in the lord as you do and now you're all scrappy.
You are so very arrogant to tell me that I need to define words like love, peace and compassion for you if I am going to talk about them.
You mock my usage of those universal words as though no one who does not know god as you do could understand them.
I reached out across the divide. You still want to fight.
You are Jason.
You are only a distraction to the people who are actually concerned about the problems of the world and looking for answers.
I am one of those.
And you have rejected me.
You asked me for honesty, I gave it to you, and you mocked me.
This is my last post here.
Some of us who actually want to work on some common ground have started a group elsewhere.
This includes Bruce Burleson. He is an open minded Christian with a wonderful, compassionate mind.
He and I and others are working together.
He is a Christian, I am an atheist.
He is my brother.
We are working together for the common good, as brothers
You stay here and play your word games with Jason.
Peace be with you.
You can respond if you like.
I won't see it.
I won't be back.
Posted by: timmy | January 8, 2007 5:31 AM
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response to Timmy, cont'd:
"My only sin to your Jesus is to not believe." Not according to the Bible it isn't. Even if that sin were not counted, God could attribute plenty of other sins to you that are sufficient for eternal separation from Him (i.e., Hell).
Your standard of morality seems very much to be based on exterior actions: killing, stealing, child pornography. The Bible says God looks further than that into one's heart. By that standard, no person (other than Jesus) deserves damnation. No one's heart is pure enough. To be pure enough, we would, for example, have to never harbor jealous thoughts against other people (surely you don't think jealousy is a good thing).
Are you telling me that other than not believing in all of Jesus' words, you are holy enough to deserve to go to heaven? Maybe not. Maybe you meant that the only unforgivebale sin is to reject Jesus and that you object to it.
"To deny that Jesus is God.
Straight to hell with me. Me, the one who believes in love, compassion, forgiveness and brotherhood."
Comments on this statement:
(1) Most people believe in the four things you mentioned. No person (except Jesus) practiced it consistently enough to meet God's standard.
(2) You seem to be offended at the idea that God would forgive killers, robbers, and even child pornographers if they repented of their sin. (There is a shallow asking for forgiveness that doesn't actually count as repentance, but true repentance is possible even for criminals.) If so, you do not have a heart for people who have committed such crimes. This is respect for love? Jesus, however, does have this heart. (And what about your posts to Jason and your subsequent decision to ignore him? Do they reflect your believe in love, compassion, forgiveness and brotherhood? This is respect for love?)
A few several Bible passages that are relevant to this post (NIV) are below. (I wonder if they're among the "words" you so closely relate to your inner morality.)
2 Timothy 4.3: "For the time will come when men will not put up with sound doctrine. Instead, to suit their own desires, they will gather around them a great number of teachers to say what their itching ears want to hear."
From 1 Samual 16.7: "The LORD does not look at the things man looks at. Man looks at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart."
Luke 18.9-14
9To some who were confident of their own righteousness and looked down on everybody else, Jesus told this parable: 10"Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. 11The Pharisee stood up and prayed about himself: 'God, I thank you that I am not like other men—robbers, evildoers, adulterers—or even like this tax collector. 12I fast twice a week and give a tenth of all I get.'
13"But the tax collector stood at a distance. He would not even look up to heaven, but beat his breast and said, 'God, have mercy on me, a sinner.'
14"I tell you that this man, rather than the other, went home justified before God. For everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted."
Sorry this is belligerent. I'll admit, I was shocked at your statements and didn't react exactly the way I should have. However, at least I admit I do not have enough respect for love and confess I'm a sinner in need of God's grace.
My response to RB will have to wait until tomorrow.
Posted by: LT | January 8, 2007 1:39 AM
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completing response to Timmy:
I guessed from my personal experience and you don't agree with it. That's fine. Also, thanks for clarifying what you mean by the deity you conceive of. It actually provides me a better argument against the arrogance of Christian belief than any that I could have come up with on my own. Actually, it looks a lot like you condemn yourself with your own standard.
You claim it is arrogant and unreasonable for anyone to claim to have "the big answer" with certainty.
"If I live my life as best I can based on my inner morality which I relate so closely to the words of all who preach love, compassion and brotherhood." This is a "big answer" statement at least for your own life, even though it does not use any religious concepts. It could be interpreted in a number of ways, but arrogance/unreasonableness ("a/u" from here on) is implicit in all of them.
The statement could mean you have as your standard "the words of all who preach love, compassion, and brotherhood." Who decides which people preach these things? Who decides which words of this people constitute love, compassion and brotherhood? And who decides what constitutes love, compassion and brotherhood?
You decided that Jesus, Gandhi and Lennon are such people. Are you certain that these are such people? If you are, that looks like a/u by your own standard. If you're not, why am I a/u for choosing Jesus alone as my standard?
You chose the words of Jesus that made sense to you and rejected the ones that didn't. And you chose certain words of Lennon. Are you certain that those are the words to live by? If you are, it looks like a/u by our own standard. If you're not, am I a/u for striving to live by all the words of Jesus rather than just the ones that seem natural to me?
You speak of love, brotherhood and compassion. How do you know what these things are? Do you know it when you see it with certainty? If so, that looks like a/u to me. If not, you chose the words and people beforehand so that you could define these three qualities, but then you run into the problem of the one or both of the two preceiding paragraphs.
You claim you relate your inner morality "so closely" to these "words" the origin, choice, and content of which I have asked you to justify. Why do your inner morality and these words relate so closely? One is that you hold these "words" as your standard and try to live by them. The problems are like those in the three paragraphs preceding.
Alternatively, your inner morality and the "words" relate "so closely" because you have found "words" that fit your inner morality and filtered out everything that doesn't. That's clearly a/u. Or are you certain that your inner morality is correct? If so, that's a/u. If not, why is it a/u for me to claim that my inner morality is fallible but the Bible will challenge me where I'm wrong and I will try to change according to it?
A third possibility is that your inner morality and the "words" are so closely related because they're so naturally equivalent. According to this interpretation, your inner morality, the words of Jesus you've chosen, Gandhi and Lennon are all saying basically the same thing. That's still a formulation of the "big answer." Do you hold this with certainty? If so, then it's a/u. If not, why is it a/u for me to believe that not everyone who supposedly preaches love, brotherhood and compassion is saying the same thing and that one of them (Jesus including the words you don't like) is saying the corect things?
Furthermore, you say you try to live "as best I can." Who or what defines "as best I can"? If it's the "words" (never mind how the words are chosen), then how can you be sure you are living as best you can by the standard they set? If there were a heaven with entry conditional on "as best I can," how could you be sure that you would make it to that heaven? Why would you ever fail if your inner morality were so closely related to the words? Because you're too busy with something else? Because you needed to get something else first? Alternatively, are you defining "as best I can"? If so, are you certain of your standard for "as best I can?" If so, that's a/u. If not, why am I so a/u to believe that absent God's grace I would need to be perfect to get into heaven?
Another post is coming...
Posted by: LT | January 8, 2007 1:02 AM
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Jason, thank you for your reply. It has been a revelation.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 8, 2007 12:07 AM
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I'm currently active on the Ann Coulter site discussing my 10 Guidelines for Modern Living. Those of you who are registered for that site might want to check it out.
I may be needing backup soon.
Posted by: Doug | January 7, 2007 9:44 PM
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RB - I've enjoyed your comments, and have never responded to you directly. I'll probably visit this site every couple of days, so if you respond, I may not see it for awhile.
Forgive me if I am misinterpreting you, but your main argument against faith seems to be that you think believers have never progressed out of a childhood state of gullibility. I'm sure you have other arguments, but this thought has appeared in several of your posts. Please allow me to make a few brief responses to this argument.
1. This is almost a psychological diagnosis. To be fair, you would have to subject each believer to some sort of psychological examination to determine if, in fact, this was their condition. You certainly have not done that to me, and I doubt you have done it to anyone. Mr. Dawkins, to my knowledge, is not a psychologist or psychiatrist, so I doubt that he has done this either. Therefore, it appears that you have no evidence to support your claim (at least as to my individual situation, for sure), and have simply reached a convenient conclusion that allows you to dismiss everything that believers say.
2. To say that all believers are stuck in some infantile stage of thinking with respect to faith, is akin to an ad hominem attack. It is really no different than Jason's calling everyone a moron, except that it sounds more intellectual. It would normally be thought an offense to educated, thinking people to have someone level this charge against them. I personally am not offended, mind you, I'm only arguing that to say that people like C. S. Lewis and Isaac Newton are victims of childhood gullibility seems far-fetched.
3. Finally, to say that believers believe just because "momma told them so" does not account for the many cases of atheist conversions, or Muslim conversions. Muslims who convert come to believe exactly the opposite of what momma told them - and some of them pay with their lives. People from atheistic backgrounds who convert in adulthood are clearly not stuck in an infantile way of thinking, as they were not told to believe in God as children. Your theory just doesn't seem to fit these cases.
It has taken me a long time to write this as my computer is bogging down. I may not respond, but I'll check back in a couple of days to see if you read this and responded. Peace
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 7, 2007 7:13 PM
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Puzzled, why do you feed the Troll? The Troll has infested dozens of these threads, and stays as long as it is fed. This would be an interesting conversation to contribute to, except for all the nauseating stuff between the Troll and those who feed it. If you feed the Troll long enough, you become one. I guess it may be entertaining for you, but are you learning anything other than how to feed a Troll? I'm remaining anonymous because my name would be more food for the Troll. Once the Troll leaves, I'll enjoy some constructive conversation with you and the others. Please don't feed the Troll.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 7, 2007 4:43 PM
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LT:
Thanks for the explanation. My father (I think) is a devout believer in every sense of the words, from all indications. He once told me that he thought Bertrand Russell's famous essay (Why I am not a Christian; is that title accurate?) completely missed the point. Maybe we'll revisit that conversation when he visits again, probably in the summer. I do not hold such beliefs. No offense taken, either way.
I agree that there has to be some factual basis for the Bible, in particular the events during Jesus' time. But there is also a lot of noise in there too. It is a matter of degree (between you and I). I am closer to thinking that it is mostly inspirational writings of true believers (ie, their interpretations of what it is to believe in Jesus). Everlasting life and salvation seems great, but I don't know (and I doubt anyone really does know) what it means. In Buddhism, for instance, there is talk about enlightenment. Perhaps there is something to all the different ideals in different religions. And it has little to do with heaven and hell, but more to do with what to make of this world we live in. In this regard, I think that faith does contain certain wisdoms that are worthwhile holding onto.
I just have problems with the dogmatic aspects (which seems to me to be getting bigger and bigger in church life these days) of organized religion and the "absoluteness" of belief that is logically contrived, and effectively cuts off all dialogue.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 7, 2007 4:35 PM
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From Jason's answer, I see that he has arrived at "belief" by definition (but of course, stated as "I got it from God."). I cannot prove a definition false, since it is an assumption that you set above proof, no more than you can prove that such an assumption is true for the very same reason.
1. God is "truth,"
2. I believe in "truth,"
3. Therefore, I believe in God.
Your belief is grounded in an assumption you made to escape the very circular reasoning you are criticizing. I can see how you feel confident in the internal consistency of your logic. But that still does not get you beyond how you were able to get the logical process started, except to say "God said so." I don't have problems with that, except to say that conversation between those who "heard god" and those who have not is made impossible. After all, in the real world, we also would like to have some external validity for our assertions as well as internal consistency.
Once again, God = logic? By that I am asking whether God would be consistent with logic (i.e., be subject to logic)? Simple question: can you say yes or no? Or, "it depends"? (in which case, depends on what?)
As for your response to Andy, I can see your point about knowing something (with absolute certainty) requires a kind of fullness of knowledge that encompasses all time and space. It is an ideal, and true by definition. However, in a more practical sense, so what? Should people not study veterninary medicine since we can never know that how cat and dogs are related? I did read your first post again, and you are saying empiricism is "false" yet you yourself concede that Newtonian physics "worked" until a guy named Einstein came along. I say word play because it really is semantics. Newtonian physics was not proved "false" but we understood that it needed qualifiers. This, too, is semantics, but rejecting the incrementalism of science because it is always incomplete (by definition) also rejects your ability to learn.
You say you heard from God and became Christian. However, can you not become a better Christian (ie, closer to emulating Jesus)? Jesus came to provide a human model and teach us that we can all be God's sons (and daughters). This must be an incremental process. As a wise man once said to me: If you do not become a better person by believing (and strive to be even better), then what good is belief?
As a side-note, I'd be fascinated to know what made you think that Jesus already came back in the year 70? I did not take you to be a creationist type, and perhaps you are not, but I'd be curious to know all the same.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 7, 2007 4:19 PM
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Puzzled, I've already answered the question. God caused me to believe that the Bible is the Word of God and God caused me to reject all others.
Now, care to "prove" to me how that is non-sense?
Andy says,
1. "but which logic?"
2. "One can choose not to use it"..."it" being the law of contradiction
3. and Andy rambles on about Hegelianism, which is all but extinct.
Response:
1 and 2 - Andy, i don't believe in polylogism. And there is a very simple reason for this. In order to think and to say that there are many different sorts of logic, one must use the rules of logic there is.
Again, i pose the challenge to you: Please write a 50 word post explaining a different logic without using the law of contradiction.
3 - And once again, I applaud you for introducing into this thread yet another empiricist whose work demonstrated that empiricism, if worked out consistently, leads to complete ignorance and nonsense! thank you, thank you, thank you.
Hegel taught that the truth is the whole and that an object's relationships are logically internal to its meaning.
For example, "a cat is not a dog; it is part of the essence of a cat to be not-a-dog. But to be not-a-dog is to be related to dog, and this relation is internal to the meaning of cat. Thus cat and dog, sense object and self, are included in a larger whole. The All-Inclusive is the Absolute.
"That relations are internal, and especially that the truth is the whole, are themes hard to deny. Yet their implications are devastating. So long as you or I do not know the relationships which constitute the meaning of cat or self, we do not know the object in question. If we say that we know SOME of the relationship, it follows that we cannot know how this unknown relationship might alter our view of the relationship we now say we know. The alteration could be considerable. Therefore we cannot know even one relationship without knowing all. Obviously we do not know all. Therefore we know nothing.
"The same principle can apply to the Absolute itself. The truth is the whole and the whole is the Absolute. But obviously we do not know the whole; we do not know the Absolute. In fact, not knowing the Absolute, we cannot know even that there is an Absolute. But how can absolute idealism be based on absolute ignorance? And ours is absolute ignorance, for we cannot know one thing without knowing all." - Clark; Religion, Reason, and Revelation
Another great example of how abandoning revelation leads to complete nonsense and a rejection of reason.
But since "certified idiots" like Andy would rather not spend their days in the looney bin, he instead steals from God whatever and whenever he pleases in order to have, at least, some normal function in the world; ie. he knows he has to be "reasonable" at some point in his life, yet he rejects Reason.
Andy, you're a blood-sucking leech. A thieve. And unless you repent of this foolishness, you will one day face Reason Himself and find the reason for your judgment.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 7, 2007 2:31 PM
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Puzzled, I've already answered the question. God caused me to believe that the Bible is the Word of God and God caused me to reject all others.
Now, care to "prove" to me how that is non-sense?
Andy says,
1. "but which logic?"
2. "One can choose not to use it"..."it" being the law of contradiction
3. and Andy rambles on about Hegelianism, which is all but extinct.
Response:
1 and 2 - Andy, i don't believe in polylogism. And there is a very simple reason for this. In order to think and to say that there are many different sorts of logic, one must use the rules of logic there is.
Again, i pose the challenge to you: Please write a 50 word post explaining a different logic without using the law of contradiction.
3 - And once again, I applaud you for introducing into this thread yet another empiricist whose work demonstrated that empiricism, if worked out consistently, leads to complete ignorance and nonsense! thank you, thank you, thank you.
Hegel taught that the truth is the whole and that an object's relationships are logically internal to its meaning.
For example, "a cat is not a dog; it is part of the essence of a cat to be not-a-dog. But to be not-a-dog is to be related to dog, and this relation is internal to the meaning of cat. Thus cat and dog, sense object and self, are included in a larger whole. The All-Inclusive is the Absolute.
"That relations are internal, and especially that the truth is the whole, are themes hard to deny. Yet their implications are devastating. So long as you or I do not know the relationships which constitute the meaning of cat or self, we do not know the object in question. If we say that we know SOME of the relationship, it follows that we cannot know how this unknown relationship might alter our view of the relationship we now say we know. The alteration could be considerable. Therefore we cannot know even one relationship without knowing all. Obviously we do not know all. Therefore we know nothing.
"The same principle can apply to the Absolute itself. The truth is the whole and the whole is the Absolute. But obviously we do not know the whole; we do not know the Absolute. In fact, not knowing the Absolute, we cannot know even that there is an Absolute. But how can absolute idealism be based on absolute ignorance? And ours is absolute ignorance, for we cannot know one thing without knowing all." - Clark; Religion, Reason, and Revelation
Another great example of how abandoning revelation leads to complete nonsense and a rejection of reason.
But since "certified idiots" like Andy would rather not spend their days in the looney bin, he instead steals from God whatever and whenever he pleases in order to have, at least, some normal function in the world; ie. he knows he has to be "reasonable" at some point in his life, yet he rejects Reason.
Andy, you're a blood-sucking leech. A theft. And unless you repent of some foolishness, you'll will one day face Reason Himself and find the reason for your judgment.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 7, 2007 2:30 PM
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LT
Oops, forgot to address one of your points.
You said:
"I used to generally think I was a morally decent person. I also had career aspirations that I treasured very deeply, and I didn't want to believe in God since I thought it meant I had to sacrifice those aspirations. I'm guessing that you, a successful stand-up comic, might be in a similar situation."
This is telling of believers.
You think the rest of us need to work hard to reject god.
You think the idea of god iss in our head naturally, and we need to find some kind of selfish reason to reject God.
My career aspirations can not cause me to reject an idea that was never there in the first place.
The idea of god has never been in my head.
People like you have tried to put it there but it never made it past my skepticism.
The same skepticism I have for the flying spaghetti monster.
And I'm glad I have it
I need a reason TO believe.
Not need a reason to not believe.
Not believing comes naturally.
Posted by: timmy | January 7, 2007 2:13 PM
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Philip Tripp wrote: "Perhaps I will see Timmy, Andy, Doug, RB, Jason, Kaatie, Robin, WM, Puzzled, Stan, Burton Wolfe, Duckphup,Bruce et,al on the other side.
I don't think so... at least, not DuckPhup. I happened to look at AlterNet's 'Privacy Policy', and pulled myself up short. I ended up sending them an e-mail...
Your 'Privacy Policy' states, in part:
"AlterNet employs cookies -- small text files placed on your computer's hard drive -- to track the type of content and sites to which our users link, the length of time they spend at any particular site and the AlterNet services they use. Cookies also help us diagnose problems with our server."
That statement implies that you not only use ‘cookies’, but that you also employ ‘spyware’... how else would you be able to “... track the type of content and sites to which our users link...”?
Whether you “... track the type of content and sites to which our users link”, or NOT, you need to promptly change your ‘Privacy Policy’ (http://alternet.org/about/privacy.html):
If you DO “... track the type of content and sites to which our users link”, then you need to CLEARLY state that you are employing SPYWARE in addition to ‘cookies’.
OR
If you DO NOT “... track the type of content and sites to which our users link”, then you need to change your ‘Privacy Policy’, and quit saying that you do.
Posted by: DuckPhup | January 7, 2007 2:10 PM
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My last post here
LT I will check back for your response and final post.
It was a pleasure to speak with you all.
I have learned a million times more here that reading 100 Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins books.
See you all on the other boards.
Peace be with all of us.
Posted by: timmy | January 7, 2007 1:55 PM
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LT
I am an equal opportunity arrogance accuser .
Most certainly not just Christians, but all who claim with certainty that they know who God is, and assert that all other versions of God are wrong, or, not correct.
All of these people, muslims, Jews and Christians alike are arrogant and unreasonable.
And no, I don't believe that an all knowing god is speaking to us through an arrogant Jesus who claimed to be the son of god and condemns people to hell for not believing in him.
Pay close and careful attention to my wording.
I SOMETIMES like to IMAGINE, an all knowing all loving god as an abstract personification of my inner morality.
It is an uplifting and spiritual THOUGHT for me to IMAGINE this god, not your GOD, but that my personification of my inner morality is communicating with me and all of us through the inspirational words of people like John Lennon, Gahndi, and Jesus.
But again this is not your god I am talking about, it's mine.
And this is not your Jesus I am talking about, it's mine.
Who is my Jesus?
My Jesus is a fictional character who may have been based on a real person, or an amalgamation of several people.
He is a hero character.
Since there is no proof (good enough for me) that Jesus existed, all I can do is read about his message.
Seeing Jesus this way, I can reject all of the stuff that makes no sense to me.
e.g. "I am the son of god" "believe in me or go to Hell" "Women should take a back seat and be submissive to their men"
And I can imagine my personal idea of god, speaking to me through, what I feel was the true message of the hero character, Jesus.
Love, compassion, a brotherhood of man.
Imagine all the people, sharing all the world.
You may say I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope some day you will join us
and the world will live as one
You can not inject your idea of God or Jesus into my definition any more than I can inject mine into yours.
But I hope you can see how close we are in our agreement on the basic idea of god as a moral guide.
Our gap is so small as I see it.
I hope you do not see it as a casm.
If I live my life as best I can based on my inner morality which I relate so closely to the words of all who preach love, compassion and brotherhood.
And this illustrates my biggest aversion to believing one step further and thinking of Jesus as the son of "the one true" God.
My only sin to your Jesus is to not believe.
I can kill (though I shouldn't) steal (though I shouldn't) engage in internet child porn (though I shouldn't)
I can do all of these things and get into heaven so long as I confess my sins and ask forgiveness from the lord.
But the only unforgivable sin, the only thing that will send me to Hell, is to not believe. To deny that Jesus is the son of God. To deny that Jesus is God.
Straight to hell with me. Me, the one who believes in love, compassion, forgiveness and brotherhood.
Straight to Hell with me for doubting that Jesus is the one true God.
If that is what your Jesus cares most about (and according to the church, it is), then smell you later dude.
I have to much respect for love to believe in that horse$%#%it idea of god.
I like my version better.
Posted by: timmy | January 7, 2007 1:40 PM
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Timmy,
I will take a guess at why I think you don't believe, based on my own experience of why I wasn't willing to believe before. If you want to say I'm wrong about my guess, go right ahead.
I used to generally think I was a morally decent person. I also had career aspirations that I treasured very deeply, and I didn't want to believe in God since I thought it meant I had to sacrifice those aspirations. I'm guessing that you, a successful stand-up comic, might be in a similar situation.
As for why it isn't arrogant and unreasonable to suppose that the truth I believe in is the exclusive one? Let me start with your view: "an all knowing and loving creator of the universe" and that "this deity speaks to us metaphysically through messengers like Jesus or John Lennon or Gahndi." You're not sure if this is true but think it's reasonable.
If you say I'm arrogant and unreasonable because I claim to know the true God with certainty, then this should be a consistent principle across all people. You should claim that Mohammad is also arrogant because he claimed to know the true God with certainty. (Could he have claimed to be God's last prophet only with high probability?) Most other religious figures of the past claimed to know the divine with certainty. In fact, the person you should find most arrogant and unreasonable of all is Jesus. He claimed to know God with certainty and to be God with certainty.
Are you going to tell me that an all-loving creator of the universe spoke to us metaphorically to an arrogant person like Jesus? I see the revilement of most major religious figures as the logical implication of your opinion that to claim any certain truth about God is arrogant and unreasonable, not a comfortable but untenable synthesis of what God should be like and the claims people have made about Him.
I have other things to attend to this afternoon but will complete this post and my other responses later today.
Posted by: LT | January 7, 2007 12:02 PM
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For those of you not on Sam Harris's e-mail list, he has a new article posted January 6th at 5:34pm. The article is also on the washingtonpost.com web site just like this one.
Because the quantity of comments is still fairly small, my computer is currently able to scroll at normal speed.
On this site I have the same problem as Bruce Burleson. My computer scrolls at a snails pace. I did find the key to go top to bottom quickly but, even once there, it takes minutes just to scroll up 10 pages.
Perhaps it is time to move on. There are some wonderful posts over there already. I have read Bruce's comments, Victoria and several others from this site.
Perhaps I will see Timmy, Andy, Doug, RB, Jason, Kaatie, Robin, WM, Puzzled, Stan, Burton Wolfe, Duckphup,Bruce et,al on the other side.
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 7, 2007 11:59 AM
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Doug: Excellent post 1-6-07 8:36 p.m.
Bruce and Phillip: "There may in fact be a hardwire for some of us to believe in God. They are calling it something like a God gene in Time and Newsweek articles."
The scientist who was quoted about the "god gene" has said he regrets using the term.
Dawkins and others have noted that religion is likely a by-product of something else. That something else is the survival value of childhood guilibility. Popular media have kinda mis-labeled this, and it has been eagerly seized upon by religionists and mis-interpreted, which they always do.
Posted by: RB | January 7, 2007 11:29 AM
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My final posts will answer responses to my previous post, and then I am done. Feel free to comment, but I won't be responding to posts since 1.7.07 at 7:16 A.M.
Puzzled,
Yes, I agree that the Bible has to be read in its context and that the writers were not writing for AP or UPI. However, if this means that nothing is factual as we commonly understand it (the limiting extreme), then Christianity becomes devoid of meaning. If for example, the resurrection is not literally true but only spiritually true, then Christians have no empirical basis for eternal life. Theologians who conclude from this non-literal reading that there is nothing after this life (e.g. Crossan) are at least following the logical implications. What doesn't make sense to me is for a theologian to claim life after death despite a resurrection that only spiritually occurred because then there's no logical basis for believing in an afterlife.
I would submit that the Gospels claim that Jesus' resurrection was nothing less than literal and bodily. The clearest example is Luke 24.36-43, according to which the disciples didn't believe Jesus had bodily risen (they thought he was a ghost) until He tells them to touch Him and eats a piece of fish.
You are right to be confused by the notion of a spiritual truth when it's defined as wholly separate from factual truth (which I define differently as true, possibly exceptional occurrences rather than what scientific law would dictate). Since I'm not a theologian, I cannot answer the details of how to know something is to be taken literally as we would normally think and when something should be taken metaphorically. I recommend that you speak to theologians who believe in a literal, bodily resurrection if you're truly puzzled and want to know more.
Finally, I wish to make clear that I am not implying in any way that you or your father do or do not believe in a literal resurrection and intend no offense regardless.
Posted by: LT | January 7, 2007 11:27 AM
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For all who were puzzled by my florid outburst of Hegelian logic in comment #819, here is a subdued clarification.
On Contradiction
The philosopher Hegel wrote thousands of pages to build up a position called dialectical idealism. Reading and understanding these pages is difficult, but a picture emerges of reality developing and growing through a process of inner necessity, powered by the emergence and resolution of successive contradictions. When I tried over a period of years to make sense of these writings, I came up with a text that boiled down to the triads 1.1 -- 3.3 cited in comment #819. If my summary makes no sense, my apologies, but I believe it makes as much sense as the original.
Hegel's core idea was that all that happens must happen as it does. Reality unfolds as a tree grows, out of an inner drive that powers it through a succession of momentary forms. Starting from sheer being, which is so blank it is indistinguishable from mere nothing, we discern becoming, and so on until we arrive at the absolute truth, which is a particular state of reality in which the Prussian constitutional monarchy and so on represents the highest and most evolved state. For Hegel, the truth is the whole.
Like many other Germans, Karl Marx started out as a young Hegelian, but then rebelled and inverted the whole lot to create dialectical materialism. Then the young revolutionary Lenin studied both Hegel and Marx closely and proceeded to put the revolutionary ideas into practice in Russia. When Lenin died, Stalin took over in Russia. A few years later, the young Chinese communist Mao Zedong studied under Stalin and took the lessons back to China.
Most of the writings in this tradition are difficult and unpleasant to read. In my own selective sampling, I found a translation of an essay by Mao Zedong written in 1937 to contain the clearest expression of the core doctrine:
"The law of contradiction in things, that is, the law of the unity of opposites, is the fundamental law of nature and of society and therefore also the fundamental law of thought. It stands opposed to the metaphysical world outlook. It represents a great revolution in the history of human knowledge. According to dialectical materialism, contradiction is present in all processes of objectively existing things and of subjective thought and permeates all these processes from beginning to end ... In given conditions, opposites possess identity, and consequently can coexist in a single entity and can transform themselves into each other ... But the struggle of opposites is ceaseless, it goes on both when the opposites are coexisting and when they are transforming themselves into each other ... If, through study, we achieve a real understanding of the essentials explained above, we shall be able to demolish dogmatist ideas which are contrary to the basic principles of Marxism-Leninism."
What does all this have to do with us? Well, it shows that one can write a lot of nonsense about contradiction, for one. But also it shows that the classical law of contradiction (not both P and not P) is really just a useful tool, and using it is a choice we make. One can choose not to use it, and write Maoist stuff and build a state on it. That state can survive and prosper, make a lot of money, and buy up U.S. Treasury bonds to bankroll the spending habits of George W. Bush. In other words, this is still an ongoing world-historical contradiction that could one day lead to global war.
Jason,
When I thanked you for being an "idiot" in comment #543 and for savng my soul in #819, I was not merely being facetious, I meant it. Behaving like an idiot can be liberating, as I found when posting my rational reconstruction of the apparent mindset of Jesus or my parody of Hegelian logic as a creative misuse of contradictions. Getting that sort of thing out of one's head and into the world is the first step in dealing with it.
Thank you everyone, for triggering me to write all this stuff. I shall treasure it as raw input for my next book.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 7, 2007 7:16 AM
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God is logic? Then it follows that God has to follow his own laws (like that "golden rule"... no no, not that one, I mean like the law of contradiction). Because God's law cannot be absolute and not absolute at the same time? But god also is omnipotent, meaning he can be whatever the hell (or whatever the heaven) he wants to be. So do you believe in a god that is absolute certainty, or a god who is absolute certainty and not at the same time?
Also, Jason, I guess you don't want to answer my earlier question. Did you study all religions and decide to go to church because you knew (with absolute certainty) that God is logic (= truth)? Or did you decide as a matter of convenience? (My guess is the latter. Because since you love logic so much, Buddhism would have blown your mind.) If this is too private for you, then I guess we'll just let it pass.
But a less personal question: is it law of contradiction or law of non-contradiction? Can both be "true"? Can law of X and law of non-X be "true" as well?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 7, 2007 5:18 AM
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Philip,
Occam -- Ockham -- both are dense in the literature, due to the vagaries of Latinization. For the innocents, Ockham's razor is a logical instrument for cutting off useless danglers, such as a "god" that is immortal, invisible to the vulgar senses, omnipotent, and utterly inaccessible to the faithless because "he" chooses to remain incognito.
Bruce,
Your rose metaphor is wonderful. Shakespeare: "a rose by any other name would smell as sweet." One of the names of the rose is "God" and the rose still smells sweet. But calling a rose "God" does not make the rose divine, and inferring that the rose is immortal, omnipotent and so on, because you call it "God" is a petitio principii. For the innocents, a petitio principii is the fallacy of "requesting an opponent to grant what the opponent seeks a proof of" (to quote my first logic teacher).
Jason,
You say "God is logic" (John 1:1) but which logic?
For example, the new discipline of quantum logic has recently emerged based on "qubits," which are realized as quantum dots that are both 0 and 1 at the same time. These quantum dots exploit the amazing facts about the empirical world revealed by the success of quantum mechanics. David Deutsch, the first prophet of quantum logic, says the only way to make sense of qubits is to say we live in not just one universe but a multiverse. The different universes in the multiverse interact to generate the quantum effects that make qubits possible. The interaction was nicely visualized in the Spielberg science-fiction movies "Back to the Future."
To set up a logic, we first have to define an alphabet and a set of rules for making well-formed expressions, then we need to assign a semantics. We need to define a model containing objects and then a mapping between the objects and the names in the language. To do so, we use the formal truth definition I cited in comment #502. All this presupposes a lot of facts about languages and so on, empirical facts that have a haze of uncertainty.
Think of computers again. Before your box suffers any risk at all from contradictions, you have to define an operating system, specify a programming language, specify assignments for your variables, make sure the box is turned on and booted up, and so on. All this is goes beyond logic, and is subject to empirical constraints and probabilities.
Back to quantum logic. It looks like reality buds a new universe whenever a contradiction threatens. That is, as soon as a thing can happen two ways (say if the dot can be 0 or 1), the universe sprouts two branches, one for 0 and one for 1. Because we are big creatures on the quantum scale, we have to go one way or the other. Only the tiniest things can be in two or more universes at once. You can see this as God leading us along one path, but the science suggests that all the other paths are there too. In other parallel universes (not this one, I should add), you exist as a hopeless wuss! All this makes it hard for us to assign a consistent semantics to the word "God."
By your fruits may ye know them. Your life sounds OK. Work on the logic, dude.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 7, 2007 4:58 AM
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I harp yet further on the definition thing.
I think it is so important.
All of our conversation is muddled. There is so much ambiguity.
Here's why.
God: The one true God of the Abrahamic religions
God: Everything everywhere. (from Hinduism)
God: The creator of the universe.
god: The general idea of an omnipotent over lord
god: A supernatural being. e.g. Thor, Zeus
god: An all knowing all loving deity
god: You know.... God
god: Tom likes to see god as, all of the positive energy in the universe, which we are all a part of.
god: Jane likes to think of god as an abstract personification of her moral goodness.
god: Eric Clapton
god: George Burns
Atheist: One who BELIEVES that GOD does not exist.
Agnostic: A person who claims neither faith nor a disbelief in GOD
I capitalized the extremely ambiguous words.
20 people were asked the question "Do you believe in God?"
15 answered. "depends on what you mean by god."
Most who identify themselves as agnostics will tell you that they are agnostic because,
"I don't deny the possibility of the idea of god, but I certainly do not believe in any of the versions put forth by organized religion."
If the word GOD in the dictionary definition refers only to "the one true God", then that person who just claimed to be an agnostic is actually an atheist.
If this is the case, by the dictionary definition, I have never met an agnostic.
One who has neither a belief nor a disbelief in "the one true God."?
I have never met anyone who didn't have a very solid opinion on the one true God.
Are there any true agnostics? Or are they just polite Atheists.
And what about the person who likes to think of god as an abstract personification of her moral goodness.
Not religious
Not an agnostic - because does not believe in the one true God.
So, Atheist right?
But so many people with these kind of abstract ideas of god do not feel that they are atheists even though they deny the one true god. They mistakenly call themselves agnostic because they think that atheists are people who do not have such open minded spiritual thoughts.
Why?
Because the word GOD, in the definition of atheist, is ambiguous, wrong, confusing, and most troublesome.... misleading.
We are all atheists.
So many spiritual minded free thinkers don't know that they are atheists.
We need the definition to be something that includes these free thinking spirituals as well as the nihilists under one big happy, "one true God" denying umbrella.
Come on under the umbrella.
The more, the merrier.
Spiritual free thinkers should not be arguing with nihilists.
What can we do?
Let's lobby a petition to change the current definition, in the dictionary, and in Wikipedia, etc.
Posted by: timmy | January 7, 2007 4:58 AM
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oh, and by the way Philip-why-you-Tripping.
1. Family - i get along with my family quite well. My mother-in-law was actually one of the most vocal anti-Christs i had ever met. The first time i tried to talk to her about something in the Bible, she got right in my face and told me to never try it again. It did get to a point where she hated me so bad, she tried to drive a wedge between my wife and I. It almost worked until Amanda and I decided to cut her off completely. That lasted for three years and then she finally emailed me with an apology and we've worked things out since then. I think seeing how serious her daughter was about her faith made her rethink her hostility.
2. Friends - you're right, i don't have too many. One major reason for that is because i adhere to a view of "end-times" that the vast majority of Christians view as heretical - Christ already returned in 70ad. That's one of the reasons i ended up in Florida. I was booted out of my church in Birmingham. Wasn't because i'm a jerk though. I've never had a friend, christian or not, leave me because of that. In fact, i've lost Christian friends who thought i was too loose, ie. i'll hang out with you, drink a few buds and enjoy a nice cigar. Scripture forbids drunkenness, not alcohol.
3. Work - couldn't be better. Our appraisal firm is one of the most respected firms in the Tampa Bay area. We have high standards with our service because we believe God delights in nothing less. God commands that we don't steal, so we don't steal from our customers - in service or time. God commands that we do not lie, so we don't lie to our customers.
Furthermore, because we're not waiting for Jesus to show up at any moment and sink the ship, we take the time to polish the brass and invest in education, etc. for our field to be as professional as we can.
so no, "my life is goooooddd".
Libre can not be Libre and Nacho Libre at the same time and in the same respect.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 7, 2007 2:40 AM
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Andy says, “Just go enjoy life ...”
Hmmm…great answer Andy. Just go walk on the beach everyday and act like everything is fine, meanwhile anti-Christ ideologies make it into our laws and millions of babies are sliced and vacuumed out of their mother’s womb. (just to name an example)
I do enjoy life, but I do so responsibly.
Puzzled, God is not above or below logic, He is logic. (John 1.1) God thinks logically. Scripture says that we are made in His image; therefore, we are to think logically. I don’t think that it is any coincidence that people who have made God an option have made logic an option as well.
Timmy says, “And they tell us that their God is omnipotent and the laws of nature don't apply to him.”… “We all know that Jason trusts in the laws of nature, not completely, but you can not function if you do not take the laws of nature as being "almost certain" or certain until shown to be not certain.”
Wrong again Timmy. I don’t believe that the so-called “laws of nature” even exist, for the very reason stated in number 3 of my original post. You can not argue for a universal law based on inductive reasoning. Inductive reasoning is always fallacious.
Hume and others have argued against miracles because that would have God violating the “laws of nature”…ummm, not so fast…that argument assumes that such laws even exist and Hume nor anyone else can prove any of them. There are even atheists who have written on the problem of induction and the “laws of nature”.
I believe ovens light because God causes them to light.
God also causes people to accept or reject Him, which is why you have not and will not ever see me say, “I can prove to you God exists.” This is one of the reasons I think the entire intelligent design fad is a complete waste. These men are nothing more than empiricists who have thrown the Bible in the mix and empiricists are NEVER going to get the evidence they require because God is non-empirical. But guess what? That’s neither my problem nor God’s. I’m not the one that limits myself to empirical evidence, like Philip-why-you-Tripping does.
“I need to be shown proof of he/she or its existence that satisfies my personal empirical requirements.”
You’re never going to get it.
Philip-why-you-Tripping says, “How do I know it's not a complement? I live and work in the real world Jason, and I don't use the word moron to complement anyone.”
You’re missing the point. Philip, do you believe that the law of contradiction is optionable? Is it something we can doubt or it is absolutely certain at all times and in all places?
“Since he/she/it doesn't have every one on the planet on the same team after many thousands of years of debate, I have concluded that either he/she/it either doesn't really care one way or the other or simply doesn't exist.”
The Scripture answers that question. God shows mercy upon whomever He pleases. If you end up remaining a moron for the next 40 years and die a moron, it’s because He planned it that way.
Yes, i deny the "free-will" myth as well. ( ;
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 7, 2007 2:04 AM
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Bruce, your first two sentences cracked me up. My response of "Neee" certainly was a shot across the bow and you have answered the call. Bravo!
Nice to have you back by the way. Your heartfelt answers are always welcome around here in my opinion (even if your are a moron). Just kidding and you know it. I couldn't help but think of how Jason would have handled it.
There may in fact be a hardwire for some of us to believe in God. They are calling it something like a God gene in Time and Newsweek articles.
It could also be that your need for proof is far different than mine. You accept the new testament and you have had a communion with God. I believe that I am accurately describing what you have communicated to us in previous posts.
I would never attempt to tell you that those are not valid reasons for believing for you. They are not valid for me, however.
What I said earlier, is that God must understand that the proof required is different for all of us. Since you would agree that he undoubtedly has the ability to bring me around if he wanted to, what am I to make of the fact that he hasn't done it yet with me, or about 4 billion other souls.
He either, is not quite as powerful as you think, really doesn't care if I believe or not, or he simply is not there.
I'll go with the "not there" because that idea follows Occam's razor as several have alluded to before. Sorry Occam if I spelled your name wrong.
Dirk- Nice to see you back. Yes, Andy and Kaatie both went over to the dark side and visited Ann Coulter. Their posts describing how much fun it was appeared earlier. Perhaps they will jump in again and tell us how to go there so we can have as much fun as they did. Just kidding about the fun part. They really didn't like the experience.
Puzzled-Thanks for your very informative answer to the Church question. I really clicked in on your reference to the bible as talisman and the dark side. Good stuff man.
A new phenomenom has recently sprung up. I often see a group of people sitting around a table at lunch at fast food places. They all hold hands and someone says a prayer thanking God for the wonderful bounty that God has provided them and praising the Lord. You know, that works at a huge family meal at thanksgiving but not at Burger King. Puhlease...take it somewhere else.
A double whopper with cheese and large fries is not my idea of something that God really wants to take credit for having put on your plate. Get a life people!
Anyway, it's early Saturday night here on the left coast and my family is headed for Greek food tonight. Kali Spera. Philip Tripp
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 6, 2007 9:29 PM
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Hi, Bruce - Welcome back!
I'm beginning to see that my views are more moderate than I thought. Although I think my stand on political issues are pretty liberal (note my last post) I don't find myself wanting to go to the extreme edges of intolerance for religion in all forms.
Perusing the Ann Coulter site leaves me shaking my head and feeling positively Christ like. Still, I perceive that rigid, literal, fundamentalist religion is a problem that needs to be addressed.
You have steadfastly put forth your religious views in a way I respect. I do not know your stand on the afore-mentioned issues, but I expect they are far more "christian" than fundamentalist.
Posted by: Doug | January 6, 2007 9:08 PM
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wm posted on Posted January 5, 2007 8:27 PM:
"I personally don't think that believers have much of a burden of proof with respect to their beliefs as long as their beliefs aren't resulting in harm to others. Of course, per the butterfly effect, sometimes seemingly innocuous irrational beliefs could result in unpredictable catastrophies, but one can hardly live one's live based on the butterfly effect.
If a believer thinks that there are fairies in his backyard, I don't see that he has much of a burden of proof. I don't see how that belief could hurt me or anyone else in any significant way.
If a believer is going to come to my doorstep and spend my time and goodwill on his beliefs, then he has a burden of proof.
If a believer is going to try to prevent over-the-counter access to emergency contraception due to his belief that a couple cells have a soul, he has a heavy burden of proof.
If a believer is going to advise a disease-ridden people to not use condoms due to his beliefs on the immorality of contraception in general, he has a very heavy burden of proof.
If a believer is going to try to instill his beliefs in a child and potentially cause that child anxiety and fear in the future, he has a very heavy burden of proof."
Wm - I think you have made a very important point here. When personal beliefs impact public policy those beliefs lose the protected status of personal belief.
These are some of the specific public issues that appear to me to be dangerously impacted by conservative literalist believers:
1. Birth control
2. Right to die
3. Creationism in the schools
4. Prayer in the schools
5. The word "God" on money, in speeches, in the Pledge, etc.
6. Stem cell research
7. Crusade-like wars in the middle east
8. Discrimination against homosexuals
As a threatened minority I would like to see the political power of religion reduced dramatically.
I understand your final point completely, and I have wanted to respond to your previous post on that subject. Our society allows the parent a very free hand in what and how they teach their children. So long as the destructive influence of literal religion holds sway over the parent, their children will pay the price. We who understand the damage potential can only do our best to take every opportunity to point out how damaging to personality development the rigid shame, blame and guilt environment of a fundamentialist religious upbringing is.
Posted by: Doug | January 6, 2007 8:36 PM
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That Ann Coulter crowd is rough. Kaatie rocks :-)
Posted by: Anonymous | January 6, 2007 8:29 PM
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For Timmy:
No one much haa commented directly on Timmy's interesting little experiment. I find it very revealing that 15 out of 20 people would not answer his question without first being given a definition of God.
I regard myself as a radical pantheistic agnostic. How's that for a mouthful for you! If someone were to ask me:
Are you an atheist? I would most definitely say:
Depends on what you mean by God. In other words it depends on how you define a theist.
I am agnostic because I don't claim to know all the answers. I am radical because I totally reject the kind of meaningless/nonsensical answers provided by the worlds major religions -- whether it be Judaism, Christianity, Islam or Hinduism. And I am pantheistic since I do not rule out a completely different concept of a Divinity entangled with the universe in a manner difficult to comprehend. As Andy rightly points out numerous philosophers in many different ways have put paid to the notion of a creator God. There quite literally cannot be a God (as Christians and Muslims conceive of him/her/it) separate from the universe who brought it into being.
Anyway I liked Tim's statistically invalid little
experiment since -- given that so many people want to know the meaning of the word God before answering a leading question -- does at least give some hope that mankind is not totally lost.
Posted by: Ted Swart | January 6, 2007 8:24 PM
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When Philip Tripp pronounced "Neee" upon us, I realized that I had to get back in the game. When passing ruffians can say "neee" to little ole' Christians, we know that these are perilous times. Seriously, I am convinced that Christians just need to get back to what our Lord called us to do - believe in and love Him, love each other as He loved us, and share our faith with others, in a gentle and loving manner. As a group, we are not scientists, we are not logicians, we are not politicians. We begin to look silly when we try to impose our will upon these realms of human activity. We do not look silly when we act like Jesus.
As Christians, we believe, therefore we are. I doubt that there is an "organ" of faith, like the organ of sight, but I am beginning to think that some of us are wired for faith, while others are not. Perhaps this is simply part of God's election in working things out for his purposes. If I blindfold you and pass a rose under your nose (no rhyme intended), you will know that there is some "entity" there and you will say "it's a rose" or "it smells like a rose." If you have never smelled a rose before, you will try to describe what you have smelled, but it is extremely difficult to describe an odor. You might say "it smells sweet" or "it smells like a flower", but you, like Shakespeare, will not be able to precisely describe what you have experienced. If your olfactory nerves have been destroyed from snorting cocaine, or if your brain has been damaged so that you cannot smell, you won't sense anything at all. You won't even know that rose has passed under your nose.
A rose has been passed under all our noses. Some of us smell it and THINK we know what it is, but we can't describe it in a way that will make sense to others who haven't smelled it or who can't smell. We do not all have the same experience, so we can't just say "it smells like a rose." Of course, some of you will think that Christians are passing something else under your noses, and you are glad that you CAN't smell it.
I look at this forum as people sniffing each other and each other's ideas, and trying to understand each other. I think Christians generally, including myself, do a fairly poor job of presenting our experience and our case to the world. If nothing else, I think we are learning to describe the rose we believe we have smelled.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 6, 2007 8:07 PM
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As an atheist/non/believer/free thinker and moron, I would be willing to accept that there is a God or creator.....
I would also be willing to accept, however, that there is a Santa Claus, Bigfoot, Loch Ness monster and that spagetti monster thing that keeps being bantered about.
I need to be shown proof of he/she or its existence that satisfies my personal empirical requirements. Those requirements would be entirely different for each moron listed above.
I sure hope that Jason is appreciating my fine use of the word moron. Or perhaps, Jason is composing a huge apology to everyone, and won't be heard from for awhile.
I won't hold my breath on the latter. I wouldn't mind the "won't be heard from" part. That sounds rather nice.
Anyway, many have said it before me, but even atheists would be believers, in just about anything, in the face of proper evidence. Therein lies the problem.
The evidence needed to prove the existence of anything can be different for every human being. I can say "that" is an absolute certainty. Sorry Jason.
Only a truly omniscient God would be able to convince each and every human being, with exactly the evidence that each human being needed, to believe in he/she/it.
Since he/she/it doesn't have every one on the planet on the same team after many thousands of years of debate, I have concluded that either he/she/it either doesn't really care one way or the other or simply doesn't exist.
I would expect that action by God if he wanted me to believe in him. As I said before, in a much earlier post, God knows where I live. If he wants me in his club, he knows where to find me and how to prove his existence to me and only me. Now that would be a powerful God and one that I would readily accept.
Only I would ask him for a revised text with which to run my life by. I would tell him that those old guys, that he used to rely on for his message, are old dead guys and their world is a dead world. I need a modern version of his word. Perhaps he would refer me to Doug's 10 list.
For those of you who say "it is not up to God to come to me, it is up to me to have faith in God", I say to you.. Neee..!
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 6, 2007 7:14 PM
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Puzzled -
It seems to me that belonging to a group or "community" is an intrinsic human need - we are social animals.
Church groups fill that need very well - that is one of the appeals. What are the alternatives for someone who no longer finds the commonality of the group to be comfortable? What other groups can one join that are going to be more comfortable and supportive to an agnostic or aethiest? There may be such groups, but I'm not aware of them.
My Brother (who is agnostic) has found the Unitarian Church to be a valued support group. It works for him, but I found the (few) services I attended to be very unsatisifying.
All of the fraternal organizations that I am aware of (masons, shriners, etc.) seem to have religious cores.
In my own small town, people are usually either a member of one of the many small churches, or a regular fellow at one of the many small bars. The bars don't work for me.
Maybe an on-line forum group could fill some of the social needs of non-believers. Maybe that's one of the reasons some of us are on this forum.
How many of us would want to join an on-going forum to discuss issues like these?
Posted by: Doug | January 6, 2007 7:07 PM
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I am sure many of the things the pastor says sounds okay since I've heard that kind of stuff so many times. I also hear things that make me grimace sometimes. Then why do I go?
To be honest, I don't know sometimes. I used to think fellowship, but I am becoming more pessimistic, perhaps signaling that it is about time to stop. Fellowship can get you only so far since too many people I see these days are really going over to the dark side. For instance, I've seen people carry their bibles around in their cars like a talisman (to ward off evil and bring prosperity?), a kind of idolatry if there ever was one. Don't they realize they're violating their own rule #1?
Perhaps it is because my dad is a theologian (prof. of OT, retired). As a result, I have a built-in immune system (from long years of exposure) and I am able to maintain my healthy skepticism. My dad is open-minded and his theology is pretty "liberal" (his PhD is from Union in NYC) and I used to proof-read his manuscripts and do some chores for him (eg, typing things on the Word Processor before he learned) when younger (extra allowance) and from that, I have a healthy respect for theology as a scholarly endeavor.
It is a conflict, I admit. My wife is the same way, except she is more accepting of faith than I. So we go. But avoid doing anything beyond Sunday service as much as possible. My wife is worried that if they force me to come to bible study, then I will say something shocking, so we agreed that I would never (oops, sorry, never say never; "probably not") go to such meetings.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 6, 2007 6:48 PM
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Andy, have you been on the Ann Coulter site? I thought you'd sworn off that for your New Year's Resolution. Perhaps you were gauging the reaction to Doug's 10 Commandments. Hi everybody, nice to see that everything's pretty much the same as I left it three days ago.
Dirk
Posted by: Anonymous | January 6, 2007 6:08 PM
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Puzzled- Thanks for responding. However, I was only really focused on why you still go to church. You somehow confused my question about attending church with the celebration of Christmas. They are completely different events.
I have been an atheist for 40 years and since childhood, have been and still do celebrate Christmas. My 5 year old daughter just received way too many gifts from Santa Claus. Very Pagan. Our "Christmas" tree is still fighting to live while standing in our living room, my 17 year old son spent his first 7 years of education in Christian schools and I wish everyone either a merry Christmas or happy holiday. I certainly fall into the category of at least trying to get into the "Christmas" spirit every year. I was only asking you about church.
Your first paragraph alluded to grimacing at times while in church. I would guess that grimacing only occurs a little and you are getting something from being there. That is the what that I am asking about. I find the whole idea fascinating, as I said earlier.
Sorry that I chose the word atheist if that is not how you define yourself. My bad.
If the questions that I posed specifically about going to church, are just too much, than I apologize and please ignore them.
I do wonder how many people, sitting in the pews with you, share your feelings? Now that is an interesting thought!
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 6, 2007 6:05 PM
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Timmy,
Relax, it was a joke. I'd just come back from the Ann Coulter site, where a feistier mood prevails. However, the point was serious. You have to define "God" in such a way as to distinguish the resulting entity from the blank state of being that kicks off Hegel's logic and serves as the basis for Heidegger's philosophy. Being is not a god or anything like one, but it is all you get for free. All the rest, as Wittgenstein pointed out, depends on a lot of anthropological facts about you and your language community, and there the uncertainty of everything empirical becomes an issue.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 6, 2007 5:54 PM
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Timmy,
You dilettante! Go read the scriptures! I mean the philosophers, who for 2500 years have accumulated a case against "God" that even rock-solid stick-in-the-mud absolutists cannot refute, because even the so-called law of contradiction (not both P and not P) is denied them! I've been pussy-footing about here trying not to offend people but the time is ripe to get out the razor -- I mean Occam's razor! Get real, man! Since when can you make any statement at all about "God" or anything else without permission from the philosophers, who allow you to say "om" and no more until you put some kind of sense in the rules of your language game?
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 6, 2007 5:03 PM
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Philip:
It is difficult for me to sit in church sometimes without grimacing. Another columnist here has a posting by the title of "Atheist in the Pews." Let's just say I was comforted by the title.
And I think of myself as agnostic, not atheist. I find it difficult to believe in the existence of a God as described in the Bible, but I am willing to concede that there may be a Creator. So perhaps I am atheist with regard to established religions, but agnostic toward a more deistic notion of or a Creator.
Just because I am agnostic does not mean that I cannot say Merry X-Mas to friends and family and share in the "Holiday Spirit"? Ever since I was a child, Christmas was my favorite time (for many reasons), and perhaps I am nostalgic. And I see nothing wrong with that.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 6, 2007 5:00 PM
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Now, to what is the debate.
I have been doing an experiment the last couple of days.
I have asked 20 people the question.
Do you believe in God?
The results were very interesting.
2 people said yes.
3 people said no.
Wait, that's only 5 people. What about the other 15?
What did they say?
Agnostic?
Nope.
They said, "It depends on what you mean by "god".
This is my point about this muddled debate.
It is so very muddled and will always be muddled so long as the definition of an atheist is "One who believes that god does not exist."
It is a one sentence definition.
In that short sentence, two of the words are extremely ambiguous.
"God" as my experiment supports, is ambiguous in this definition.
And the inclusion of the word "believe" suggests that atheists all believe the same thing.
I don't believe that we are here just cuz.
But that is the belief of some atheists.
a short one sentence definition in which the two most important words are clearly ambiguous.
This definition needs revision.
Agreed?
Anyone?
Posted by: timmy | January 6, 2007 4:55 PM
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Doug, your "Ten Guidelines for Modern Living" are excellent. Religious people often incite their religion as the best source of morality. They also wonder where atheists can possibly find morality without religion.
One answer would be in your guidelines. Your guidelines are purely non-denominational and do not promote any race or creed. I would guess that most people who read those words would say, yes that represents the tenants of my world view towards morality. Many would want to take claim to those words and associate it with their faith.
It indicates how universal the concepts of morality and ethics are and that even atheists can find morality without organized religion.
As for Jason and his post a few minutes ago at 3:43pm: Sorry buddy, but calling me a moron doesn't surprise me and doesn't bother me. In fact, I predicted your response and you didn't let me down big guy.
What bothers me, is that you delivered the asinine question of, "How do you know that I am not complementing you"?
Are you fricking kidding me Jason? Is that really your response? I would expect that answer out of an 8 year old. I assume that you are older than 8?
How do I know it's not a complement? I live and work in the real world Jason, and I don't use the word moron to complement anyone. The people I work with, friends, family and any humans that I contact don't use that word when complementing someone.
So your question simply magnifies and puts a spot light, for all to see, on just what a looney toon you are.
There is a complement in the first sentence of this post. See if you can find it Cowboy.
No, I'm way beyond being insulted by you. I do however feel pity for you. My life experience has shown me that, generally, people are usually accepted and liked about the same in all areas of life that they travel through.
Based on what I have seen here, I would surmise that you have few friends, you are not well liked in either your personal or professional life, including your church, and you are probably a deeply troubled individual.
Some guys just have all the luck!
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 6, 2007 4:50 PM
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Jason you agree with me!
While still calling me a moron, I love it. I guess we're in this moron business together.
Because we agree here, on this one, for sure.
I agree with Jason. Holy %$#@.
We're getting somewhere.
Science is not an alternative to religion so science should butt out, and stop trying to discredit God!
Because science can do no such thing.
People however, still have a problem to deal with.
Literal jihadists and dogmatic interference with politics.
Science can not help people with this problem.
Science is useless with this problem.
Does everyone agree?
Posted by: timmy | January 6, 2007 4:39 PM
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Let's put it this way,
If this debate were actually about: which is correct?
Science or Religion?
Then the most intelligent and insightful comments posted on this thread would be those of Jason Bradfield.
Because he's got science nailed for all it's hubris.
I mean that. I'm not being facetious.
Anything science tells us about the laws of nature, or the vastness of the universe, is useless as evidence against god.
I actually agree fully with the point made by Jason and other believers that science can do nothing, and I mean absolutely nothing, to rebuke religion or God.
Nothing.
When it appears as though it is science, or the science community, that is attempting to prove that god does not exist, Jason has the most valid point.
Even if you believe that the laws of nature are an absolute truth.
This does not discount God, because the definition of God we have to go on, is the Believer's definition. And they tell us that their God is omnipotent and the laws of nature don't apply to him.
Done.
End of any science based argument. It's moot. It tells us nothing that rebukes what they say. And it's their definition, God. We don't have one. So they are right. Your science is no good here.
The same principle applies to science pointing out contradictions in the Bible.
It is all God's interpretation.
Done.
End of any science based argument.
God doesn't work that way.
Done.
And even if those definitions of God were not as such, and the laws of nature did apply to him. Then Jason's argument kicks in. Science has no absolute certainty so God is still possible.
And Jason is right about that.
My point?
So long as we do nothing to steer the the debate sharply away from a debate between science and religion, Jason is right.
If we take science out of the equation, Jason ceases to have a point. Or rather, he still has one, it's just not valid in this debate if science is removed as a volume of evidence for atheism.
We all know that Jason trusts in the laws of nature, not completely, but you can not function if you do not take the laws of nature as being "almost certain" or certain until shown to be not certain.
e.g..
Jason has invited some friends and family over for Thanks Giving dinner. His wife is preparing the turkey and the guests are on their way.
Jason knows full well that the laws of nature can not guarantee that when his wife turns on the oven, the spark will ignite the gas and the oven will heat up.
Jason knows that this is certainly not a guarantee.
And this is a very important dinner. It will be a bit of a disaster if this law of nature that science has put forth does not hold up this time.
But is Jason so uncertain of the laws of nature that he cancels his Thanks Giving dinner to avoid a potential let down and ruined dinner?
I won't speak for Jason, but I would guess not.
I'll bet that just like us, Jason will take with "almost certainty" that the oven will light and things will turn out just fine.
But is Jason relying on the laws of nature here or is he relying on God?
Only Jason can tell us. But for those of us who do not believe in God.
In this situation, we really don't give it a second thought.
If we have gas, and the sparker works, we will have turkey.
Does this mean that we are confident that the laws of nature are an absolute certainty?
No. We are relying on the laws of nature here as we do with so many other things in life, Because we really have no choice.
Now, in spite of the fact that I have agreed completely with Jason's point here, I still expect a hostile response.
Something like,
"Gas?.... I have an electric oven you MORON!
Maybe not. Maybe he will see that we actually have a whole lot more in common than he thinks and that we can have a fruitful discussion here, if he chooses to.
We'll see. It's going to be interesting that's for sure.
Posted by: timmy | January 6, 2007 4:28 PM
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Jason does not answer my question and instead obfuscates by fixating on the word "monopoly." However, the crux of the question was: Did you study all religions and conclude God is the one and only truth? Or did you just "settle" on Christianity because there were no Buddhist temples in the neighborhood?
As for the law of contradiction, it is a definition that is necessary for logical arguments to go forward. I just say "absolute" is too strong a word. I used examples such as Euclidean geometry and Newtonian physics as what we can consider absolutes, but they actually need to be qualified. The way I understand "absolute" is that there need to be no qualifiers attached to statements that are correct with absolute certainty. If we take the law of contradiction with absolute certainty, then you can even brush up against the conundrum or whether "God" would be subject to the law of contradiction as well.
Lastly, is it the law of contradiction or the law of non-contradiction? Can this axiom be both the law of X and the law of non-X at the same time?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 6, 2007 4:19 PM
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Jason, leave it off. I checked your site again -- you're a decent looking guy (don't worry, I'm not gay), you have four apparently wonderful kids, you live in sunny Florida, be grateful! Leave science to the scientists, faith to the desperate, and morons to the compassionate. Just go enjoy life ...
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 6, 2007 3:56 PM
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Phillip,
Yes, you are a moron. But i'm not certain [s] why that bothers you considering that no one can no anything with certainty. How do you know that i am not complementing you?
Timmy the moron says,
"Science is not the alternative to religion."
I would say it is when science starts meddling in bigger things, like trying to explain our existence.
"Science is for all of us."
I never said it wasn't.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 6, 2007 3:43 PM
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Doug, good work. For the here and now, better than Moses. I'd work on trying to make them one-liners, so people can set them in big type in a frame on the wall. Maybe Timmy the screenwriter can help. And you need a snappier title -- Top Ten Tips -- to freshen it up. Sorry to sound facetious, but people need cheering up too.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 6, 2007 3:39 PM
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Doug.
Contrast that with Jesus' commandment:
"If a man does not abide in me, he is cast forth as a branch and withers; and the branches are gathered, thrown into the fire and burned."
--John 15:6
Posted by: RB | January 6, 2007 3:05 PM
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Timmy:
Yep. It is absurd to speak about Polish physics or Christian biology or European algebra.
Why ask Jason anything? Haven't you learned? I guess hope springs eternal, despite the evidence.
Posted by: RB | January 6, 2007 3:01 PM
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Ten Guidelines for Modern Living
1. Look within yourself for the loving spiritual guidance that will help you treat others the in the way that you would like them to treat you. If you fail to meet your expectations, do not wallow in shame and guilt but resolve to do better in the future.
2. Seek out new knowledge and truth wherever it may be found, but take only your own counsel in what is right or wrong for you. Do not let any other dictate to you through law, order, command or religious creed what is the right way to live your own life.
3. In your communication with others be mindful of the impact of your words. Do not carelessly use words that incite anger, fear, guilt or shame.
4. Do not become so obsessed with the acquiring of material wealth and the exercise of power that you forget that the relationships between people are more important. Take time for yourself, your family and friends. Contribute as much to your society as you receive from it.
5. Respect other people, be they old or young, rich or poor, genius or moron, beautiful or plain, like you or unlike you. Treat them well and care for them when they need care.
6. Respect the life of other people and living things. Do not take a life lightly. Do not suffer others to take lives lightly. Recognize that life has a beginning and ending and let the old and injured die with dignity.
7. Know that the World’s population is too large already. Recognize the rights of others to choose to give birth or abort a fetus. Do not engage in sex without the proper precautions to prevent unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases. Do not force sex on someone who is not willing. Do not discriminate against others based on their sexual preferences. If you have promised monogamy to your partner, do not break your promise.
8. Respect the property of others and do not take or destroy that which is not yours.
9. The truth will always serve you well. Do not lie or pretend to know what you do not know. Honesty is the best policy.
10. Be proud and satisfied with your self. Do not compare yourself unfavorably with others you may see or hear about, but congratulate yourself on what is yours and what you have done.
Posted by: Doug | January 6, 2007 3:01 PM
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Science is not the alternative to religion.
Science is for all of us.
Concurrence?
Anyone?
Jason?
Posted by: timmy | January 6, 2007 2:44 PM
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LT:
"The most venerated patriarchs of the Church, like St. Augustine and St. Thomas concluded that heretics should be tortured (Augustine) or killed outright (Aquinas). Martin Luther and John Calvin advocated the wholesale murder of heretics apostates, Jews and witches. You are free, of course, to interpret the Bible differently--though isn't it amazing that you have succeeded in discerning the true teachings of Christianity, while the most influential thinkers in the history of your faith failed?"
Sam Harris, Letter to A Christian Nation, page 12
And James Dobson, a latter-day biblical scholar and advisor to president bush and leader of a mega-church agrees with Calvin.
Now, tell me again about how Christianity is a benign and loving religion at its core.
Posted by: RB | January 6, 2007 2:44 PM
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Ah,
Religion or Science
That is the question.
Um..... No it isn't.
Posted by: timmy | January 6, 2007 2:42 PM
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Jason -
Thinking back to when I was 18, I can't imagine a more persuasive way for God to bring a boy to a meeting than the invitation of a gorgious girl. Of course the point was to hear the message, but I'm sure the company was pleasant.
I don't know anything about the organization you work in that was mentioned in passing some time ago. What does it do?
Posted by: Doug | January 6, 2007 1:52 PM
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I take back what I said about Jason after reading his most recent posts at 12:46 and 12:52pm. He is still a jerk.
Where does all of his hate and animosity come from? Jason is an equal opportunity hate monger. He even jumped all over Bruce Burleson. Bruce was the only guy that, for days, espoused his deepely Christian views and at one point pleaded with Jason to be nice. Jason's response was to call him a moron.
Jason's carefully worded and intelligent response to me will be, let me guess, "Philip is a moron".
Does anyone remember Chevy Chase's famous response to Jane Curtain's political commentary during the 1st season of Saturday Night Live?
I rest my case.
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 6, 2007 1:15 PM
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more dribble from RBoob, you know, the one who says we can't know anything for certain:
"We all agree today that slavery is immoral."
Rboob, care to prove this universal assertion?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 6, 2007 1:10 PM
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New definition for a-theist: Moron.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 6, 2007 1:08 PM
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Doug,
Yes, I took steps, but God caused each step as well. I’m just simply answering your question of “cause”.
Now, as to those “steps”: God decreed that a gorgeous girl ask me to go to “Friend Day” with her on Sunday. I wasn’t about to turn down an afternoon with her. The pastor basically preached a summary of the Gospel, it made sense to me, and I assented to it. God decreed that I believe it and I haven’t stopped believing it since.
Now, I was somewhat familiar with the story beforehand and even understood it (that is, it made sense WITHIN its own framework) but I had never trusted it. Now I do.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 6, 2007 1:03 PM
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Concerning your two points:
The first is a red herring. I never said I don’t believe in uncertainties. In fact, I expressed an uncertainty on this very forum when doubting Timmy’s unprovable assertion that newspapers will always burn. And guess what – I got called a “retard” for doing so. Furthermore, I’m a little uncertain as to how a university could award Andy the moron with anything. I guess that just shows you how far down the pot our schools have gotten. I’m not certain that I’ll be alive in the next ten minutes, but I don’t worry about things like that. I’m in the hands of a Sovereign Creator who works all things to my good. Maybe you’re anxious Puzzled, but I’m not you – try again.
Concerning your point 2, I’ll give you a quote from Daniel Dennett:
“The “monopoly on truth” isn’t the problem. The problem is when someone retreats to “faith” and “mystery” whenever you point out contradictions in the truth they espouse. Aristotle had it right more than 2000 years ago: when a person abandons the law of non-contradiction, he asked, "what difference will there be between him and a vegetable?"
Now Puzzled, back then to the original task I set before us in my first post – empiricism is self-contradictory. That is the charge I have laid on this thread and no one has come to the rescue. Instead, ya’ll babble on about resurrection, whether I poop or not, government, and all the rest of the red herrings.
And to top all that off: We even have folks on here who tell us the law of contradiction is not a certainty. Now, this is commendable in that I believe that is the logical end to empiricism; however, you turn into a “vegetable” at that point.
Try again.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 6, 2007 12:52 PM
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Puzzled says, “What Jason seems to be missing is that scientific methodology does not make any claims to "absolute certainty."
Ummm…no, that very thing was said in my original post…you know, the one everyone is getting all hot and bothered over.
“Universal propositions can never be validly obtained by observation. Hence, science can never give us true statements.”
What you seem to be missing is that you cannot function in a world with no absolutes – prime example: law of contradiction. What you seem to be missing is that morons like Timmy, who readily admit that absolutes don’t exist, continually assert absolutes. What you seem to be missing is that in the very second you type a sentence, you contradict your presupposition that there are no absolutes.
Go ahead Puzzled, take the challenge: write a response to me without utilizing the law of contradiction. Looks like Andy tried, but Andy has just demonstrated again just how stupid people get when they take their empiricism serious. What’s sad is that many people here have admitted their difficulty with what Andy has written and just pawn it off as: “wow, Andy must be real smart…take it down a notch Andy and speak to us non-geniuses.” I prefer to just call Andy for what he is – a moron. Besides that, notice he utterly failed the challenge. He couldn’t communicate to me his theory with conventions other than language and logic.
Puzzled, the law of contradiction “requires that a given word must not only mean something, but it must also not mean something else. The term dog must mean dog, but also it must not mean mountain; and mountain must not mean metaphor. Each term must refer to something definite and at the same time there must be other objects to which it does not refer. Suppose the word mountain meant metaphor, and dog, and Bible, and the United States. Clearly, if a word meant everything, it would mean nothing.” – Clark
Yet, you tell me that logic is optionable, we can’t be certain about the law of contradiction… hmmmm…well, I guess all I have to say now in response is:
“mountain mountain mountain mountain mountain mountain mountain mountain.”
Did you get that?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 6, 2007 12:46 PM
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Puzzled asked several days ago, why creationists fuse science with the bible. That is an excellent question. My answer would be that if they fully accept science as their reality, they would have to trash everything written in the bible. The two belief systems are mutually exclusive. They would have to overturn their entire belief system. The proverbial house of cards would come tumbling down.
"That aint working" so, faced with that looming problem, the only solution is to mold the two beliefs together. That is where everything gets wierd and wacky. The stuff that evolves from those attempts seems often laughable to an outsider like myself. Apparently, they don't recognize their own evolution and are impervious to criticism.
Robin asked earlier, "What is the point"? Asking why everyone on this thread spends so many hours re-hashing all of the same thoughts over and over. Initially I agreed. Then I realized that everyone is at different stages of their spiritual evolution and reading these posts and adding their own rhetoric is part of the process of their own spiritual evolution. Me included!
Andy-I absolutely agreed with your extremely well written letter to Jason's superior. I was not aware that his presence here was under the auspices of a higher authority. It took some time, but I think Jason got the message and his tone has radically changed. Perhaps his superiors read some of his diatribe and had a little talk with him. He is starting to seem a little more lovable now.
Puzzled also said that they still attend church regularly. I found that fascinating.
Puzzled- I must ask for your thoughts on that subject. Is it the fellowship that you seek? You mentioned habit. Explain that a little. Do you partake in the rituals, songs etc? Do others know that you are a non-believer? I find it so interesting that you would still go to church. I used to attend meetings of Atheists United but I would feel like a stranger in a strange land if I went to any church on a regular basis. I would love to hear your thoughts.
One large event in my spiritual evolution occured when a scholar, that I knew in my teens, made the statement that Yahweh, Allah, Jehovah and the like, are all the same guy. I choked on that thought but his evidence was absolutely correct and further distanced me from organized religion. Is that concept generally recognized by Christians and Moslems alike? If so, how do they deal with the consequences of that revelation?
Do Christians, Moslems and the like believe that animals have souls or are we the only lucky/unlucky one to have the pleasure/pain of worrying about such things?
To believe that we are the only ones that have souls, you must make a distinction between us and the animals. I would guess that many non-believers don't make that distinction.
I don't even make the distinction that we are the highest or most evolved form on this planet. The answer to that question is entirely rooted in what guidelines you choose.
For example, if you ask what organisms are best suited to survive a complete worldwide nuclear weapons exchange, it would have to be bacteria and viruses. So, under that scenerio, they are the most advanced life form on this planet. Man likes to think that he is at the top of the evolutionary tree, but a true rationalist knows better.
All the best, Philip Tripp
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 6, 2007 11:26 AM
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LT: I enjoyed your thoughtful response.
1. Cherry-picking. You claim the NT placed a new context for viewing the harsh OT. Please explain Ephesians 6:5...
"Slaves, be obedient to those who are your earthly masters, with fear and trembling, in singleness of heart, as to Christ..."
And 1 Timothy 6:1-4...
"Let all who are under the yoke of slavery regard their masters as worthy of all honor so that the name of God and the teaching may not be defamed..."
No where in the NT does jesus denounce slavery. He endorses its continued practice. We all agree today that slavery is immoral.
Thus, modernity forces one to reconcile past teachings with an evolving sense of what is moral. Morality evolves. These old texts don't.
Finally, where in the NT was it explicitly stated that the death penalty for breaking the 10 commandments was suspended? Answer: no where.
2. On the evolution of knowledge. You say: "This reflects the same bias toward scientism..."
Look. Ancient people used to scratch away at the earth with a stick, drop a seed into the dirt and pray something would grow. Today modern ag machines plow 1,000 acres a day and employ many other technologies to grow 10,000 times the yield, no prayer needed. Pointing that out may be "a bias toward agricultural engineeringism" but so what? I don't get the point, I guess. This seems like an attempt to artificially force dualism where it's not appropriate.
The new context is science and technology. That's not a bias, it's a recognition of what is known.
3. On circular arguments. "Your argument is circular and only appears to be helped by the fact that people in the past knew less about science than today. However, people did not need "physics, chemistry, biology, engineering, medicine" or even "basic math" to know that once a person is killed, s/he is supposed to stay killed. Yet a large number of people claimed to have witnessed Jesus' resurrection."
LT, because they were ignorant of the irreversibility involved with the decay of tissue (medicine and the 2nd Law of thermo), they could be told someone arose from the dead. Today we have advanced thermo and have established that it's impossible because dS/dt>0. We understand a property of matter (entropy) they had no clue about.
Actually only a minority of people today have studied these sciences...a majority still considers the understanding they yield as arbitrary. Thus they are susceptible to equating knowledge with mythology. Over time, this group will shrink in size.
You claim this is a circular argument, but how so? I'll provide another example:
We know now that the surface tension of water is caused by the polar nature of H2O. We can measure the strength of this force, and calculate very precisely that it will NOT support the weight of a person.
So, yes, a priori (important to note: today with knowledge gained over the past 2,000 years) I can reject the alleged miracle of walking on water.
But they couldn't. They did not have the tools.
Posted by: RB | January 6, 2007 9:26 AM
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Time ... my night is your day ... so I have to take a lot of posts at once and distill from them the spirit for another big response. So sorry that I cannot address posters by name. I shall do so by topic.
A. Creativity with contradiction (Hegel in a nutshell)
Triad 1.1
It is -- It is not -- It becomes
Triad 1.2
It becomes objects -- It becomes properties -- Objects have properties
Triad 1.3
Objects are essence -- Properties are essence -- Essence is appearance
Triad 2.1
Reality is essence and appearance -- Both are essential -- We see both
Triad 2.2
Essence is manifest -- Appearance is hidden -- Reality is deceptive
Triad 2.3
We sort out reality -- We don't sort it out -- We are people
Triad 3.1
We use our senses -- Our senses trick us -- Art shows us how
Triad 3.2
We lack knowledge -- We have faith -- Religion offers hope
Triad 3.3
Art is surface -- Religion is beyond -- All is one in the Absolute
Hegel used an argument like this to "prove" that the Prussian state, united under God, was perfect.
Karl Marx took this dialectical idealism and turned it upside-down it to create dialectical materialism.
Vladimir Lenin concluded that "dialectics is the doctrine of the unity of opposites" (Collected Works, Vol. 38).
The resulting clash (Prussian militarism versus Soviet communism) dominated the 20th century.
What can we conclude? Philosophical absolutism, of left or right, is dangerous.
What should we do? Relax and let logic become a technology.
B. Bits (1 + 1 = ?)
In bit logic, otherwise known as Boolean algebra, 1 + 1 = 0 as long as you ignore the carry bit. If you remember the carry bit, 1 + 1 = 10. In arithmetic modulo 2, 1 + 1 is zero, and in binary arithmetic, two is 10.
In program code you can write contradictions. There's no law that says you can't. But if you do, your box will crash. Avoiding contradiction is a practical maxim for success in life. Things go smoother if you go with the flow of modus ponendo ponens: if p then q; p; so q -- Wittgenstein (re)invented truth tables to show why this was valid.
C. God (who, where, how to explain)
Sam Harris is now a researcher in neuroscience and consciousness. So he will understand the following idea, whose exact source I have forgotten but for which my prayer to Google was in vain.
One way to describe the sense of awe in face of the Absolute is to say that we find a fixed point. We touch base with eternity and feel our unity with the universe. All the rest is flux and change, including our silly little personal lives with all their jealousies and frustrations. This Absolute, experienced in its true magnitude, is peaceful and self-sufficient. It bears comparison with the inner peace found by experienced meditators in the Eastern traditions such as Buddhism. There is no yearning for a beyond because there is no beyond -- I melt into eternity.
Now for the idea. The psychology behind this state is that each of us has two heads, metaphorically speaking. We have a big head and a little head (this is where Google failed me -- too many vulgar hits). The little head is our everyday head, the one that drives to work and sorts out the kids. The big head is the "Sunday head" that tries to achieve union with the Absolute. How can I know God? By becoming God, or rather by becoming my own representation of God, my big head. Done right, this gives me my fixed point.
Natually, my big head fails to achieve more than fleeting union with God. I would have to overcome all the contradictions in Hegel's philosophy to become God, and life is too short. But I can have faith. The monotheistic traditions help me hold on to the idea that one day my little head will catch up with my big head and I will go down in eternity as a fulfilled soul, a strange loop in the sense of Douglas Hofstadter, with no time left unaccounted for.
Why do we have two heads? This is where the neuroscience comes in. What we really have is two cerebral hemispheres, left and right. As one acts, the other observes. We have "mirror neurons" (Google it) to reflect both our own thoughts and the observed actions of others. We understand things by holding up the mirror and analyzing their image. This is how we manage socially. We mirror each other, as best we can. This is what we are doing here in this blog, trying to understand each other's thoughts.
Our big head is a social adaptation. It's our altruistic head. Our little head is our selfish head. We need a big head to get along with each other. Now, monotheistic religion has gotten hold of this big head and inflated it enormously. Each and every believer is supposed to get his or her head around the entire universe. No way, no can do. So we need faith. The church sells us faith to stop our heads exploding. The church takes over, and then attacks nonbelievers as pusillanimous, which in effect means insufficiently big-headed.
Cut to now. Meditate and be calm. Abraham had a vision of God that brought the world together. It was a great thing he did, or rather we all did on his behalf. Now we have one world, with just a few little political problems to clear up. Sometimes it looks like we have a massive unsolvable problem to clear up here. But we can do it if we remember that a network of medium-sized heads can understand each other well enough to be, in effect, one big head.
The acid guru Timothy Leary (fogged up by LSD but still lucid) saw the Web as a worldwide brain in which we, the online masses, were the neurons. Just as the neurons in our brain communicate imperfectly with each other and sometimes foul up, we in the Web still have some collective "thinking" to do.
This blog is a perfect example of what we need to keep doing. When we can claim together to have become not just a lot of talking heads but a brain as big as a planet (thanks, Marvin the paranoid android), we will have become Gaia, we will have fulfilled the vision of Saint Augustine and have become the Body of Christ.
Hallelujah and amen!
PS: Thanks, Jason, for savin' ma soul!
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 6, 2007 8:36 AM
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Hold on LT You get your own personal response since you want me to engage you more directly and specifically.
1)
I apologize if I accused you of insinuating that, I called all Christians dangerous, if that is not what you meant. I sometimes read these things so fast because there is so much to read. So long as you know those are not my feelings.
2)
If I asked you: Why do you think that I don't believe?
Well I'm not going to put words in your mouth, so I need you to answer that question for me.
What is your best guess as to why I don't believe?
Am I missing the obvious?
Is the evidence, in your eyes, as clear as the nose on my face?
Am I incapable of having the same kind of revelation that you had? Or unworthy?
Do I misinterpret my emotional feelings?
Obviously the reason I ask is that I'm having trouble with this idea that you believe in something so completely that it is clear to you, but you find it perfectly reasonable for me to not believe.
I can not reconcile that, I just can't.
So maybe you can elaborate on why it is that you think, that I do not believe.
As my recent posts have shown, not only do I think that it is reasonable to postulate and imagine an all knowing and loving creator of the universe, I have done it myself.
To imagine that this deity speaks to us metaphysically through messengers like Jesus or John Lennon or Gahndi is also reasonable.
And I'm sorry for this LT, but this is where reasonable ends and what you believe starts. (For me)
I definitely believe that it is unreasonable to profess with absolute certainty that you know who the creator of the universe is, and he is the one true god, and his teachings and good word are in this book, and others who don't believe this are wrong to not believe it. Unreasonable.
When there are so many other religions and philosophies and Ideas about the universe; for you to even think that you and your group have found the one true answer, is unreasonable to me.
Not only unreasonable, but very very very arrogant.
You have found the one true answer? Really?
I'm wrong? I'm going to Hell?
All of those other religions and ways of looking at the universe, but you and your group have found the one true answer?
33 percent of the worlds population are right and the rest are wrong?
If you truly find "not believing" to be reasonable, as you have claimed, then how could you not see the arrogance of telling people that you have found the one true answer. Christ.
Again, a belief in the idea of a god is not unreasonable or arrogant.
If you believe that you and your group know who the one true God is, is very unreasonable to me, and very arrogant.
I am happy to listen with an open mind, to your explanation of how you feel that it is not unreasonable to make such an assertion, and it is not arrogant.
As someone who believes that no one knows the big answer. That we are all still searching for it. I really have no choice but to call the religious position, arrogance.
If I did not address any of your points that you want me to address, let me know.
And I don't consider literalism violence and dogmatic political interference as your responsibility.
But is it not, as much your problem, as it is mine?
Do you not share equal responsibility with me and all of the peaceful democratic people of the world to try whatever they can to solve these problems?
Do you not possess special qualifications that I do not have, to talk to those who take religion too far, and reason with them to back off with the interference into other peoples lives?
Or do you not mind at all that these people have their moral noses in our business.
You turn.
Posted by: timmy | January 6, 2007 4:45 AM
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Well I got some interesting responses.
My use of the word "club" got some people all riled up.
just a metaphor. And I was making a point not agreeing with the sentiment.
Doug, When you said
"Timmy - Speaking for myself I don't want to replace one set of dogmatic beliefs with another. Atheists aren't supposed to be a "club" with dogma that must be believed (or not believed) to be a member.
This is my point exactly and it seems like you were responding as though I was advocating some kind of atheist dogma.
I used the word club to illustrate what people are doing to atheism.
It was me who has been most adamant that atheism is not a thing and therefore can have no dogma.
This is where the confusion of the dictionary definition comes in.
"One who believes that god does not exist"
This is a belief. It is a dogma. The dogma that god does not exist. At least, according to the current dictionary definition.
That is why I have a problem with this definition.
It is wrong. It is confusing.
What god? Gods of any kind? The idea of a god? The one true god? All of the above?
If it is a "belief that god does not exist":
We need to have a very clearly defined statement of what "god" means.
Because people are unsure.
Maybe not any of you, but regular people, are unsure.
People who have spiritual dreams and imaginations such as I have described might think that they are not atheists because atheists aren't people who have such thoughts.
But they are not agnostics either, because they absolutely do not believe in the one true god. They are not ambiguous about this in the slightest.
So this excludes them from the definition of agnostics who are "not sure if god exists".
Again do you see how important and yet not clear the definition of "god" is in that statement.
So I am not agnostic because I definitely do not believe in the one true god of the Abrahamic religions.
And I'm certainly not a Christian or a Muslim or Jew.
I like the term "free thinker" but then I understand why believers would take offense to that.
"So what, I'm not a free thinker because I believe?"
I think that it is perfectly reasonable that believers can believe by choice with free will. So I get their objection to "free thinker" being synonymous with non believer.
So, I'm not agnostic
I'm not religious
Free thinker, can include believers in God, so that's too confusing.
So that just leaves atheist.
And the current definition of "One who believes that god does not exist" Does not describe me.
It describes only one kind of atheist.
I don't know why "atheist" needs a definition.
It is a definition.
One who is not a "theist".
That describes all of us for our only common trait.
Under this subgroup, there are people who believe all of these different things:
We are here just cuz. It's all meaningless.
We have always been here, time has no beginning,
Who knows how we got here it's just so interesting to think about the question. I like to imagine different things.
We are all just energy, which is matter, which is energy.
One day we will learn to use more of our brains and travel across space-time as energy balls.
We are possibly a colony of humans from a distant star that died.
Reincarnation is the continuation of our life energy.
Live in the here and now, because it's all over when it's over, baby.
All of these people refuse to believe in the one true god and for this reason they are none of them, agnostic.
They are a-theist.
"One who believes that god does not exist" is a terrible definition to try and cover this group of people. It makes them all sound like they believe the same thing. Clearly they do not.
This is why they can not ever form an organized group with dogma. And must not.
So let's drop the pigeon hole dictionary definition and just leave it at:
a-theist
In the dictionary, it should just be a sub set under "theism"
Posted by: timmy | January 6, 2007 3:41 AM
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Oops. Forgot to post name.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 6, 2007 2:08 AM
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LT:
I agree that since the bible was written in a time and place completely different from most us know, to judge the bible with 21st century attitudes may not be the way to go. That is why theologians who translate the bible into modern languages like English must also study, in addition to many of the languages of ancient Mesopotamia, sociology, history, ... I know because my dad is such a person. He is a theology professor of OT, now retired. He's now working on a retirement project: Psalms Commentary, and I've seen the process from afar, so I have some sense. Theologians do this because what is said in those texts is wrapped in the context of the time and place. To me, this is the prima facie case for why taking the bible literally (i.e., that every letter, word and sentence was just so and cannot be wrong) can only lead to a poor understanding of the authors' true intentions.
However, to say that just because we now know more about the world around us then the ancients did, the ancient texts are "wrong" doesn't make much sense either. Bible was not written to with the intent of being factually correct. Bible authors were not working for AP or UPI. They were spiritual men and women who wanted to profess their faith that god is our creator. Honestly, I have a hard time getting this spiritual part, but I suspect (guessing with "low level of confidence") that the kind of spiritual "truths" may be different in its essence than "factual" or "scientific" truths (i.e., empirical regularities and laws).
My humble suggestion: let science be science since the scientific method (at least now) can only very poorly account for this spiritual side. Psychologists may try. But after all is said and done, all they're really doing is making (statistical) inferences from stimulus-response. Philosophers may employ logic and mathematics, but as far as I understand, we can observe behavior, and speech, attitudes, etc. but that is about it. And atheists should also concede that the spiritual experience is outside their understanding: that is why atheists are atheists, after all. As long as either party keeps to their space and not presume to tell the others what they're doing, then perhaps honest discourse can follow. So, creationists have to really stop railing about their "science," and atheists have to allow for the "leap of faith" that is the domain of spirituality.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 6, 2007 2:06 AM
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Ted - I can think of two possible conclusions from the preponderance of religious affilitions in Congress. First, as you say, non-believers may be very poorly represented in Congress, because a politician needs the religious voting block to get elected.
The cynic in me suggests that an astute politician might join a congregation, attend services, shake hands and keep his mouth shut about just how much he does or doesn't believe. Even in this case he knows where his votes come from at the very least.
If I was a politician who wanted to get elected I would join a church with a large, rich influential congregation - and be very visible. But I have too many athiest moral scruples to do that.
Posted by: Doug | January 6, 2007 1:54 AM
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If you go to the main page of the On Faith discussion you will find an interesting tabulation of the religious affiliations of the representatives in Congress.
Those with no religious affiliation number 6 in the house and none in the senate. This represents 1.1% of congress as opposed to 14.1% in the population as a whole.
So it would seem that atheists, agnostics and pantheists are very poorly represented in Congress.
Posted by: Ted.Swart | January 6, 2007 1:42 AM
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Kattie said:
"Hey, we atheist say, "Anything's POSSIBLE", being good scientists and logicians and all, but forget about "metaphysical other" concepts. Just the same old same old - give us some Proof, some Evidence, just an itty-bitty bit, No Evidence, no Other. Otherwise, we're just watered down, pap-slinging, pandering a-gnostics, pathetic pastors wandering in the pasture."
I disagree. Agnostics simply say it is all unknowable, might be, might not be. Athiests take a stand that they don't believe in gods. Still doesn't mean that they insist that something new couldn't hit them with a bolt of lightening or something. Anyway, My SMO's better than your SMO. My SMO's better than yours. My SMO's better cause...
Tomorrow, me Kaatie me dear. I shall give you proof in the form of a replacement for the Ten Commandments dictated personally to me by my own personal SMO. They shall be known as Ten Guidelines for Modern Living and shall be inscribed in virtual binary space. Stay tuned for the World's newest religion.
Posted by: Doug | January 6, 2007 1:41 AM
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Philosophically, empiricism or any other kind of scientific methodology "suffers" from this issue of "absolute certainty." What Jason seems to be missing is that scientific methodology does not make any claims to "absolute certainty." In his zeal to uphold and defend the absoluteness of "absolute certainty," he speaks of unattainable ideal forms and rejects knowledge that cannot make claims to absolute certainty, and hence his claim that the christian bible (only the bible) holds all the truth. And that must follow from the assertion that only christianity is internally consistent or some variation of the sort (i.e., does not contradict itself) and is complete. Whether that is the case is for another debate, but I will just talk about the issues that may be raised about such reasoning:
1. All that might be fine for armchair theorizing, but if you get hungry, you still have to get up out of that armchair to eat and once you eat, you have to (eventually) go to the bathroom, etc., etc. Even armed with such principles that Jason loves so much, there comes a time that we have to stop and make assumptions about the model we are trying to devise in order to make sense of the world around us. Trying to hit a grand slam with no one on base is futile. Sensible manager will tell you to take one for the team and get on by hook or crook, even if it is not too pretty and guarantees nothing. Bible may provide guidance in some things, but it sure won't help you build a house, nor pump oil for energy, etc.
2. In order to make a claim that the bible is the one and only source of truth (implied by the word "monopoly," not the game, but the economic term denoting a firm that is the only firm supplying a particular good or service), Jason would have had to either
(a) study all pilosophical, moral, religious ideas and then decide that the for all the parts that the non-bible ideas contradicted the bible, the bible is superior, and that the bible includes absolutely all other meaningful "truths" so that studying the non-bible ideas is redundant, or
(b) settle on the bible as a matter of convenience. There is no shame in that, since we are not immortal, such heuristics may be a more efficient search algorithm than a global search (as suggested in (a), above) in that there is a constraint on the time, mental capacity, etc. that are available to us.
Indeed, to be uncompromising and to demand only absolute certainty may be aesthetically pleasing, but overly idealistic, and simply infeasible. More pragmatically, when we search for knowledge of our surroundings in order to manipulate it for our purpose, as incomplete and inadequate as it may seem next to the ideal (call it god or whatever), it is ultimately self-defeating if one were to attempt to apply such criterion to everything. If eternal salvation or enlightenment is the purpose, then knock yourself out. But don't forget to also eat and sleep and spend time with your familty as well.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 6, 2007 1:40 AM
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Well, sure Jason. God did cause you to go, but there must be more to the story than that. God probably also caused to you do other things, including take some steps on your own.
I would like to hear what those steps were; What you were thinking and feeling; What your experience was.
I was raised in the church from birth. My parents were very active in starting a new branch church in our community and I was a charter member of the Church Nursery (in our kitchen) while the meetings were in my Grandparent's living room next door. My parents and Grandparents literally built the church (building) and I grew up with it. 55 years later and I still live within a mile of that church.
I was completely immersed in religion my entire young life. When I was about 12 I felt God calling me to make a public acceptance of him, which I did. I communed with God. Later I drifted away as I've posted earlier.
Anyway, I never went from an aethiest home to choose God on my own as you did. So I am really interested.
Posted by: Doug | January 6, 2007 1:25 AM
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LT:
Personally, i would rather not go into great detail in expositing certain Scriptures with "morons" (that really means genius) because i think we are letting them off the hook too easy.
As i have mentioned before, empiricism cannot get very far at all with all sorts of problems/contradictions and i will continue to hold their feet to the fire.
I'm not even about to explain theological details to people who can't even tell me if the law of contradiction is a certainty or not.
However, i will say in short: yes. I agree with you in principle that there are very reasonable answers "within" the framework to solve these so-called discrepancies.
But again, atheists are not honest with their own...well, at least most are not. Some have been honest and they are the ones locked up in mental hospitals.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 6, 2007 12:49 AM
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Why do people think i am being disrespectful in calling them a "moron"?
We don't know anything for certain, right? At least that's what I'm told...so maybe "moron" actually means "genius".
In this case, some atheists here have actually protested me in calling them a "genius" - what morons.
----------
Don't you love that? Two can play this game. ( ;
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 6, 2007 12:40 AM
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Doug,
God caused me to go.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 6, 2007 12:32 AM
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RB claims "the practice of not reading the scriptures literally is an accession to modernity." RB's only evidence for that assertion in that post is the Old Testament commands for death. What RB lacks is context. The commands are given in context of a covenant with the people who leave Egypt in Exodus. Since they were to be a holy, sinless nation-state under the covenant, the seemingly harsh commands are reasonable for them because it would limit sin. Also, this was not a forced covenant but an accepted one.
Christians believe the New Covenant through Jesus has the same heart of God but has different implications for how we act in society. Christians are not a holy nation-state in the way Israel was.
In society, this means that many Christian mistakenly support policies based on a covenant that no longer applies. I for one object to theocracy in America as much as any non-Christian. However, to read with context in mind does not constitute "failure" or compromise with what the Bible says. For your example, at least, I have a "within Christianity" reason of not reading that part of the Bible the way.
It is not obvious from the Bible what kinds of public policies are appopriate for Christians to support. If you think that the Bush administration's policies must follow logically from the Bible (I'm not saying that you do, only "if"), then that reflects a narrow-mindedness about the Bible similar to that of Christians who support Bush administration policies because they think Bible provides such a definitive answer.
I have to admit, though, the example you gave was a challenge to why I think the way I do, and I learned (or relearned) something in the process.
[To Jason: Hello. I'm not an expert, but what do you think of my interpretation?]
However, RB, I don't feel the same way about your other post.
"It is a historical fact that the people who wrote the bible were ignorant on a scale that, by today's standards, would be breath-taking. No physics, chemistry, biology, engineering, medicine and only basic math."
This reflects the same bias toward scientism that I argued against three nights ago (and still seen no direct rebuttal for). I repeat:
"If one says that for something to have happened, it must be supported by scientific evidence, then God is effectively eliminated. For example, if a miraculous event in the Bible is not supported by science, then it can't have happened. However, if it supportable, then the argument for God is weakened anyway because we don't need to appeal to Him for that event."
RB, you admitted that "thinking scientifically a priori rejects all miracle-performing, personal gods" and then acted like there was nothing intellectually lacking in that. To propose to figure out the God question this way is to answer the question before one asks it. My arguments aren't for people who assume a priori there is no God and are no miracles, but for people who think based on "the evidence" that they don't exist.
Your argument is circular and only appears to be helped by the fact that people in the past knew less about science than today. However, people did not need "physics, chemistry, biology, engineering, medicine" or even "basic math" to know that once a person is killed, s/he is supposed to stay killed. Yet a large number of people claimed to have witnessed Jesus' resurrection. There are many alternative explanations to explain these claims, and I am not a historian, but I suspect a lot of them follow a methodology that rejects miracles without having adequately established that they can't occur.
As for burden of proof, you gave a decent answer to the first part of the question (why believers should have some burden of proof), but you still haven't answered what would constitute a proof for you.
If you ask me to prove Christianity, we might agree that a miracle must have occurred for Christianity to be true. If I allude to (multiple, independent instances of) human testimony as evidence of the resurrection, do you dismiss it out-of-hand saying they can't have seen what they claim because resurrection is impossible according to the scientism that declares either resurrection is impossible or it is not a miracle? Or do you dismiss it for non-tautological reasons? My issue is not that you see evidence but don't find it conclusive, but that you refuse to accept any evidence I provide on tautological grounds.
Timmy:
I perceive a pattern in which you've stopped addressing my actual arguments and blanket them with ad hominem comments (not disrespectful attacks, just comments) with what I must think as a believer. (If this is wrong, please tell me why.) Let's see if we can at least agree on what our positions are. My position is that (1) Christianity is correct and reasonable and that (2) atheism, however defined, is incorrect and reasonable. Having been an atheist most of my life (I wasn't churched), I cannot deny that atheism is still reasonable.
However--correct me if I'm wrong--you seem to think that (1) atheism is correct and reasonable and (2) Christianity (along with other religious beliefs) is incorrect and unreasonable. My goal is not to prove Christianity is correct, but to show using reason that Christianity is not unreasonable. I'm okay with your "missing it," to use your term, but I'd much rather have you miss it because you think that Christianity, while plausible, isn't true rather than because you think Christianity is not only untrue, but ridiculous.
Would you agree that one should base one's opinion that Christianity is unreasonable on reason? At least when RB finds one (or all) of my arguments ridiculous, he takes what I said and says why he thinks it's wrong. I do the same to arguments I think are wrong. Even Jason does this (although Jason, you could be more respectful).
That's part of what this forum is about, isn't it? If there's some part of your argument that you think I avoided and didn't address directly and would like me to do so, I'd be glad to give it my best shot. However, I think on balance that since I brought up the issue of scientism, you've done much direct responding to Jason and not very much to me and in some sense treated me with less respect than him (before you started ignored him). (As a Christian, though I can bear not being respected.)
FYI: You said, "I think I have stated clearly that I do not think that all christians are dangerous. Please do not place these words into my mouth again." I said two posts ago: "As far as I can tell, Timmy, your tacit opinion...stem [sic] primarily from a valid but irrelevant argument about the dangerousness of *some* who call themselves Christians" (emphasis added). I said last post: "Timmy doesn't believe Christians are a monolithic group..." For the record, it is you placed words into my mouth.
Posted by: LT | January 6, 2007 12:31 AM
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Doug said:
"I make a point of this specifically to keep the distinction clear. If I get sloppy in my use of language and use the word "god" to mean something other than "GOD", things get very confusing very fast.
Maybe someone will coin a nice punchy short word we could use for the concept of a Significant Metaphysical Other. SMO doesn't quite have the right ring to it though.
Then we could say things like: Athiests don't believe in God, but they allow the possibility of the existance of a SMO."
Hey, we atheist say, "Anything's POSSIBLE", being good scientists and logicians and all, but forget about "metaphysical other" concepts. Just the same old same old - give us some Proof, some Evidence, just an itty-bitty bit, No Evidence, no Other. Otherwise, we're just watered down, pap-slinging, pandering a-gnostics, pathetic pastors wandering in the pasture.
Posted by: Kaattie | January 6, 2007 12:28 AM
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Timmy, I have had what I consider spiritual experiences - they have brought me joy and a sense of completeness. I am still an atheist (or an a-theist, if you will). I don't believe in a God (or Gods) (or Goddesses) (or Divine beings of uncertain gender). Jesus did not speak to me during these experiences. Neither did any other deity. But for me, they were profound experiences.
I can identify with your comments around "If this does not exclude me from the atheist club, the atheist club should make that more apparent." I have known atheists with whom I would feel a total fool for admitting that I have had what seem to me to be spiritual experiences, despite my not claiming to know the basis of the experiences and my not feeling a need to attach an anthropomorphic figure to the other end of them. There are certainly "anti-spiritual feeling" atheists. But atheists really aren't a united team with an anti-spiritual dogma to spread around the world. To use an over-used metaphor, if anything, they are a herd of cats. Some are more friendly toward spiritual experiences than others. I was comforted in a way when reading "The End of Faith" to find in Sam Harris a "non-believer" whose reasoning I found sound in many areas who is not dismissive of spiritual experiences. I am glad that he addressed spiritual experiences in the way that he did, despite criticism that I'm sure he has received from some atheists.
I agree with you that it would be helpful for more non-believers who do have spiritual experiences to make this known. I think that people would be less fearful of letting go of their idea of God if they knew before-hand that a feeling of emptiness and disconnection is not the inevitible result. It seems that a lot of believers fear that. I never had spiritual experiences before recognizing the unlikeliness of God and did after. So in a spiritual sense, for me becoming a non-believer or a-theist was a net positive.
Posted by: wm | January 6, 2007 12:19 AM
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Jason - Sorry, I made the assumption that you had been a church goer at a younger age. I hadn't picked up that your home environment was athiest.
I just meant that the community that the people in a church provide is something that most people would find a positive thing. And I thought that a kid, moving around as you did, might have really appreciated that sense of community and belonging.
Why did you start going to church?
Posted by: Doug | January 6, 2007 12:17 AM
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Doug,
Was it a "positive value" to be apart of a church? Sure. It certainly (oops), I mean it most likely was not a negative (dang it), i mean closely resemble a negative.
But no, that's not the reason i started going to church at the age of 18, raised in an atheist home.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 6, 2007 12:07 AM
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Sorry, Timmy - I hadn't read your previous posts of today where you where talking about a definition for the word Athiest and asking if an Athiest could also believe in god.
Symantics is a tricky business, but it seems to me that a-thiest means what you said in one of your posts: NOT a believer in god(s). That's the simple definition that I'm operating with. Now GOD is a pretty well defined concept, as is ALLAH, and JEHOVAH, and ZEUS, etc. These are the gods I say that I don't believe in. That is not the same as saying that there isn't some sort of metaphysical something-or-other that might exist. I don't say that there couldn't be something like that. (I don't BELIEVE that there is either.) What I do say is that GOD is a term that is pretty well defined by the Bible, a huge body of religious literature and masses of believers. I don't believe in GOD as defined by all of these trappings and dogma. I do not eliminate the possibility of something completely different from GOD that might have some god-like aspects.
I make a point of this specifically to keep the distinction clear. If I get sloppy in my use of language and use the word "god" to mean something other than "GOD", things get very confusing very fast.
Maybe someone will coin a nice punchy short word we could use for the concept of a Significant Metaphysical Other. SMO doesn't quite have the right ring to it though.
Then we could say things like: Athiests don't believe in God, but they allow the possibility of the existance of a SMO.
Maybe someone knows how Unitarians deal with this concept symantically. My impression is that they believe in something, but are very careful to not be very specific about exactly what.
Posted by: Doug | January 6, 2007 12:00 AM
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Timmy,
Your statement about being left out of the atheists club didn't offend me, it confused me. Because I stated in my first post that I am an atheist. I did say that I went to catholic schools and attended protestant churches while growing up. But I have been an atheist since I was 16 and now am 50.
I guess that was missed somehow.
If you are asking me as an atheist if your imagination, dreams, thoughts that you describe would exclude you from *some* atheist club? I personally would not know why it would. Not any that I would consider belonging to.
(Oh and by the way, I loved Pay It Forward)
Personally, for myself, I can say and do with certainty (Jason) that no god exists for me in my life. I don't even consider thinking it a possibility.
I think the message of Jesus, is one that would benefit all of mankind. I try to follow much of what that message holds. But that does not mean I subscribe to the idea that he was the son of god as I repeat myself, I do not hold to the idea that any god exists.
I think you have a beautiful outlook on what life might be like if we all could imagine and try and put that imagination into reality. Not to mention just plain old common decency and respect towards our fellow man.
And no to *any of you out there* that may be thinking I am an atheist because I have had a hard life and am angry and bitter, so I turned against god. I have had a life like most with good times and bad times. Beautiful things have happened in my life as well as terrible. I have questioned the religious teachings at a very young age. As much of it did not make sense to me. Too many contradictions in the bible that I have read many many times. It just never made sense to me. I mean how much sense does it make to say in one breath that God loves a person and is then in the second breath spout all the retributions you will receive if his will is not followed.
To me that is the same as trying to teach your very young child not to run out in the street by pushing them in front of a moving car and pulling them back just in the nick of time. I don't know about anyone else but when my kids were to little to understand I kept a very good vigil on their whereabouts and or held their hands when we neared a street, so they could not dart out into traffic and when they were old enough to understand I told them what could happen if they did run out into the street before looking both ways.
Ok I am getting way off topic for the initial reason of posting to you.
I hope we are no longer confused.
Robin=atheist
Timmy=atheist or agnostic or free thinker?
Posted by: Robin | January 5, 2007 11:53 PM
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RB: "He is right on target with the hypothesis that childhood gullibility is a survival mechanism that allows for the by-product we call religion."
Yes, the survival mechanism is the denial of death. Isn't that what all the world's religions promise, immortality? Anybody on this site read Ernest Becker, "The Denial of Death" and the (far-better) companion, "Escape From Evil"? He argues very persuasively that all of humankind's psychopathology, including religion (although at points he appears to be advocating religion as the balm of this universal fear), derives from the human consciousness of death and its attendant need to banish the reality of the fact of our own mortality. What use is the world, living, if we all end up as s-it (shades of Freud, too) in the end?
Death is the specter that drives all the drivel. We are still in its throes, witness the obscene futility of keeping 95 year-olds alive in the intensive care unit on ventilators.
What about death? That's the ultimate unknown, a journey to be savored and explored, a la Socrates.
Posted by: Kaattie | January 5, 2007 11:48 PM
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Timmy - Speaking for myself I don't want to replace one set of dogmatic beliefs with another. Athiests aren't supposed to be a "club" with dogma that must be believed (or not believed) to be a member. Well, technically you need to not believe in God(s) to apply the term. Otherwise, agnostic might be a better term, but I'm not that particular.
If it makes you feel good to imagine a spiritual being that has good energy - I don't have a problem with it. If your imagination started to give you absolute commandments I would suggest that it would be time to stop.
I think about alternative ideas for some sort of spiritual force that might have something to do with all life. It is never anything like the Gods in the religious books. I never start believing in any of my ideas, because they are not real, but it doesn't bother me to explore my imagination.
Posted by: Doug | January 5, 2007 11:17 PM
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Kaatie:
"We atheists are indifferent to the so-called "Bible", "Torah", "Koran", whatever papyrus-writings you choose to name, we just want it out of our lives and out of our national policies. "
Amen.
Dawkins appears to be onto something: He observes that religion is manifest around the world, in all cultures and asks, from the pov of evolution: why?
He is right on target with the hypothesis that childhood gullibility is a survival mechanism that allows for the by-product we call religion.
Follow the money: religion is, ultimately, about money and power. Remember your history. The Catholic church divided the "new" world between Spanish and Porteguese along a line of longitude. Thus the birth of modern-day Brazil: the arbitrary division of the Americas.
Religion HAS BEEN powerful stuff. Let's deflate this idiot balloon.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 11:14 PM
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Still here, reading the incredible diatribe...
Some updates:
1. I burned some paper in my woodstove today, the fire was blazing hot, but to my amazement, not all of it burned! Some of it MELTED. Because there were some non-paper elements mixed in, of which I was not aware...(get it, Jason?)
2. I braved the lions at the Ann Coulter website (cf Bruce, saying he was "braving the lions' den" on THIS site, HAH!) with a very innocuous post and - surprise! got amazing invective, ad hominem, vicious, really toxic, responses. You guys are tame pussy cats compared to the (utter f-ing fascist) folks who are Ann Coulter afficianados. Came away feeling totally slimed; deleted ALL references from my hard drive, for "cleansing".
3. I read Timmy's screenplay - what fun! Go, Timmy!!!
4. I have to aver a central point we should all be addressing in response to Sam's post, which started this thread - we need to come out of the closet and be heard. Just goading those (jerks) Ann Coulter-types has got to bear fruit. Go forth and multiply, and let our voices be heard!!!
5. Argument, polemic, diatribe...all a good intellectual exercise, but consider just sticking to the central point. We atheists are indifferent to the so-called "Bible", "Torah", "Koran", whatever papyrus-writings you choose to name, we just want it out of our lives and out of our national policies.
6. Let the red states proclaim what they will. Let the freedom-fighters (us) remember the words of our forefathers, particularly Thomas Jefferson (see Dawkins, The God Delusion). Let Freedom Ring, freedom to be left alone with our own bodies and our own private beliefs.
Posted by: Kaattie | January 5, 2007 11:03 PM
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Robin,
I'm not sure why you took offense to my last line.
I was talking to atheists and asking them a question.
If I hear the words of John Lennon's "Imagine", or read them, and I get shivers when I think about the meaning of those words and how they appeal to my soul and sense of goodness. And how closely they relate to the message of Jesus, all except that one line (.. and no religion too).
And if I like to let those shivers take me to a spiritual place where I feel good, at least for the moment, to imagine these words being channeled through John Lennon and Jesus and Gahndi etc. by a loving, caring, caretaker of the universe.
I love to imagine that sometimes when I get those shivers. It makes me feel good. It's a feel good thing to imagine. Like going to a movie.
I was asking the atheists Robin, if this excludes me from their club. I know that it excludes me from your club because I believe that these feelings that I have are just pleasant postulations, I put no dogma to these thoughts and I am not ever going to relate those shivers to your book who's god is no one I would ever imagine.
I relate to the concept of god in the way that I have just expressed. But the story of your god, is not one that appeals to me. I am just postulating a feel good deity for the same reason that I would go and see a movie like "Pay it Forward"
If this does not exclude me from the atheist club, the atheist club should make that more apparent. It might be a nice welcome mat for people who might find that they relate more to that way of believing in god than the church's way.
?
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 10:58 PM
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Jason - all those moves when you were a kid - sounds like you were never at one school more than a couple of years. I haven't had that experience, but I would think it would be hard, leaving your friends behind, over and over.
Did you find that being a member of a church helped? It seems like it would be almost like a club, where you could fit in and be accepted, even if you were the new kid on the block. That seems like something of real positive value that a church could provide.
Posted by: Doug | January 5, 2007 10:57 PM
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The volume in this thread is too much for me to keep up with. I saw several good things posted that I would like to respond to, but may not have the time.
This is one thing that can't wait - I have a suggestion for everyone. Please stop fanning Jason's flames. Sure there have been some funny lines - but at who's expense? At this point, Jason could (and I believe he HAS) say something that showed some progress towards reasonable discussion, and nobody would notice, they would just keep on with the same old silly responses and name calling.
STOP! EVERYBODY! Try this: From now on only reward Jason with a response - IF you can find something positive to say. Model the kind of communication you wish he did more of. Encourage him whenever he starts to make sense - and not in a back-hand slap way.
Posted by: Doug | January 5, 2007 10:32 PM
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How did I miss this one?! In my insistence that the law of contradiction not be seen as an option, Janine the Genius responds:
“Okay jason, I'll bite (in the metaphorical sense): A homeless person does not have a home/house to live in, but the street, car or cardboard box is his/her home. It's not a home per se in the sense that it has walls and a roof etc. however, where ever he/she sleeps is his/her home. So there you go, a home that is not a home. “
You know, it is sad enough that Janine would bite at the logic challenge and then commit atrocious reasoning in doing so. But what really takes the cake is that in “rationally analyzing” arguments, sometimes it can be difficult to spot the fallacy, but Janine her sticks a big red dot on it.
From Wiki:
“Also known as ambiguity, Equivocation is a logical fallacy. It is committed when someone uses the same word in different meanings in an argument, implying that the word means the same each time around.”
The quote from Jeninus: “It's not a home per se”
No…really? Oh my gosh, my stomach is hurting. This is funnier than Timmy the Moron’s stand-up crap. Please…more…
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 5, 2007 10:30 PM
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"Methinks the psalm doth protest too loudly"
WM, protesting implies you have some other opinion as to the state of foo...i mean non-believers. However, you admitted that you are not certainty about anything.
So, this statement here in Ps 53 by your own admission is probable and your opinion is probable...however, i would be inclined to argue that your protested opinion and the bible both can't be right at the same time (logic at work), but then that would assert some kind of certainity, to which you then reply that certainty is not possible.
So, you basically end up sounding like a moron, indicating to me that Ps 53 has a pretty darn handle on your condition. ( :
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 5, 2007 10:04 PM
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Robin, re "I also would like it if believers could/would understand that we atheists are not heathens. We are exactly like them ie: moral, lawful, compassionate, giving, forgiving etc as they are."
I recall a verse from Psalms 53 that we used to sing at church when I was growing up:
"Fools have said there is no God
They in their heart conclude;
They are corrupt, their works are vile
Not one of them doeth good."
Methinks the psalm doth protest too loudly ...
But if someone believes that the bible contains the literal word of God and has read his bible, then he would believe that non-believers in God are scum.
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 9:46 PM
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Heck, I'll even lower the word count to 50.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 5, 2007 9:21 PM
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Andy,
Bravo! for the excellent post on Wittgenstein. Once again demonstrating where consistent empiricism leads us to – complete nonsense. Thus, I refer to Wittgenstein in one of my rap songs found on RCM Radio:
Wittgenstein, sought
Hideous crime, by assigning God talk
To ambiguous signs
Andy, here’s my challenge to you:
If logical principles are arbitrary and language is just a game, please state your own epistemological theory without making use of the law of contradiction.
Again, my challenge to Andy:
If the law of contradiction is an arbitrary convention, and if our linguistic theorists choose some other convention, I challenge you to write a 5oo word post in conformity with your principles.
I'll await your post.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 5, 2007 9:17 PM
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WM,
If i was a betting man, i'd say odds are that your empiricist epistemology is taught or at least assumed and operated in every public high school in this country.
A burden of proof IS on you. Not ONCE in twelve years of public education in 6 different states (army brat) was i EVER offered the possibility of Christian rationalism and presuppositionalism as a theory of knowledge.
Free-thinkers my ass. ( :
However, how do you prove or disprove skepticism?
It's very convenient for you to assert that there are no absolutes - it supposedly keeps you from getting cornered and subject to "rational analysis", but there are those of us who claim the the law of contradiction as an absolute and (to borrow a term from Dennet) prefer not be "vegetables".
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 8:48 PM
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Trish:
"Believers claim that post-bodily punishment or rewards will make up for the injustices that regularly occur in this world, which is only a brief blip compared to eternity. Why even attempt to seek justice in this world, if that's impossible? Why have civil, or ecclesiastical, courts, laws or sanctions? Wouldn't it be cheaper, easier, and more indicative of belief to wait for the Big Guy to straighten it all out later?"
Actually, there is a bumper sticker out there, I believe they are NRA members, that goes like this: "Shoot 'em all, and let God sort 'em out."
So, there are some out there who actually agree with this sentiment.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 8:44 PM
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LT, Re "Is it so that believers have a burden of proof? If so, we should address that question directly and understand the meaning and scope of this this burden of proof."
I personally don't think that believers have much of a burden of proof with respect to their beliefs as long as their beliefs aren't resulting in harm to others. Of course, per the butterfly effect, sometimes seemingly innocuous irrational beliefs could result in unpredictable catastrophies, but one can hardly live one's live based on the butterfly effect.
If a believer thinks that there are fairies in his backyard, I don't see that he has much of a burden of proof. I don't see how that belief could hurt me or anyone else in any significant way.
If a believer is going to come to my doorstep and spend my time and goodwill on his beliefs, then he has a burden of proof.
If a believer is going to try to prevent over-the-counter access to emergency contraception due to his belief that a couple cells have a soul, he has a heavy burden of proof.
If a believer is going to advise a disease-ridden people to not use condoms due to his beliefs on the immorality of contraception in general, he has a very heavy burden of proof.
If a believer is going to try to instill his beliefs in a child and potentially cause that child anxiety and fear in the future, he has a very heavy burden of proof.
Just my opinion.
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 8:27 PM
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Timmy,
I hope you didn't mean that last line...
If you won't let me and people like me into your club of atheism...
I honestly was not critizing I was just asking questions.
This website at times fatigues me with the bickering. Although, I can see a purpose for it. I just have problems with name calling. And that is because, trust me, I can be reduced to doing it more than not. I just don't see it as being constructive and that is when I have to gracefully bow out. You guys' name calling is mild to what I feel like saying some days...lol
Thank you for answering my post. I do like your thinking very much so. And as I say anything that makes me think is a good thing.
Posted by: Robin | January 5, 2007 8:19 PM
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One poster on this thread has scared me into doubling my donation to Americans United for Separation of Church and State (www.au.org). "be afraid, be very afraid"
Posted by: Anonymous | January 5, 2007 8:18 PM
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RB
Actually I threw that out to anyone. And thank you for giving me your opinion.
Of course I agree with what you said. I didn't exactly mean on that big of a scale. I understand that atheists have to become more vocal as part of this society for the reasons you stated.
Although, I do realize Bush is backed by the Christian right, which is what got him elected.
I think the United States involvement in Iraq has less to do with Bushs' fundamentalist beliefs and more to do with Oil and Chenys' war profiteering ie: Haliburton.
I meant here on this thread. And again I do understand the significance of debate even small scale here. What i just meant was that if it gets down to whos right and whos wrong and then name calling. Just seems to go nowhere fast.
As an atheist I do want to stand up and be
counted and if the opportunity arose I would fight at the steps of the capitol, for religious reform.
Again, enjoying the thread.
Posted by: Robin | January 5, 2007 8:11 PM
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Robin you are right,
It does always come down to the believer trying to convince the non believer to come over to the other side.
So what can we do?
Well, what is the problem?
violence based on religion.
religion forced down our throats.
This is what we have in common.
We do not have to convince the believer to not believe to discuss these things with them. It makes it easier to do so when we move on from the "your thing is whack" argument.
We can talk to believers who are not violent or dogmatic or pushy about their beliefs and try to convince them that they can be a valuable tool in solving these issues, by talking to the more problematic believers about the problems of violence and dogmatic politics.
I made such progress a couple of nights ago with Bruce.
And most importantly, as I have most recently pointed out, we can spread a definition of this "new atheism" that is not misleading. i.e.
"One who believes that god does not exist."
This is too cold and not entirely true.
Atheists are just people.
And outside of their aversion to having someone else's religion forced into their lives, they can dream of spiritual things, and make themselves feel happy about the universe by thinking of nice spiritual things.
If they want.
Or they can think that the universe suddenly appeared out of nothingness if that's what they imagine.
Or they can think that it was always here and time has no beginning.
Or they can think that a surfer dude named God who lives in a universe where they have discovered a way to make a micro version of their own universe to study has created our universe.
Oops. That's my movie again.
Atheism is so much more inviting when it is just a-theism.
A "theist" to me is not the same as someone who dreams up an abstract idea of god for their own philosophical enjoyment or comfort.
So if I do that on some days when I feeling particularly deep in my thoughts about the universe. I do not become a "theist"
I am still an atheist.
That is me.
If you will not allow me and others like me into the club of atheism? God help you.
Because I am as sane as they come.
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 7:59 PM
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I have so enjoyed the opportunity to see the interesting thoughts of so many skeptics & atheists in this thread.
Reflecting on the idea that getting rid of religion would leave a vacuum in society that must be filled to prevent dangerous social forms from developing: how about replacing the "larger than me" aspect of life with civilization itself? The accumulation of accomplishments by people working together over space & time is impressive and meaningful. Changing relationships, jobs & interests would be less traumatic if one doesn't believe I was put here for *a* reason.
While catching up on the past couple of days' worth of postings, I have started brewing another question about faith. Believers claim that post-bodily punishment or rewards will make up for the injustices that regularly occur in this world, which is only a brief blip compared to eternity. Why even attempt to seek justice in this world, if that's impossible? Why have civil, or ecclesiastical, courts, laws or sanctions? Wouldn't it be cheaper, easier, and more indicative of belief to wait for the Big Guy to straighten it all out later?
It is also regularly claimed that belief in eternal life is comforting to believers. But I have to wonder, because of behavior of believers in situations where they actually face death, whether of themselves or of loved ones. If you really really expect to spend a blissful eternity with the Big Bearded Guy in the Sky, and that this life is just a brief "veil of tears", why accept any life-prolonging medical care? Why cry if one of your loved ones is "in a better place"? Why would anyone intervene to prevent the death of someone they care about? Wouldn't that be tantamount to bumping them from a flight to bliss? The only way that such things would fit in with belief in eternal post-bodily life would be if you know/suspect that the loved one is headed to one destination, and you will probably be sent to the other. How comforting is that?
Also, people who expect rapture, the end of everything we've ever known and the end of the lives of everyone they care - think that those of use who think that, with no god/s, the only way to be in a better world is to create it for ourselves are the pessimists.
Oh, and to the question of late night postings: I have been out of college for - gulp - decades, though I hope laser skin rejuvenation makes it harder to tell. Having some health problems, I am fortunate to have a husband with a steady job & dcent health benefits. I have been able to concentrate on selling my watercolor paintings, and have been dabling a bit with writing & making humorous videos. [check out Mythbusters stunt on You Tube].
It's been fun! If this group goes to another thread, please post it here so I can find you guys again!
Posted by: Trish | January 5, 2007 7:51 PM
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WM says, "I'm afraid I'm going to finally have to concur with the other posters that you are really have absolutely no interest in attaining knowledge"
WM, what is "knowledge" and how do you know when you have it? And if you claim to have it, how can you be "certain" it's knowledge?
Furthermore, are you certain that i have no "absolute" interest in knowledge?
Wait a second, I thought there were no such things as "absolutes", yet here you are saying that I have "absolutely no interest".
You people are morons.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 5, 2007 7:50 PM
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Puzzled asks, "Did you read any book?"
Puzzled, I'm not certain whether I have read any books or not.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 5, 2007 7:46 PM
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Jason, I'm afraid I'm going to finally have to concur with the other posters that you are really have absolutely no interest in attaining knowledge, and let you continue chasing your tail in peace. Merry chasing!
Other posters, sorry to have entertained said tail-chasing for so long!
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 7:41 PM
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Robin, you did not address this to me, so feel free to ignore my observation:
"Am I missing the point of wanting the believer to understand they are wasting their time? I am not sure that is my place to infringe upon their right to spend their time as they choose fit."
This is really the point. If fundamentalists were not bent on converting or killing infidels, why waste any time on them.
But they are. The war in Iraq is being led by a fundie here (Bush) against fundies there (Sunnis and Shi'ias) at a cost of $2 billion a week (MSNBC report tonight). What they believe and act upon does impact us.
The current group of atheist thinkers believe that confronting the taboo against criticizing these irrational belief systems could make a difference by isolating the extremists. So you're not wasting your time.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 7:35 PM
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RBoob says, "This cherry-picking of the scriptures means you're not a fundamentalism, but rather, a moderate, which is to say, a failed fundamentalist."
Don't you just love it when people who don't study the Bible try to tell you what it means?
Hey RBoob, "literal" means according to the literature. And literature, in case you haven't noticed, can contain many types of genres.
Satire, parable, prophecy, biography, narrative...
That's probably one of the reasons you dislike the Bible so much...you're illiterate.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 5, 2007 7:29 PM
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Timmy,
I also concur with everything you wrote in your last post. Which I must say you wrote very well. And I have to agree with 9/10. The only thing I can't claim to be for me is that I *have not* written a movie script, yet! *smile*
I also would like it if believers could/would understand that we atheists are not heathens. We are exactly like them ie: moral, lawful, compassionate, giving, forgiving etc as they are.
Thank you for allowing me to add my 2 cents that is about equal to 1/2 cent.
The reading has been very informative.
Posted by: Robin | January 5, 2007 7:23 PM
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Jason,
I am quite certain that you do not know what you are saying. What do you know about philopsophy? Did you read any books and did you really understand it? Do you have an advanced degree? It looks like you just picked up a few terms here and there and you wield them without understanding.
What is "absolute"? Or more precisely, what do you mean when you say "absolute"? I'm fairly certain that you do not know anything with absolute certainty either.
Answer 2 questions for me (and for the others, too):
1. What is absolute certainty? (and how is that different from other types of certainty, such as mathematical certainty?)
2. Do you know anything with absolute certainty?
If you can demonstrate to me that you do, then perhaps I will accept your definition of "absolute" or that you are saying something worth listening to. Otherwise, I can only conclude (with a high level of confidence, probabilistically speaking) that you don't have the foggiest idea and are hiding behind non-sensical utterings to hide your lack of understanding. Please tell me it ain't so.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 5, 2007 7:22 PM
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I have been reading this thread for a few days now.
I find all of this threads dialogue interesting until it lowered itself to name calling which gets everyone nowhere real fast.
I am not educated and refrain from debating, but do like to educate myself through reading. I am an atheist that knows squat about science. I have been an atheist since I was 16 and I am now 50. I came to that decision as I found it the only one that was rationale.
I as a protestant attended Catholic High School and protestant church, (although not regualar in attendance) when growing up. I do believe I have a decent knowledge of the Christian religion. Enough to know I have no desire to hold those beliefs. Yes I have read the bible fully a couple of times in my lifetime.
Timmy,
I liked your post to LT with the bottom line being..*We have to work under the unfortunate knowledge that we both think the other is missing it*
With that in mind, however, does anyone really think believers and non-believers can truly have a constructive dialogue? Won't the conversation always end up on whos right and whos not? I only ask this as this is basically what I have seen throughout this entire website.
It has also been my personal experience with real life dialogue between myself and a believer, that although I don't go far enough into a debate of whos right and whos not for two reasons.
1) it usually steers into the believer wanting to save my soul.
2) we just have to agree to disagree.
I guess what I am trying to say or ask..what really is the point? What am I missing?
Am I missing the point of wanting the believer to understand they are wasting their time? I am not sure that is my place to infringe upon their right to spend their time as they choose fit.
The only conclusion I can think to come to or hope is that with this debate that somewhere along the line one or the other may something that will resonate with the other or someone else reading it that will click at least enough to spark a question in someones mind.
Ok, please forgive me I guess I am just thinking out loud.
Posted by: Robin | January 5, 2007 7:16 PM
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Timmy:
Thank you for elaborating. Gotcha. That's just me talking to you, two dreamers, not atheists. I concur.
As you say, when someone else jumps in, I may have to become an atheist again, for the moment.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 7:11 PM
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And again I am announcing the formation of the "Jason non responderers" club.
We simply don't respond.
This will save much space.
I've seen us agree to disagree, and move on much more quickly with far more meaningful points.
The Jason Non Responderers Club meets here daily for meaningful chat. All are welcome to join.
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 7:00 PM
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My name is Timmy.
I am a person with free thoughts.
At this moment I am not an atheist because no one is currently trying to convince me that their god it the God.
If someone started trying to convince me of that, I become an atheist.
I also become an atheist when people are trying to insert their god into public policy and governmental affairs. Or when they organize and try to convert large numbers of people, especially children.
When I am involved with, or speaking of any of these things, I am an atheist.
At all other times, I am just me.
Atheist is my reaction, to someone else's idea of god, being forced on me or others.
I do not oppose other people believing what they want.
If they open up the conversation and start asking me why I don't believe, I become an atheist again.
At other times, I am just me.
And at those times, I sometimes sit and wonder about the vastness of the universe, and the big question, what started it all and what does it all mean?
Fascinating. I let my imagination run wild.
Are we a science experiment?
Recently, cosmologists have been talking quite seriously about the theoretical possibility of creating a miniature black hole and then a miniature universe.
I love to think about the implications of that.
I even wrote a movie about it called "God's Universe"
Fascinating. Our universe as somebody's science experiment.
And his name is God.
I am free as an atheist to think of something like that.
A creator?
Sometimes I listen to me talking to myself in my head and wonder if this moral inner me is god.
(here I am borrowing the word god and giving it my own meaning of the thing that I am imagining right now)
I do not believe that to have such imaginations makes be a believer. Just a dreamer.
People are dreamers. They become atheists when, and only when confronted with the pushing of someone else's beliefs.
Through direct contact, or government.
Ergo
An atheist can dream of god. And even choose to believe in that god if they like.
They just agree that these are all postulations of imaginations.
This definition of atheist ends a lot of unnecessary argument.
Clarity.
There is nothing cold about non religion.
The most important point we can get across.
Concurrence?
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 6:55 PM
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LT: " I'll just say there are some things that don't have to be taken literally to be Christian..."
This cherry-picking of the scriptures means you're not a fundamentalism, but rather, a moderate, which is to say, a failed fundamentalist.
The reason you do not accept the part of the bible that are literal, i.e. slaying children when they mock god's priests, or killing people for uttering god's name in vain (remember the penalty of breaking any of the 10 commandments is death), does not come from within Christianity, but from without.
The practice of not reading the scriptures literally is an accession to modernity. Some religions have acceded more to modernity than others.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 6:53 PM
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WM says, "Of course, there are obvious conflicts between the scripture and many of our observations of reality."
stop right there WM - do you not see how incredibly ridiculous your posts are?
What is an 'obvious conflict'? Is that the same thing as a 'certain contradiction'? Because if you're not sure that the so-called conflict you're seeing is certain, why is it 'obvious'? if it's not certain, than what is it?
See, you can't even go ten seconds without stumbling all over yourself.
How does a man (or woman) who claims he can't know anything with certainty recognize an "obvious conflict"?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 5, 2007 6:45 PM
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LT:
I see I mis-read a quote:
You wrote: "This is why I think not to believe in God and to believe in no god are equivalent.""
I mis-read this as to believe in God and to not believe in God are equivalent. My bad. But others have made that assertion, and I answered that thought.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 6:27 PM
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I am born again.
I don't even read his posts anymore, it feels great.
LT,
I do not mean to offend, really.
Perhaps this will help.
You believe in God and Jesus fully and the evidence is quite obvious to you. So obvious that you believe fully.
So when I tell you that I don't believe, in what you see to be obvious, you can not help but to think that I am not looking at the evidence rationally, or that I am missing the point.
You can not help but think that about me because I cannot see what you see so clearly.
You must think that I am irrational and or missing what is obvious and apparent.
And you probably feel sorry for me even because you are a person with a kind heart and you want me to be saved.
I could take great offense to this, and I do when it is thrown in my face, but I certainly understand how you have no choice but to find me wrong about my observations of the obvious, because you believe that I am missing it.
So please don't be offended that, in my eyes, you are basing your belief on evidence that I do not see as evidence and or a feeling inside you that I have never had.
I have no choice to think that you are missing it just as you have no choice to think that I am missing it.
We have to work under the unfortunate knowledge that we both think the other is missing it.
We have to start all of our conversations with the given that, we will not make each other see each others obvious.
So how can we relate with these differences in mind.
Any thoughts on that?
I think I have stated clearly that I do not think that all christians are dangerous. Please do not place these words into my mouth again.
I have found a new way of engaging on this thread.
I hope you will notice and appreciate it.
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 6:27 PM
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Puzzled:
"Do Christians have to believe that the Bible is the literal word of God? Or can Christians understand the Bible as an historical document written by many different authors, often in a literary way (poems, parables, metaphors, etc.) to confess one's faith?"
This is an excellent question. It depends on what standard is used to decide which parts are to be taken literally. If one uses science as the standard, and then one thereby denies the resurrection, then I would say one cannot be a Christian. Clearly, it is possible to take the Bible too symbolically.
Beyond the resurrection, I believe that when specific acts of people are described, they are meant to be taken literally. My Christian understanding is that each of us is individually resposible for our actions and is worthy of eternal separation from God because we have disobeyed Him and failed to meet His standard. It doesn't make sense to me that God would try to teach us that we are responsible for our actions (our sins) by showing us parables of people sinning. So I believe that Adam and Eve were actual people and not just the symbolic representation of the first people.
Alas, I have more to say, but dinner's ready at my house. I know I've left many loose ends, but hopefully food for thought as well. I'll just say there are some things that don't have to be taken literally to be Christian, and yes, Christians using science to prove creationism isn't sensible. And no, I don't take offense. I'm glad the tone of most of the posts is being elevated.
Posted by: LT | January 5, 2007 6:26 PM
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LT:
"why some of them think that one has to be ignorant or unreasonable to believe in Christ."
It is a historical fact that the people who wrote the bible were ignorant on a scale that, by today's standards, would be breath-taking. No physics, chemistry, biology, engineering, medicine and only basic math. Again, the bible has the number pi wrong, at 3.1 when it was known for 1,000 earlier to five decimal places.
Could ignorant people propagate mythology that would not stand the test of time as knowledge increased? Of course. Could subsequent generations choose to be ignorant of the new knowledge, or ignore it, or ignore the contradictions? Of course. Do athests think this is unreasonable? Yes.
"The part about one true God: I don't think as a Christian it makes sense for me to say I'm an atheist with respect to [Z = other monotheistic religion]. I feel instead that people in Z can be very sincerely trying to reach the one true God but are approaching Him the wrong way."
Sure, lots of people believe this. Christians about Muslims (and everyone else), Muslims about everyone else. Each teaches fundamentally incompatible things. Two possibilities here: Either one is right and the rest wrong, or they're all wrong.
Oh, and someone who believes the other is "approaoching Him the wrong way," is also arrogant, by definition.
"This is why I think not to believe in God and to believe in no god are equivalent."
No, they're not. It is a matter of survival to be a dualist when a child. Once that phase passes, some people drop this childish gullibility and become monists. Clearly, you are still a dualist. Some never outgrow this.
On burden of proof: B. Russell dealt with this 100 years ago. He proposed a teapot in orbit around the sun, so far away no telescope could see it. He claimed belief in this teapot. He challenged others to prove the teapot did not exist.
Of course he was illustrating both that crazy propositions require the crazy person to provide the proof, not turn the question around and require everyone else to disprove it. Otherwise, everyone can believe anything, and demand respect (and tax breaks).
So it is with your water-walking lord. Prove it to me, otherwise I can conclude you are simply weighed down by your own regional fairy tale.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 6:22 PM
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I'm wasting my breath again:
Jason, I am fairly certain (I am sorry I cannot put a probability to it, but pretty high) that we cannot (incl. you) know anything with "absolute" certainty.
Tell me: is God a liar or not(w/ abs. certainty)?
I did not say anything about trivial, and I did not resort to "blah, blah,..." Do you allow your children to do that? Did your parents raise you that way? Please stop the ranting and grow up.
As for me being a moron, I am certain with a high probability that that is not true since I know what my IQ is. It is not between 50-70. It's way above that range. How do I know? Because I took a test that measures it. Although there may have been measurement error involved, it would have to be pretty awful test to be that wrong.
In the mean time, I hope there aren't any significant measurement errors involved in the construction of your home, car, etc. I don't know how you sleep with all that anxiety? Is the car going to crash? Will the roof fall down on my head? Do you know with absolute certainty those things will not happen?
Let's be practical and not engage in circular reasoning: It gets no one anywhere.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 5, 2007 6:11 PM
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Also, Jason, Re your complaint: "Why do you folks insist on bringing up stuff that has nothing to do with my posts?"
Perhaps you don't see the connections to your posts, but they are there. In the case in which I expanded on my beliefs it was due to your statement: "People like WM feel as those the claims of Scripture do not jive with what we observe, there's a conflict," I thought it would be helpful to inform you that "people like me (whoever they are, anyone other than me?)" could care less whether or not Scripture conflicts with my observations while there is no substantial evidence that the imagined author existed in the first place. Without the evidence, any real or imagined conflict becomes irrelevant. Of course, there are obvious conflicts between the scripture and many of our observations of reality, but this takes a back seat to the question of whether or not there is substantial evidence that the purported author actually exists. I would think that if you actually want to change anybody's mind about whether or not it is ridiculous to believe in Christianity, that you would find providing evidence that your favorite God is the "one, true God," more fruitful than chasing your tail ad nauseum. And if you don't want to influence anyone's opinion, why post?
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 6:06 PM
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I agree with Andy; I don't think we can concur that quickly either. I'd rather keep definitions negotiable and try to learn what I can about why nonbelievers think the way they do and why some of them think that one has to be ignorant or unreasonable to believe in Christ.
Also, I might suggest that, as long as we're on this page, that we try to keep Sam Harris' post in mind. I'm trying to show that it is not a rut to argue that one set of beliefs of God is true, contrary to Harris' assertion.
That said, Timmy's post is entire apropos since it questions the definition of atheist, as does Harris. I do have some problems with it--
The part about one true God: I don't think as a Christian it makes sense for me to say I'm an atheist with respect to [Z = other monotheistic religion]. I feel instead that people in Z can be very sincerely trying to reach the one true God but are approaching Him the wrong way.
The part about an atheist can believe in a god: We would still need a word for someone who doesn't believe in any kind of god. Also, to use the stamp collecting analogy, does it make sense to call a non-philatelist to collect stamps, but not "true" stamps?
On "believe" versus "not believe": Here I'm willing to be convinced with a more cogent argument. Here's my problem: a young boy is a male even before he has encountered the idea of male vs. female. If one thinks that beliefs are different from this biological state, I suggest that Timmy's non-belief definition of atheist may not even be sustainable when atheism means everything is fundamentally physical. Then not believing in God reduces to one chemical state in the brain and believing in God reduces to a different state. We have equivalence again since these chemical states exist prior to encountering a person's particular definition of God. This is why I think not to believe in God and to believe in no god are equivalent.
What's the significance of belief vs. non-belief, anyway? Is it so that atheists don't have to be called dogmatic or something else pejorative? Fair enough: Timmy doesn't believe Christians are a monolithic group, and I admit that atheists are not a monolithic group. However, unlike Timmy, I do believe it is possible for atheists to be dogmatic.
Is it so that believers have a burden of proof? If so, we should address that question directly and understand the meaning and scope of this this burden of proof. (Still waiting, RB, if you would be so kind.)
Posted by: LT | January 5, 2007 6:01 PM
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and Timmy the Moron:
I see you didn't answer my question about the referent. Of course you won't. Because answering that question would expose the complete nonsense you tried to argue about CareBears on TV.
Something "certified logicians" call equivocation.
ummmm...duh....
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 5:55 PM
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Puzzled,
it's a simple question:
Did you or did you not say that we can know NOTHING for certain? I believe you did.
So, i am asking you: Are you certain that we can not know anything with certainty?
Puzzled, you can call it whatever you want - words games, trivial...blah, blah, blah.
The reason you refuse to answer is because you're trapped - it's just that simple.
Skepticism is self-contradictory.
Hence, you're a moron. (or fool - whatever word i feel like using because "fool" also means "cool", "smart", "elephant", and "poop" because the law of contradiction is not certain)
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 5:52 PM
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Jason - re the law of contradiction, if Andy and others have failed to get their points across, I don't see that I will. I suggest responding to Andy's post on this of January 5, 2007 3:07 AM, which makes a great deal of sense. No point debating an amateur on this when you can go to an expert! But I'll put a few thoughts here - hopefully more knowledgeable folks will correct my mistakes.
What Andy said was "One formulation of the law of contradiction is that a speech act is vitiated in the case that one and the same statement is both asserted and denied without further explanation or justification." The key part of this is "without further explanation or justification."
There are many examples of the problems of trying to apply truth evaluations to statements that contain any ambiguity or that are subjective. I could say that Danny Devito is short, and from my frame of reference, this would be a true statement. But from someone else's frame of reference, Danny Devito may be tall, and my statement would be untrue. Same statement, but can be true and untrue depending on who is making it. (Let me know if you'd like more examples along this line)
Examples like this lead me to think it is not reasonable to subject all statements to "true/false" analysis because many statements contain ambiguity. If I said that "compared to most of the males of my family, Danny Devito is short," most people would also believe that this is a true statement, based on a common meaning of the word “family” (a group of individuals living under one roof and usually under one head). But then someone may come along who is using another definition of family (perhaps a group of persons of common ancestry) and show the statement to be false when using family in the other context. Same statement, but it can appear true and untrue (both definitions of family are in the Merrian Webster dictionary)
I could then take another shot at elaborating this statement to make it true and say, “compared to my parents and siblings, Danny Devito is short.” This would on the surface seem to be completely verifiable, would it not? But then, what if my relatives are not who I think they are. Maybe I am adopted from a family of very short people, to whom Danny Devito would seem of quite average height. (Of course this has nothing to do with the truth of the statement, just with my ability to know the truth).
Do you see a few of the problems? I’m not omniscient, so it is very difficult to be 100% certain that some statements are true or false. This decreases the usefulness of the law of contradictions in many situations. And if I were omniscient, I would still need to make a statement with no possible ambiguity in order to say that the statement must be either true or false, so not all statements would be subject to a simple law of contradiction that requires that a statement can only be true or false (I think this is your simplified version of the law of contradiction, though I think that most definitions are more along the lines of the one Andy provided).
Given some of the difficulties with your definition of the law of contradiction, I don't see its usefulness in the context of the overall discussion. But perhaps you could explain (I'm not holding my breath!)
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 5:36 PM
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LT:
I agree that atheists have to tone it down a little too. I considered myself an agnostic until I read Dawkins, and I suppose by his definition, I am an atheist too. It has to do with his notion of probabilities and which I thought was more likely. It doesn't really matter: it's a label. On the flip side, just because people call themselves Christian (or Muslim, or Buddhist), it does not automatically follow that they're living their lives accordign to the teachings of Christ, Mohammed (and Allah), and the Buddha.
Having said that, the question becomes this: do Christians have to believe that the Bible is the literal word of God? Or can Christians understand the Bible as an historical document written by many different authors, often in a literary way (poems, parables, metaphors, etc.) to confess one's faith?
Atheists seem to be calling only the former type ignorant since most empirical evidence shows no support for a literal reading of the Bible.
Actually, I find very puzzling the Creationists and those who seek to use "science" to show that the Bible is factually true. After all aren't miracles and God's work, by definition, not something that we can show or describe scientifically? (That is why they're called miracles?) Why go to so much trouble, but the end result seems to be actually making a fool of themselves, and worse a mockery of their own faith by extension?
Once during grad school, a creationist came to my church (yes, I actually go to church, by habit). When I asked others (people with advanced degrees in the natural sciences and engineering) who went to that meeting, they told me that they needed some independent verification that the Bible is true. I don't know if that is the usual way the folks who take to Creationism think, but I thought that explanation to be terribly self-defeating for the above reason: miracles are supposed to defy explanation and independent corroboration, o/w they would not be miracles!
I hope you take no offense, and I hope you take my questions as earnestly asked. I am just trying to understand different perspectives, and once again draw the discussion back to the stated topic: can atheists and believers converse?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 5, 2007 5:31 PM
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Hi Timmy,
I suspect we can't concur quite so quickly. An atheist is not a theist, true, and a theist is a principled believer, so maybe an atheist can be an unprincipled believer ... but what's that?
If standing in awe of God is a state of mind that appears to refer an external being, the atheist is just one who admits you can have the state of mind, and even that it can be a very convincing one, but simply denies that that state of mind actually refers to an external being.
But that's not really believng in God, or even in a little god ... do you see the problem?
Do we defer to concur or concur to defer?
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 5, 2007 5:11 PM
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Ok, Tim.
In fact, with his last statement :
"i can't respond to anything else you've said because the law of contradiction is up for grabs and i can't know anything for certain anyhow, so i have no idea what your post means."
Being so embarassing and childlisly tautological, he's certainly not worth speaking to.
Now, I take Sam's approach: "Atheism is not a philosophy; it is not even a view of the world; it is simply a refusal to deny the obvious."
Atheism is the word we use for someone who demands credible evidence when a god believer makes untenable assertions about his or her fairy tale.
Skeptic is the word we apply to someone who objects when an astrologer claims the stars are in alignment for you to win the lottery.
But the attitude and approach is the same.
But "an atheist can believe in god?" Please expound...I'm skeptical about this.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 5:01 PM
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I will reply to you shortly LT,
I have to go walk my dogs ritght now. They are driving me nuts.
In the mean time.
What do you think of my new thoughts on the thread?
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 4:54 PM
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Now others throw out basic ideas that they feel are fundemental to helping the issue and ask: "concurrence?"
Can we try this?
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 4:50 PM
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Hi Timmy,
It's me again. I did read the post you referred me to, and I am impressed by the notion that as a Christian, I have more responsibility and ability to dissuade Christian political extremists than an atheist (although in my case, my standing in this world does not suggest such a task would be most appropriate for me).
And I admit, there's nothing you can do to dissuade a Christian believer. However, correct me if I'm wrong, but I still sense you think we Christians are all ignorant in face of "the evidence" (my phrase). Which evidence are we ignoring? The scientific evidence? Puzzled's recent post of 3:39, combined with my argument about universal scientific laws from three nights ago, suggests that believers are correct not to be swayed by scientific evidence.
Then there's historical evidence, but many historical studies are predicated on the premise that no miracles occur. I am not a historian, but I suspect that most histories of Jesus that deny His divinity assume implicitly that miracles are impossible.
As far as I can tell, Timmy, your tacit opinion that Christian beliefs are unreasonable or ignorant stem primarily from a valid but irrelevant argument about the dangerousness of some who call themselves Christians. It's irrelevant because Christianity is first and foremost about Christ, not Christians.
Then there's the issue that you didn't hear or see Jesus talking to you when you prayed to Him, which I recall reading from another of your prior posts. I submit that even such an ephiphany wouldn't have been definitive because you could still have questioned whether it was really from God, from someone else, or just an illusion. (On the other hand, if Christ claimed He was going die and rise and He did, then we can trust the rest of what He said and can discern waht comes from God.)
I apologize if I sound belligerent, but I really want to know why you think all religious beliefs are irrational--for my edification and maybe for yours so that you can see why we believe.
Posted by: LT | January 5, 2007 4:47 PM
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Nice story, Andy Ross!
As for Jason, how did you know with "absolute certainty" that those people you called "moron" all had IQ of 50-70 (not below or above)? The closest analogy I can think of when I read your posts is that you are like a child who just learned sarcasm and thinks that being sarcastic will make you look intelligent. Let's get past word games and actually talk, then perhaps all this will have been worth the time.
It's too bad we got carried away trying to convince Jason to stop all this non-sensical talk and got away from the real topic, which had something to do with whether atheists can converse with believers. Maybe the last few days' worth of postings show that we cannot, although some of the religious scholars in other discussion boards seem to be fairly open-minded (like Bishop Spong, whom I actually like quite a bit).
Posted by: Puzzled | January 5, 2007 4:47 PM
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I have a dream,
My humble attempt to save this thread.
I have a dream,
That this thread evolve into a constructive and meaningful search for a concurrence of basic ideas that are helpful insights into defining the conversation started by Sam, Richard, Dan... Andy, RB, Bruce, Victoria, Timmy, Duckphup (or something like that) Anony', Skeptic.... Jason (sigh) (the woes of being a democrat), and many many more wonderful conversation starters.
A concurrence of basic ideas by the wonderful minds on this thread, that will help the situation as we each see it.
For Example:
I will put forth one or two basic ideas for concurrence.
I will keep it short for now. We can expand into a conversation that may lead to a concurrence of the wonderful minds here.
I wonder if we might try this we could give this thread the meaning it deserves.
The first idea that I unfortunately must throw out for concurrence, so that we can save this thread is that we not respond any further to Jason.
Yes this is exclusion, but our democracy will continue to let him post, (no choice, but that's a good thing).
But I humbly suggest that we not engage any further with him, for the reason that there isn't anyone who has ever posted on this thread who is not of the mindset that Jason's comments are a spiteful distraction by means of malicious and pointless wordplay.
Concurrence?
The first real and helpful Idea I will throw out for concurrence is the definition of the word atheist. (Pay special attention to the non capitalization)
The current dictionary definition:
(noun) One who believes that there is no deity. (Some dictionaries use god in place of deity)
I believe that this definition is wrong. And it is the accepted one. This, I believe causes the debate to become excruciatingly muddled.
Do atheists, not believe in god?
Do atheists, believe that god does not exist?
And is it the general idea of god or just the one true God.
Do they disbelieve in both?
Somebody made up the definition of atheist and didn't think too much about it. And none of us have noticed that it is wrong.
Here's why,
atheist does not need a definition.
It is a definition.
If you need it clarified to, "non theist". You shouldn't.
There are these people called theists.
atheists are not them.
a-theist.
Atheism is only a thing, in the sense that "non stamp collecting" is a thing.
By this, non definition, I think that it is completely possible for an atheist to believe in god.
The only thing that would make them an atheist, is that they do not believe in "The one true God"
Concurrence?
Wouldn't a clarification of an a-theist as what I have shown help un-muddle the debate.
Wouldn't it be offering church members something other than the church. An atheist can believe in god.
concurrence?
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 4:44 PM
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RB, i have a "reason" for calling you a moron. But other than that, i can't respond to anything else you've said because the law of contradiction is up for grabs and i can't know anything for certain anyhow, so i have no idea what your post means.
I thought i had some idea of what the word "bully" means, but since it is possible for bully to also not mean bully, then i'm not certain what you mean by it. And why should i expect to be certain when there are no certainties?
:putting the jacket back on and going back into my pod:
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 4:30 PM
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WM,
You're still ignoring my point about the law of contradiction.
Why do you folks insist on bringing up stuff that has nothing to do with my posts? i don't care about flying monsters, islam, or any other baloney you have brought up.
I want to talk about what YOU actually said.
Please explain to me how one goes about questioning the law of contradiction? Why is this law not a 100% certainty? You said it, not me.
YOU said we can have no certainty of anything, so please explain to me why the law of contradiction is not 100% certain.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 4:24 PM
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Let me tell you a true story.
The young student Ludwig Wittgenstein was very brilliant. He discovered the logical work of Gottlob Frege and was totally awed by it. Frege had just made the greatest advance in logic since Aristotle and had used it to write a monumental book on the logical foundations of mathematics. But Frege did not want Wittgenstein (who was a Jew) as a student and advised him instead to go work under Bertrand Russell in England.
So Wittgenstein went and studied under Russell. Russell had found a fundamental and irreparable contradiction in Frege's big book and driven Frege to consternation, so now Russell and his collaborator Whitehead were completing a massive three-volume work called Principia Mathematica that attempted to do right what Frege had done wrong. Just when they completed it, the First World War broke out and the young Wittgenstein went off to fight for the Austrians. In the trenches, he thought a lot and wrote (in pencil) a slim book.
Back in England after the war, Wittgenstein gave his slim book to Russell to read. Russell was blown away. This was a work of total genius! It was a polished reconstruction in pure logic of the entire universe! It had such crystaline perfection it allowed Wittgenstein to be a solipsist! (A solipsist is someone who thinks he is the only person in the universe and that everyone else is a figment of his imagination.)
A whole movement in philosophy grew up around the work. But Wittgenstein couldn't stand it. He retreated into a hut in the mountains and had an "epistemological break." When he finally returned, he repudiated his earlier philosophy completely and said it was a load of error. His new philosophy was that logic was just a language game. Other language games could have different rules and be just as valid in their own, different ways. The main thing was that people agreed on hw they used and understood their words. Those shiny hard logical rules were just fetishes for people who couldn't stand to play the usual language games.
As other philosophers gradually realized the older and wiser Wittgenstein was right, they built up a movement around his new work, which was not a book but just scraps of paper with remarks on them, and celebrated it to the heavens. That led us all to modern philosophy, where logic is just a formal machine, in effect the stuff of software, with no particular metaphysical value. The old idea (as one distinguished mathematician put it) that God was "the supreme fascist" in the sky who laid down the laws of logic was gone, dead, obsolete.
Phew! Free, free at last!
PS: A moron is someone with an IQ of 50 to 70.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 5, 2007 4:19 PM
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When I observe your repeated insults and bullying, that is not, by definition, an ad hominem attack. It is mere observation.
Speculating about the effect of that type of personality on vulnerable children, is just that speculation. And it gives me the creeps.
Do you believe, Jason, that a soul inhabits your body?
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 4:12 PM
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Puzzled,
Are you absolutely certain that you know nothing with absolute certainty?
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 4:08 PM
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The great rational one, RB, with more ad hominens.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 3:59 PM
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The great rational one, RB, with more ad hominens.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 3:57 PM
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Jason, I have no concern about your beliefs being irrational per se. I do have concerns about your potentially damaging your children in the name of these irrational beliefs.
You have proven that you really are not interested in inspecting your belief armor. If you are, I suggest responding to Andy Ross's post of January 5, 2007 3:07 AM in a thoughtful, reasoned way. Insults do not compose an argument.
But it's so much easier and less painful to call anyone who asks you to think a fool, isn't it, on the authority of your favorite holy book?
It's probably pointless to tell you what I actually believe, since you have constructed a virtual wm that speaks for me. But re. "People like WM feel as those the claims of Scripture do not jive with what we observe, there's a conflict" : That is true as far as it goes, but it is not the whole story. Even if the claims in the Scripture did not appear to contradict my observations and reasoning, these claims would not necessarily be correct. For example, I could claim that the Flying Spaghetti Monster and some of his noodly friends kicked the big bang into gear and are currently hovering over the earth, waiting to determine who to whisk away into culinary heaven based on which infidels have the audacity to shun pasta and which believers slurp it up with gusto. They don't make themselves known to us because they don't want to unduly influence our behavior. I don't see anything in this story that contradicts my observations of reality. But I am still not going to be slurping down pasta 3 times a day unless someone provides some GOOD evidence that this deity exists, regardless of any unverifiable mythology that springs up around the FMS. And I'm sure not going to be forcing pasta on any child of mine that is revolted by the stuff.
To me, it's all about evidence. Evidence. Not Proof. I don't need absolute certainty to rationally think that basing my live on the FSM would be a fool's errand. I think the same way about belief in the Christianity, Islam, and the Indian pantheons. There is no evidence that I have encountered to give me good reason to give Christianity any more deference than any other religion.
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 3:42 PM
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I forgot to attach my name to my last post.
What is "moron"? If I called you or someone you loved a "moron" is that an insult? If a good friend called me that, I would assume he is joking and call him something worse. That is (most likely) not an insult, although it is also possible that I may step over the line inadvertantly. If someone whom I do not know like you calls me that, I assume it is an insult (derogatory remark). You might be joking, or saying it with reverence, as you call people "moron," but common sense tells me that you're probably using it in a demeaning sense. If not, then I accept your undying devotion and apologize for suspecting your motives.
Sophistry means pejoratively used (illogical) rhetoric to confuse, obfuscate argument. I guess what lawyers are today, sophists were in ancient Greece in some degree. Originally, sophism comes from the word meaning wisdom or wise (philo-sophy means 'love of wisdom'), but it now means word play for the sake of clouding the argument. I think most people would agree that offering up unresponsive answers, asking questions without being specific ("what is truth?") would fall under this category.
How do you know anything with "absolute" certainty? (first of all, what do you even mean by "absolute" any way?) A care bear is a care bear because people have said so (defined it thus). Ask them again in 30 years without the little tag that says "care bear." We can also say that it is also a little toy that looks something like a bear (but not an anatomically correct representation of a bear). If we define something as X, then it is X. That is an instance of mathematical certainty, not absolute. If you say ridiculous, then you've never seen lawyers argue over some pretty commonplace words in contracts. In a practical sense, your child is right, a care bear is a care bear, but in another sense, we can talk about other properties that it has (even though no one will argue that it is NOT a care bear)... unless of course the manufaturer decided to rename it a "not-a-care-bear".
By absolute, I think we mean without qualifiers. Then even physical laws are not absolute, as astronauts will attest to. Or take geometry. Is Euclidean geometry absolute (e.g., the sum of the angles of a triangle is 180 degrees)? But, just like Newtonian physics, we need to apply qualifiers.
One form of knowledge (i.e., scientific knowledge) is being able to hypothesize correlational or causal relationships. Something like "if A then B." However, there are qualifiers or boundary conditions, as no scientist would make the claim (no matter how exhaustive the experimental data to support it) that if A then always B without spelling out the boundary conditins for this relationship. Our knowledge, at least in practical terms as we live our lives and understand and utilize our environment, therefore comprises of less than absolute certainty.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 5, 2007 3:39 PM
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Jason, one wonders when we'll read about you in the newspaper, a la Ted Haggard.
Ever wonder why all these gays are found hiding in church's? Because they can sneak around in the presumed aura of "morality" the church claims.
You exhibit a profound cruel streak, a bully mentality, and as others have expressed here, it is not a calming thought that you are the parent of four.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 3:35 PM
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More stupidity from the comedian:
"Science can not oppose anything, nor does it."
Timmy, are evolution and the Bible compatible?
"Is a stuffed care bear, a "care bear"?
I thought a care bear was the animated cartoon I see on tv. At least that's what they tell me when the show starts. I can not touch these care bears. So how could a care bear be both an animation that I cannot touch, and also be the stuffed animal that Jason's little girl held in her hands"
here's the certified moron at work for you:
uhhh...Timmy...when i used the word "Care Bear" in the car, what was the referent?
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 3:25 PM
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Yeah, Tim, been there.
A Baptist preacher got to me about 7th grade, saved me, planted the paranoid thought-pattern that god is watching every second, can't pick your nose w/o apologizing, etc. Walk around looking over your shoulder.
We moved, half way around the world, and the feelings began to diminish, partly from being away from him and because I'd start to study science and the subsequent contradictions between fact, and well, what passes for explanation in the bible....and then...
He tracked me down, started calling me, wanted to make sure I was "ok", still faithful, wanted to see me. Finally i told my dad, who intervened on a phone call and told the stalker to NEVER contact me again.
I realized how sick these puppies were. Lost any notion of faith as anything but what it is: a power grab. i mean, maybe he was also a stalker, a perv, who knows?
But never looked back, and wouldn't have any problem physically pissing on a bible, no guilt, no fear ... I wouldn't though because I don't want to offend anyone unnecessarily. Metaphorically, no problem at all. These people need to wake up from their childhood stupors.
It isn't their fault when they're young. We're wired, as a by-product, to believe what elders tell us. But at some point their intellect either develops, or not, and grows up.
If they gain power over young people, they should be challenged. This is why "prayer in the schools" has to be stopped...it is an extension of religion through the state.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 3:24 PM
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Timmy, Yikes is right!!! You have reinforced my determination to keep my kids out of churches period until they are old enough to think. Thank you!
Doug, I'm going to have to read "The God Delusion" and learn more about Dawkins's hypothesis (I assume that's where he describes it?) It sounds interesting. I shake my head when I look back today on how as a child I could have been so rational in some areas and so totally irrational in others.
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 3:18 PM
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Daddy you told me that a care bear is a stuffed animal.
But here I am Daddy, watching a care bear cartoon while holding a care bear stuffie.
Are you a liar Daddy?
Or do you also hate it when people argue with the meaning of the words that they put in your mouth, instead of what they know you meant.
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 3:17 PM
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WM, concerned over my four children, says:
"For the love of your kids, please subject your beliefs to some rational analysis!"
"Rational" - hmmmm...there's an interesting word. What WM's concern appears to be is that my "beliefs" are irrational. People like WM feel as those the claims of Scripture do not jive with what we observe, there's a conflict...there appears to be...oh no, here it comes..."contradictory" information.
Yet, WM is the same person who says that the law of contradiction is not an absolute certainty. It may very well be possible for something to "be" and "not be" at the same time.
Yet, I am the one that needs to "rationally" analyze my beliefs?
hmmm...WM, i believe the atheist Daniel C. Dennet would refer to you as a "vegetable".
God's word for you is a "fool".
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 3:15 PM
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What about the care bear Jason?
Stuffed animal, or animated cartoon or both?
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 3:12 PM
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RB,
Some more insight for your working theory from a personal anecdote.
I was an atheist true and solid by the time I moved out of my parents house. I had no religious upbringing other than the one summer my mother sent us to Sunday school because it was the cheapest babysitter in town.
Ironically this is the summer I became an atheist.
But here's an interesting after effect.
Whe I was 19 years old, now an atheist for close to ten years, I moved out of my mother's house. When packing my things I came across the bible I had since that summer of Sunday school.
I went to throw it the garbage, but stopped at the last minute.
I couldn't.
I didn't believe anymore so why couldn't I throw out my Bible.
Fear. Even the non believer takes the fear of God out of his childhood and needs to reconcile further before throwing out his Bible.
I finally did it after I had moved three or four more times and not been able to each time.
I finally did it when I was about 25 years old.
It was hard even then.
I was scared. A non believer who was still scared.
To this day I wonder if I will go to Hell for that.
This, the result of one summer of Sunday school attendence by a kid who didn't believe going in, and didn't believe coming out.
But one summer of an athorative adult telling me that God will watch a movie of my life with me when I die and see all that I have done.
Please tell me I'm not going to Hell for throwing away that Bible.
I know I should have recycled it instead.
I'm sorry.
Shame.
Needless shame.
One summer of Sunday school.
Do Jason's kids have any chance at all of ever forming their own thoughts about anything?
Yikes.
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 3:07 PM
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Timmy now says,
"A simple inability to distinguish between two kinds of statements.
1) I am as certain as I need to be that paper burns in fire.
2) it is an absolute indisputable certainty that paper burns in fire."
____
HENCE TIMMY i ask for DEFINITIONS.
You are so pathetic. You whine about me asking you for definitions...so in order to attempt some sort of conversation i go along with your little game of ambiguity and assume that what you mean by "certainty" is what i mean by the word...i then demonstrate your foolishness...and now your way out of it is..."uh, well, there are two kinds of certainty and I...I meant 1 and not 2."
That's why you purposefully stay away from defining things. Keeping things ambiguous creates holes for you to escape.
But there is a further problem. You cannot even epistemologically justify definitions for any word because definitions imply certainty (in the absolute sense), which you deny.
Hence, we are trapped in the vicious circle of empiricist insanity.
Thank you certified moron.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 2:55 PM
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Is a stuffed care bear, a "care bear"?
I thought a care bear was the animated cartoon I see on tv. At least that's what they tell me when the show starts. I can not touch these care bears. So how could a care bear be both an animation that I cannot touch, and also be the stuffed animal that Jason's little girl held in her hands.
Boy oh boy, it seems that we can not have a rational conversation WITH Jason's law of contradiction rather than WITHOUT it.
I'm afraid your little girl is still not clear as to the definition of "What is a care bear?"
It almost seems as though a care bear it two or three things at once.
Perhaps you could explain further how you arrive at your certainty that a stuffed care bear is a care bear.
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 2:48 PM
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Jason, I realize that you don't want a dialogue with me; you just want to flash your shiny armor. But I must say: I actually cringed when I read that you have 4 children. I'm sure you don't realize what kind of damage your clinging to dogma might be doing to those precious children of yours. I have a pretty good idea (though not knowing you, I can't know the extent of the damage), having grown up with a dogmatic father and having many friends and acquaintances who grew up under the influence of dogmatic religious beliefs. I can assure you that nothing good came of it, and a large percentage of these people have had mental health issues, have totally rejected religion, and/or are very unhappy people compared to others raised in less dogmatic environments.
The insidious thing is that the damage is probably not apparent to you. You probably truly believe that you are saving your children's eternal souls, despite the irrationality of that belief. If you are a strict disciplinarian, the damage is probably even less apparent - your fearful children will probably get so good at hiding what is really going on in their heads that they will fool you into believing that they are happy, well-adjusted kids. Until some day, all of a sudden, they aren't. I have 3 siblings - all of us have had problems with anxiety and lack of confidence due to our upbringing - one of my sisters to a life-threatening degree. None of us were peaceful, joyful, happy-go-lucky children. But in a conversation I recently had with my mother, I discovered that she really thought that we were - she had no idea of how anxious or fearful we were as children. Having had independent confirmation from several of us that we WERE anxious and fearful as children, she still just wouldn't - or couldn't - believe it.
For the love of your kids, please subject your beliefs to some rational analysis!
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 2:47 PM
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WM:
Your story is quite interesting, and congruent with Dawkin's hypothesis:
"On one side, there was a great deal of pressure TO believe, which I think stemmed from a need for parental love and physical sustenance. If I hadn’t felt from a very young age that my parents would not love me and indeed, may not have cared for my physical needs properly..."
This describes the evolutionary "force" "urge" "instinct" -- take your pick -- consistent with a survivor. We all listened when told: "Don't touch that hot stove. Don't jump off the roof."
Or, we'd have scars, broken legs or worse.
Once we leave childhood, however, we can also leave behind this unquestioning obedience. Religion is a by-product, and we can leave it behind, too.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 2:36 PM
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Science can make no claims any more than knitting can make claims.
Science is not a person or even a community. It is a system of knowledge gathering to the best of our fallible human abilities.
Science can not oppose anything, nor does it.
Science neither believes nor disbelieves.
People decide to oppose incredible beliefs.
In doing so, science is but one small element of the multitude of factors they employ. Others include, personal experience, observation, reason, historical evidence, common sense and intellectual discussion with others.
In the end, science has very little to do with a persons reason to disbelieve.
It only seems that way because an astoundingly large number of scientists are atheists.
Even if Jason succeeds in crushing the integrity of science completely, (which of course he has not) he has done little to shake the confidence of non believers in their non belief.
For some reason he thinks that if he removes science from the equation, the only thing left to believe in is the Bible.
Science is not the reason why people don't believe.
It is not our alternative to the hypothesis you put forth.
We don't need an alternate view of the origin of the universe to disbelieve yours.
That would make atheists believers in something.
We are not.
None of us have, so far, found something to believe in.
And that suits us fine.
Mystery is awe inspiring. Especially when one looks to the heavens.
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 2:31 PM
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“Aristotle had it right more than 2000 years ago: when a person abandons the law of non-contradiction, he asked, "what difference will there be between him and a vegetable?" - Daniel C. Dennett
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 2:22 PM
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Anonymous says, “Reading that mission statement, it seems contrary to what Jason has been posting. Nowhere does it say: (1) insult people (e.g., calling people "moron"), and (2) engage in sophistry, "what is...?"
But anony also says, “I know nothing with absolute certainty.”
Anonymous, your posts are self-refuting. And because you can’t see that, you call it “insulting” and “sophistry”.
But again, I’ll ask: What does “insult” mean? What is “sophistry”? And why do I keep asking for definitions? It’s quite simple to understand.
I’m attempting to demonstrate to you that if we can not even be certain of logic, (which your statement implies) then your words have NO MEANING.
In order for “insult” to mean something, it has to not mean something. “Insult” does not mean “loving”, but why? LAW OF CONTRADICTION. Here’s my point: the law of contradiction is at work every time you use a word.
My five year old even understands this. I tried this very thing on her last night as we cruised over to Blockbuster. I grabbed my three year old’s “CareBear” and ask my five year old if this ‘is’ a ‘CareBear’. She said, “yes”. I then asked her if it was also, “not a CareBear?” and she gave me a blank stare. My seven year old son (I have four by the way) jumped in and said, “That doesn’t make any sense.”
See there?! He just exercised the law of contradiction. My five and seven year old – the logicians. ( : That stuffed animal can not be both a CareBear and not a CareBear at the same time and in the same sense.
That is a certainty…yet, you say it’s not. “I know nothing with absolute certainty”. Well, if that is the case then, then that CareBear was a CareBear and not a CareBear and “insult” can also mean “loving”, “attractive”, “genius”, etc. all at the same time and the sentence “I know nothing with absolute certainty” ALSO means “Jason is the most intelligent guy I know.”
One rhetorical question refutes your entire scheme: Anony, are you certain that you know nothing with absolute certainty?
Anony, deny the certainty of the law of contradiction and you have just justified insanity. And frankly, I don’t care to waste time on insane people.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 2:13 PM
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Timmy, though Jason's comments here look like game play to us, I don't think that to him they are. I think that, to him, he is actually showing us "A/A"s the reasons that we are wrong. I've met way too many people like him in real life (at one point, myself) who truly believe that their arguments are convincing, despite the brutal reality that the only people who are convinced are those who are trembling behind the same armor and everyone else is either trying not to laugh (in your case, not trying too hard!) or closely inspecting his clothes for signs of concealed weaponry.
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 2:12 PM
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In tryng to figure out why Jason needs to force all empirists to account for what I said. I can only come up with this.
A simple inability to distinguish between two kinds of statements.
1) I am as certain as I need to be that paper burns in fire.
2) it is an absolute indisputable certainty that paper burns in fire.
All I know is, next time I go camping, I will take a stack of newsprint with me to help me get my fires going.... And it will.
I am as certain as I need to be that, this will happen.
I have no doubt that Jason also uses paper to help him start his campfires. And no doubt that each time he does, he is never nervous that this time, it might not work.
This is how we all know that his purpose here is game play, not a search for truth.
I know, I know. What is truth?
You got me.
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 2:03 PM
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Andy, thanks for expanding on the law of contradiction! I was sitting up nursing my fussy, teething baby last night and thinking of reasons that that either my “non-omniscient, non-certain” position may make sense or the “true/false” positions could also make sense and came up with reasons supporting each position that I or others could subject to further analysis. I won’t bore anyone with the actual reasoning, because …
At a certain point, I realized that the actual answer to this question doesn’t matter to Jason (yes, I must be a little slow!) As others have said in other ways, someone has given him this simple, slick-sounding plate to use to reinforce his armor. In order for him to make use of it, he cannot question or doubt or pry around at the armor itself – he has to place it confidently between himself and any “unrighteous” like a good, Christian soldier and no matter the reasons, answers, or questions he receives, thoughtlessly display the “answer” written in the armor. If he actually responded to another person’s reasoning about the question and started really thinking about the question himself, there is the danger that he would realize that there is a flaw in the armor and it would cease to be of its imagined use – he would be vulnerable. Thus his refusal to answer any questions himself or to truly engage in dialogue anyone who is willing to discuss the issue. That would require thought, which would be dangerous.
I couldn’t have asked for a better example of the “belief armor” that I just wish I weren’t so familiar with!
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 1:48 PM
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Andy,
Here's a quote from my original post here:
:From our study of these five logical difficulties, it can be readily seen that science is not capable of giving us any truth. And if the scientific method is a tissue of logical fallacies, why should Christians seek to argue from science to the truth? Simply stated, they should not. Science is useful in accomplishing its purpose, i.e., subduing the Earth. But that is all it is useful for, nothing more.:
I've never said that i shut my eyes off from science. I never said science is not useful in making computers, internet, cars, and the like.
There is nothing in the Bible that says making computers is a bad thing or an impossible thing.
My point is: That is ALL it can do. Nothing more. When scientists start babbling on about origins, ethics, and the like, you've crossed the line.
At that point, you are no longer basking in the "glory of God". I enjoy His glory every waking second of my like knowing that I, as well as my computer exists "in and thru Him".
Andy, what you and others are doing is akin to Timmy here going to my bank, stealing every dime I have, using all that cash for his own little pleasure cruise and really living it up, and then turning right around and denying I don't exist.
We have a word for people who think that way: Insane
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 1:45 PM
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RB,
No, I was thanking you for your defense of me in light of Skeptic's comments. It is Skeptic who lumped me into the same category as Jason. And I took great offense to this unwarranted shot across my bow.
I have offered many new, thoughtful, and constructive courses of action that non believers can take forward in the battle for sanity.
Skeptic made no comments on these new and productive thoughts that I posed. Instead he spent most of his efforts trying to de-convert Bruce with unnecessarily verbose logical breakdowns of the inconsistencies in the Bible.
Absolutely futile. And nothing new in this debate.
I challenge Skeptic, if he pops in again, to show new constructive thoughts that he brought to the table, and compare them to mine.
I only engaged Jason when nothing else was going on and I was bored.
Whenever new thoughts were introduced, I soaked them up like a dry sponge and immediately and added my own constructive thoughts on the topic.
I will continue to do so.
I hope skeptic finds a more mature and intelligent discussion on this topic elsewhere. I have not ever come across such a thing.
If you do find a more civil intellectual discourse on this subject Skeptic, please share the link.
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 1:41 PM
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Reading that mission statement, it seems contrary to what Jason has been posting. Nowhere does it say: (1) insult people (e.g., calling people "moron"), and (2) engage in sophistry, "what is...?"
And as for being inerrant, most fair-minded theologians would readily accept that the Bible does have some inconsistencies. How could it not given the fact that there are so many different authors who are (at least in their own mind) confessing their faith. Look at this discussion board: everyone has their own definition of faith (or non-belief). Being inerrant does not necessarily mean that the Bible is factually accurate since the Bible authors intended to profess their faith and write about their inspired (again, in their mind, at least) experiences, and these authors were not trained to be scientists nor were they trying to make scientific accurate statements. And given the empirical evidence (yes Jason, although our senses are imperfect, that is all we have, deny it and you cannot even drive to buy groceries), we know that the Bible has factual inaccuracies. For the believer, that shouldn't invalidate the teachings of the Bible since Bible was written as a book of faith, not like a newspaper magazine or a technical, scientific textbook. Earnest people of faith deal with it (perhaps you should read folks like Bishop Spong) and move and focus on the important issues (like those described in that mission statement). It is those who are insecure in their faith who feel the need to lash out against those who speak with common sense and reason (although those people may not know what "truth" means; do you?), whether they are non-believers or believers who have reconciled the literal inconsistencies between the modern state of knowledge with some Bible passages.
I echo the sentiments of Skeptic above. Slinging insults at each other probably does not help, and I must admit I posted some cynical (even churlish) remarks, and I think it was regrettable on my part.
However, I did attempt to earnestly answer Jason's question, knowing full well that the question is most likely another attempt to engage in sophistry and word play. To summarize: I know nothing with absolute certainty. If there is a god, perhaps god knows with absolute certainty. But the problem is that **we** still would not know that such a god itself knew with absolute certainty. Any assertions that "my god" knows with absolute certainty are just that -- mere assertions that have no objective grounds -- since it is an assertion coming from "my" incomplete (i.e., less than absolute) knowledge. Therefore, god as the "someone" who knows with absolute certainty is an assumption to build (or not build) one's worldviews around (if he or she so chooses). I do, however, have confidence in mathematical and proabilistic certainties.
I am still waiting.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 5, 2007 1:40 PM
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And if you want my "reason" for calling these people morons, i'll simply invoke Timmy's superior rational skills:
Andy is a moron is my answer.
And I can not prove it.
I have given you an answer that I can not prove.
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 1:28 PM
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Jason
Thank you for your clarification. I understand that your practical work arises from your beliefs, and for this reason I do not wish to mock your beliefs. Nor do I wish to mislead anyone with the word "salvation," which is a public word with a fairly wide dictionary meaning.
However, you should try to understand that many people in good conscience have thought carefully through the issues that concern us all, your ministry included, very deeply. Some of those people are conversing here, on this site, and are attempting to deal with the issues with due respect and moderation. If I were to visit one of your church services and shout out childish words during the sermons and prayers, you would be right to throw me out. If I were to continue my harassment with a loudhailer from the street outside, you would be right to call the police.
As it happens, I have not seen the Narnia movie. I did read Narnia author C.S. Lewis' apologetic book "Mere Christianity" and discussed it at length with a priest here in Gemany. I explained my dissatisfaction with the argument and we let the matter drop after reaching a good mutual understanding.
Believe me, I have meditated at length on the Christian view of God and how it has developed over the centuries. I find much in the tradition to respect. It is indeed the fertile ground in which the new faith of empirical science took root. Many believers worked as experimental scientists and saw no contradiction with their faith. Even Charles Darwin began life as a trainee priest and troubled himself for many years over the religious impact of his work.
To renounce experimental science would be like shutting our eyes to the glory of God's work, in your terms. If you open your eyes, you will see how wonderfully harmonious that work can be.
Respect, Andy
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 5, 2007 1:21 PM
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Complaints Atheists/Agnostics have of Christians:
:Christians are stupid, irrational, and lack humility:
Quotes from Atheists/Agnostics:
HUMBLE?
1. I felt I was one of many who repeatedly put him in his place with superior reasoning, rationality
2. Jason is stuck in childhood, as are so many billions like him around the world. Raising his consciousness may be impossible
3. immature religious fanatics
4. Jesus loves you...But everyone else thinks you are long winded and a complete idiot.
5. Thank you Jason, for being prima facia evidence of the childish gullibility model.
6. The one named "Jason Bradfield" is an idiot....You religious nutjobs are pathetic and will be dealt with in time.
7. your argument is shot.
because you are an idiot.
8. Jason is an idiot. Some Christians are idiots, therefore Jason is a Christian. I think this is an inductive conclusion everyone here agrees is true.
9. Jason is...logically, rationally and emotionally retarded. Hence, Idiot.
10. I would like to thank Jason for being idiot enough to make me feel less foolish posting this,
This last one was by our "humble" friend Andy, by the way.
RATIONAL?
Timmy: Will you answer one question for me? It's a very simple question. What happens to a piece of newspaper when it is thrown into a fire? Based on everything that you have said so far in this thread, it seems to me that you would have to reply "I can not conclusively answer that question"
(which is correct, i cannot argue a logical certainty inductively, as Bertrand Russell has said - my answer would be that the paper may or may not burn - jason)
Now, Timmy's answer to his own question:
I can answer the question.
It burns, silly.
Combustion happens.
A solid turns into light, gas and ash.
Andy could probably write two pages about what happens to that newspaper.
Even Victoria could answer that question. (notice the humility here)....
Yes Jason, it burns.
Yes I am certain of this.
Everyone on this post other than you is certain of this.
You are the only one who questions this.
because you are an idiot.
I can claim for certain that a newspaper burns in the fire based on what I have seen in my life.
____
Jason's response: Timmy, on what basis can you say it is "certain"? Have you tested this...have you thrown all newspapers into fires to conclude then that it is a certainty that the next time i do it, it will burn?
Since you boast in logic, please demonstrate for me in logical form that your past observations logically necessitate that the next paper thrown in to the fire will burn. Until you logically demonstrate this, you are merely asserting and i have no "reason" to take you serious.
Timmy's response:
Paper burns is my answer.
And I can not prove it.
I have given you an answer that I can not prove.
It's just the answer that suits me and most people just fine, unprovable as it may be.
_______
Yes, folks, you read it correctly. Timmy tried to assert a universal from inductive reason, of which i questioned and then was called an "idiot" and retarded for doing so...when asked to prove his assertion, ie. give a rational explanation for it, Timmy concludes that he can't - thus proving my point from the beginning of this thread about inductive reasoning and certainties.
but make no mistake about it folks...I'm the arrogant, retarded, irrational idiot.
And the latest: Andy here, the "certified logician", pulls one paragraph off my site about our mission with the Gospel of Jesus Christ, calls it a noble task, but says i should trash the rest of the stuff. And then emails my friend Sam and says my behavior here is shameful and may hurt my cause in making new converts.
Here's my conclusion in all of this: Once you understand what Andy and Timmy and RB mean by "logician", Andy is simply a "certified moron".
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 1:21 PM
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Doug, Re: “So, WM, is the following generalized summary accurate?
1. You were removed from your previous immersion in a belief system.
2. You were exposed to alternative belief systems.
3. You felt a need to reduce the conflict between systems.
4. Relatively suddenly the old system didn't make sense anymore and you abandoned it.”
I think your summary is somewhat accurate.
1) true
2) true (though I had been exposed to alternative belief systems before, the sheer quantity of belief systems and their utter incompatibility was made more apparent)
3) I didn’t really perceive a need to reduce a conflict between systems, though. I think the need was more a need to shed a belief system that was becoming less and less workable and making my life miserable. I didn’t feel any need to adopt a new belief system; does that make sense?
4) true. As soon as I started honestly asking questions, the whole belief system fell down around my feet.
I think that what is missing from the summary is an indication of the strength of the clash of two opposing mental forces. On one side, there was a great deal of pressure TO believe, which I think stemmed from a need for parental love and physical sustenance. If I hadn’t felt from a very young age that my parents would not love me and indeed, may not have cared for my physical needs properly, if I had not believed, I don’t think that my self-protective mind would ever have assembled this armor. I think that frequent corporal punishment played a big role in this (maybe this is why Dobson and his ilk are so slap happy?). On the other side, there was what became an overwhelming stress and anxiety due to attempting to live these beliefs (in conjunction with other things). I think that the strength of these two opposing forces is what finally crushed the armor.
It sounds to me like the weakening of your faith may have been a more gentle experience than the shattering of mine. Do you think that maybe the needs that your belief was based on weren’t quite so forceful? To what needs do you attribute your initial faith?
I didn’t ever go through a rebellious period as you did (although perhaps my post-enlightenment behavior may have seemed rebellious to my parents, rebellion was not my intention). I just stopped acting in accordance with the previous belief framework when I realized how ridiculous it was and how little it truly explained.
For me, knowledge of science wasn’t much of a factor, though I agree that learning about evolutionary theory (something I have only been learning about recently) would make it impossible to take the Christian Bible seriously in a literal manner. I don’t think that one needs an understanding of science to reject faith. It’s not necessary to know with certainty how something works to be able to reject ridiculous explanations with a fair amount of confidence. Even if I didn’t completely understand the principles of flight, I could confidently assert that an airplane doesn’t have thousands of tiny, purple fairies in the wings escorting it through the air.
I don’t think that seeing hypocrisy was much of a factor for me either. For the most part, the people in my father’s church seemed to me to be sincere believers that were honestly attempting to live their extremely rigid, dogmatic belief system. There are many people in that church that I have respect for, though I do think that their beliefs are wrong and harmful and do much to contribute to what I perceive to be their general unhappiness and lack of peace with the universe.
While I didn’t have explicit support from friends going through the same thing, I think that the fact that my friends didn’t particularly care about my religious beliefs could only have helped.
Re: “And then there was sex - how could something that felt so good and didn't hurt anyone possibly be a major sin?” Some of the questions in my cascade of them did fall along these lines – how could such trivial, unimportant-seeming rules as those espoused by the church really be so critical to an omnipotent being or to anyone else.
Guilt was a major force leading to my enlightenment as well. For my father’s church, with its extremely strict rules, behaving in a human fashion at all or breaking the most trivial rules was reason for guilt. Eventually the weight of all that guilt and worry (over really dumb, doctrine-related stuff, not over anything that was harming another being) became just too much to bear and I was forced to examine the actual beliefs.
Doug, I couldn’t agree with you more that “Faith of this nature sets up some really un-healthy mental processes in the individual that do spill over into other areas of life.” I really appreciate Sam Harris’s book “The End of Faith” for helping me to realize the danger of even less extreme forms of religion than the one I was indoctrinated into as a child.
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 1:03 PM
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Andy,
Our "practical work" ARISES out of our "doctrinal work".
You've taken the word "salvation" off of our page and have applied a meaning to it that we don't use.
This is very deceptive.
When we talk about "healing the nations" for example, what does the Bible mean by that? Well, if you have read the rest of the Bible and compared your notes, one thing Christ heals us from is the irrationality and complete foolishness of atheist/agnostic empiricism.
Now Andy, you may disagree that this is the problem from which people need to be healed of...fine...but don't take my mission statement and read your own baloney into it. That's dishonesty.
Do you do that with any other story/narrative? Do you read/watch "Chronicles of Narnia" and insist that the Lion represents Hitler?
No! Now, Lions can be used as a symbol of many things, but once you are in the Narnia story, the Lion means what the author intends on it to mean. Don't read your baloney into Narnia and make Lewis say something he never intended.
You may think Narnia is a stupid story - fine. Write your own, but don't read Stalin into Narnia and insist that is what Lewis meant.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 5, 2007 12:38 PM
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Tim:
Of course you're not in the same category as Jason...I certainly hope you didn't think I implied that.
Jason is stuck in childhood, as are so many billions like him around the world. Raising his consciousness may be impossible, but it's worth a try.
Have you read God Delusion?
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 12:01 PM
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Thanks for the defense RB,
I did not feel as though I was in the same category as Jason.
I felt I was one of many who repeatedly put him in his place with superior reasoning, rationality and yes, the kind of insensitive humor that a malicious degenerate like him deserves.
Good for you Andy. Great idea.
I hope all in Jason's ministry will read his blogs here and think twice before taking anything that he says with an ounce of authority.
Skeptic, I invite you to revisit some of my non-Jason posts and reevaluate your assertion that I offered nothing positive and meaningful here. Perhaps you saw the name TImmy in Jason's posts so often that you mistook it all for my inane babble, not his.
Either way, all the best to you and your more mature battles against immature religious fanatics.
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 11:46 AM
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Dear Mr. Frost:
Jason Bradfield doesn't know whether 1+1=2, is true or not. While I'm not sure what his job duties as office assistant may entail, but you should not employ his skills in any area requiring math.
I mean, you can if you so choose, but it would be a "leap of faith" that your books would still balance, in short order.
For any tasks involving shoveling manure, however, this IS your man.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 11:44 AM
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To put the record straight, on my own initiative I mailed the following message to Samuel M Frost, President of the Reign of Christ Ministry.
---
Dear Mr Frost
Until this week I had no reason to regard your honorable work to bring a message of hope and salvation to people in difficult circumstances with anything but tolerance and respect.
However, I regret to inform you that your office assistant Jason Bradfield has conducted himself shamefully in an online forum dedicated to the reasonable discussion of matters pertaining to religion. If you would care to go to [link] and read his postings, I think you may agree that this is not the way to bring new converts to Christ.
---
I continue to believe the practical work of organizations like RCM in bringing aid and comfort to poor people who lack a welfare net of European generosity is both honorable and respectable.
However, their doctrinal work is less easy to accept. Although it is doubtless well meaning - who does not wish to save the souls of his or her fellow citizens according to his or her own beliefs? - it creates precisely the problems that this blog is dedicated to discussing.
Members of the RCM, if they have the interests of humanity truly at heart, should welcome honest discussion of how best to offer the huddled masses of this world real hope of salvation.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 5, 2007 11:20 AM
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James Dobson, Focus on the Family movement: "Those who control what young people are taught, and what they experience -- what they see, hear, think, and believe -- will determine the future course for the nation."
We have a prime example of the success of the replicating virus that is Christianity in our midst: Jason. His arguments are childish, rigid, dualistic. He is a case study, from his first post to his last.
Thank you Jason, for being prima facia evidence of the childish gullibility model.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 11:04 AM
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Skeptic,
leave then. And your last post demonstrates again that the only thing you have to offer is more ad hominems.
Please give me an example of "irrational banter".
oh wait,...what is "irrationality"?
Skeptic, you and all the other atheists/agnostics are nothing but leeches.
You try to suck the life out of the very one who sustains you. You deny Reason Himself, yet you expect me to approach you as a 'rational' person.
And what is real funny is that my ministry (RCM) got an email from ole Andy Ross here who is disturb over my method. He believes i bring shame to my ministry, which otherwise has the honorable work of bringing hope and salvation to people....
uhhh...Andy...salvation from WHAT? Have you read the rest of my site?
Mission Statement:
Our mission to the Church is to unite her under the word of God in peace and harmony, and strive towards that goal with holy enthusiasm. We believe that this is the mission of God, and work toward that end. As to the world, we affirm that the gospel is to be preached to every man God sends our way, either in word, or in deed. We discriminate against no sinner, and no sin, since we affirm with the WCF, which, in turn, affirms the Biblical position, that “there is no sin so small but it deserves damnation; so there is no sin so great that it can bring damnation upon those who truly repent” (15.4). The Gospel of Jesus Christ is first and foremost the Gospel of Restoration and Reconciliation. Our motto is, “Relating the Gospel to the world through knowledge in order to bring healing to the nations.”
Beliefs:
RCM affirms without reservation:
* The Inerrancy of Scriptures
* The Trinitarian Understanding of the Godhead
* The Full Deity and Humanity of Christ
* The Necessity of the Atonement of Christ as our substitutionary Head
* That Christ alone is the only way to the Father and that without faith in God, in Christ and signs of that faith (however dim they may be at the time since God works through us all individually, at different levels, on different steps) no one can be saved
Andy, the same Bible I love and read and teach is the same Bible that calls folks like Timmy "fools". It's the same Bible that says of folks like Timmy:
Romans 1:28-32 28 And since they did not see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a debased mind to do what ought not to be done. 29 They were filled with all manner of unrighteousness, evil, covetousness, malice. They are full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, maliciousness. They are gossips, 30 slanderers, haters of God, insolent, haughty, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, 31 foolish, faithless, heartless, ruthless. 32 Though they know God's decree that those who practice such things deserve to die, they not only do them but give approval to those who practice them.
THIS is the context in which our mission statement is made. The Good News of the Reign of Christ is that He delivers people from the very foolishness promoting here by yourself, Timmy, RB, and Sam Harris.
But folks, you saw it here! Andy Ross says this is an "honorable" work.
Wow...no, what Andy has actually done is he rips that paragraph off of the frontpage of my site and redefines words and places it in another context to serve whatever purpose he has.
But hey...I guess that is ok when we "can not be 100% certain about anything."
RCM's motto can mean whatever the heck you want it to mean since we can not be certain about the law of contradiction.
okie dokie.
we can now add a new character in Ms Garrison's evolutionary chart - retard leech monkey
Posted by: jason bradfield | January 5, 2007 10:24 AM
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Au voir, Skeptic.
You should, imho, view the exchange between Tim and Jason for what it is: the clash between the rational and irrational. Tim has freed himself of bad programming code, Jason has not.
It is clear to me that Tim and others are trying to help Jason re-boot, but alas, he has constructed a lockbox around the re-boot button and has lost the key.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 8:30 AM
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Natural selection builds child brains with a tendency to believe whatever their parents and tribal elders tell them. Such trusting obedience is valuable for survival: the analogue of steering by the moon for a moth. But the flip side of trusting obedience is slavish gullibility. The inevitable by-product is vulnerability to infrection by mind viruses. For excellent reasons related to Darwinian survival, child brains need to trust parents, and elders whom parents tell them to trust. An automatic consequence is that the truster has no way of distinguishing good advice from bad.
Ibid.
This model explains, for example, why Bruce is a Christian and why Sayid is a Muslim. Different geographical regions, different arbitrary beliefs, none with factual basis, have been handed down, and believed with equal conviction.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 8:08 AM
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I have decided to withdraw from this discussion. Overall, it has been a good experience. Thanks to those who shared their ideas. The only distubing thing about the discussion has been the inane, immature, uncivil, and largely irrational banter of Jason and Timmy. You guys really deserve each other. Nevertheless, Happy New Year to all!
Posted by: Skeptic | January 5, 2007 8:06 AM
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Computers do what they are told. They slavishly obey any instructions given in their own programming language. This is how they do useful things like word processing and spreadsheet calculations. But, as an inevitable by-product, they are equally robotic in obeying bad instructions. They have no way of telling whether an instruction will have a good effect or bad. They simply obey, as soldiers are supposed to. It is their unquestioning obedience that makes computers useful, and exactly the same things makes them inescapably vulnerable to infection by software viruses and worms.
Richard Dawkings, The God Delusion, page 176
Jason is a computer running malicious software. He cannot help it.
Posted by: RB | January 5, 2007 8:00 AM
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I really do feel bad for Jason in the end.
It's not his fault.
You see he read this paper by this guy who told him that if he read this book and memorized all of the arguments in it that he would never again lose an argument with a heathen non believer empiricist.
That guy who wrote that paper misled Jason.
It's not fair.
Jason worked so hard to memorize these arguments because that guy promised him that he would never lose this argument, if he made it.
I'm concerned what other crazy promises people have made to Jason that might not hold to be true.
I mean a person like this might even believe that he could have eternal life if someone promised it to him.
You know, if he read the right books and all.
Another fun day on the old thread.
Night all.
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 4:19 AM
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Andy, for that I think that you should be beaten until you admit that "to be beaten" is not the same thing as "not to be beaten."
Unless of course the one doing the beating is a mosquito and you are a man. In this case, getting beaten is not much of a beating at all.
I get it now. Jason is a mosquito. And though he beats away at us, we are not really taking a beating at all.
Cool.
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 4:02 AM
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Okay jason, I'll bite (in the metaphorical sense): A homeless person does not have a home/house to live in, but the street, car or cardboard box is his/her home. It's not a home per se in the sense that it has walls and a roof etc. however, where ever he/she sleeps is his/her home. So there you go, a home that is not a home.
As much as Timmy would like for you to make good on your offer to shoot yourself, please don't--place that bullet in the bible if you have to shoot something.
J.
Posted by: janine | January 5, 2007 3:58 AM
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My bad,
I guess Jason didn't make an empirical statement after all.
He was just plagiarizing.
Damn.
Back to waiting for Jason to make a statement of his own I guess.
Ho hum...
Thanks Andy
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 3:54 AM
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I contribute my professional opinion as a certified logician.
Gordon Clark (channeled by a disciple):
"The law of contradiction has to be one of the most fundamental, non-negotiable laws necessary for you and I to even have a conversation."
One formulation of the law of contradiction is that a speech act is vitiated in the case that one and the same statement is both asserted and denied without further explanation or justification.
Examples of contradiction
1. "It will burn!" versus "No, it won't!"
2.
Galen Strawson, metaphysical thesis #36: "Reality is substantially single. All reality is experiential and all reality is non-experiential. Experiential and non-experiential being exist in such a way that neither can be said to be based in or realized by or in any way asymmetrically dependent on the other (etc.) (Equal-Status Fundamental-Duality monism)." Journal of Consciousness Studies 13(10-11), 2006, p. 223
3.
Step A: Statement "It's round" contradicts "It's square."
Step B: Statement "It looks round from this angle" appears to contradict "It looks square from this [other] angle."
Step C: Statement "It's a cylinder whose height is equal to its diameter" resolves the contradiction.
Discussion of examples
1. Hopeless.
2. Potentially fruitful - all hangs on the "etc.".
3. No problem at all. This is how to do it.
On this occasion I shall not invoice anyone for my services.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 5, 2007 3:07 AM
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Santa, Very funny.
And Jason! You did it! You made a statement!
Now the fun begins
Jason Bradfield says,
"however, the law of contradiction has to be one of the most fundamental, non-negotiable laws necessary for you and I to even have a conversation."
Really Jason? It has to be?
Are you certain of this? 100% certain?
Is this statement that you make true?
If yes, then what is your definition of "true"?
If no, then how can this be the basis for your argument if it is not true.
You are a paradox Jason.
You make empiricists statements and cannot back them up.
You are like TIMMY.
Look everyone. Jason made an empirical statement of truth that he can not prove.
What arrogance.
What a hypocrite
Okey Dokey.
lol
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 2:32 AM
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Doug - sorry for the delay - I'll do my best to respond to you tomorrow. The baby is acting up tonight & I desperately need some sleep!
Jason - sorry I couldn't help you out - I hope that you find the answers and certainty you are looking for elsewhere! Good luck!
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 2:28 AM
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Has anyone else noticed that the poster named Jason has very bad punctuation.
He only asks questions but he uses a period at the end of his sentences.
He is either iliterate or trying to disguise the fact that he can not make a statement.
Or both.
lol
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 2:10 AM
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I found the following on a christian blog about why prayer doesn't hold up to experiment:
"I think it is very important that we don't expect too much from those who do not believe. Prayers work by faith, which is essentially a choice to believe. God has designed prayer to work for those that believe and not for those who don't. There will always be these two camps. The most diffcult ones are those who "will" not to believe."
This is a fantastic idea!
I am considering adopting this approach to my beliefs. I think it explains pretty well why I no longer get presents from santa - those who believe in the supernatural santa get presents from him, and non-believers do not get presents from him.
See, as a believer in santa I prayed to him that he would give me gifts. Lo and behold, each christmas I got gifts. Therefore he exists, and he is love. I had a personal relationship with him.
Now, one day I was sadly provided with an alternate theory that the presents come from a more earthly source. Doubt crept into my santa belief system. And then that very year - no presents from santa - only from my parents.
Apparently god and santa have at least this in common: Neither answers prayers if you don't believe in them. Oh and one other thing - THEY DO NOT EXIST!
Posted by: santaheathen | January 5, 2007 2:07 AM
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“Anyone who denies the law of non-contradiction should be beaten and burned until he admits that to be beaten is not the same as not to be beaten, and to be burned is not the same as not to be burned.” - Avicenna
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 5, 2007 2:03 AM
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well WM,
On the one hand i commend you for at least being consistent with your empiricism (if only Timmy and others would be so honest).....
however, the law of contradiction has to be one of the most fundamental, non-negotiable laws necessary for you and I to even have a conversation. And you have basically demonstrated my entire point here in this thread that a (consistent) empiricist epistemology cannot even provide the conditions for a you and I to even have a rational conversation.
If it is not necessary, then please tell me what this sentence means:
"I hard car saw fat fart home nuggets pool bladder in."
I'm sorry WM, but I see no need to converse with you any further.
If the word "home" can mean "home" and "not home" at the same time and in the same respect in our conversations, then throw me in looney bin. Hell, put a bullet through me and get it over with.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 5, 2007 1:59 AM
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So, WM, is the following generalized summary accurate?
1. You were removed from your previous immersion in a belief system.
2. You were exposed to alternative belief systems.
3. You felt a need to reduce the conflict between systems.
4. Relatively suddenly the old system didn't make sense anymore and you abandoned it.
I'm not trying to grill you over old news, I'm looking for insight into how people change their beliefs.
In my case, my intense early religious immersion resulted in full faith as a pre-teen, but an increasingly rebellious attitude through high, school. I was eager to get away to college and cut loose. Which I did to excess, but I survived and am a wiser man for it all.
I think there were several factors that contributed to the weakening of my faith:
Knowledge of science was a factor. I learned and believed in evolutionary theory and couldn't see how anyone could reject it. I could no longer take everything in the Bible literally. The people who insisted in a literal interpretation lost credibility.
Observations of hypocrisy in SOME of the people in my church (principally the Pastor) was a factor.
Support from a close friend who was also rebelling from a strong religious background was a factor.
There was a situation that occured at Teenage Church summer camp in which the camp Pastor who I admired very much (and still do) had allowed us to listen to popular music. Someone with a high position in the Church Conference showed up and made a large scene and criticised him strongly.
And then there was sex - how could something that felt so good and didn't hurt anyone possibly be a major sin?
Maybe I just got tired of all the controlling guilt trip that the church and my parents were laying on me.
I went through a rebellious period - where everybody that believed was stupid, ignorant, weak-willed, hypocritical or some combination.
Then I became accepting of others beliefs, while wanting none of it myself. During my late 20's and early 30's I thought religion was relatively harmless and did good works.
Over the past 10 years I've realized that Faith of this nature sets up some really un-healthy mental processes in the individual that do spill over into other areas of life. And of course, I regard conservative literalists to be a major threat to the future of society in this country. Sam Harris only confirmed what I already believed, although he put a fine point on it, particularly as regards Islam.
Posted by: Doug | January 5, 2007 1:13 AM
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Jason - I'm sorry that I can't give a more certain answer to your question than I already have. I'm pretty darn sure (not 100% certain, since there could be issues that I have not thought through and situations that I'm unaware of, omniscient that I'm not) that something can't be true and not true. But since I'm not absolutely certain, I don't think that your subsequent questions apply.
Believe me, I wish that I was omniscient and could confidently provide a binary yes/no answer to your question. (wm for god? ... ok, maybe not!)
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 12:55 AM
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Jason,
I think I answered your question already, although talking with you, I might need a clearer idea of what you mean by "absolute," "certainty," and "absolute certainty." I have confidence in mathematical certainties and in probabilities.
Since I answered, please extend me the courtesy as well and tell me your answer to your own question. If yes, name one, and of course tell me why (using your own logic). If no, then how can we do even start to do (learn, build, etc.) anything?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 5, 2007 12:49 AM
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"Now, is this a universal law that is true at all times and in all places? Should we ever question this law?"
sorry about that...i asked two questions then gave options. Just ignore the second question.
Again: Is this a universal law that is true at all times and in all places?
If you answer:
Yes - then i would like to know how you reconcile that with your statement that we can not be 100% certain about anything.
No - then i would like for you to give an example of something that is and is not in the same respect and at the same time.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 5, 2007 12:48 AM
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WM,
Well, I'm no PhD candidate either, but it's a very simple question.
Let's define it: "one cannot say of something that it is and that it is not in the same respect and at the same time""
Now, is this a universal law that is true at all times and in all places? Should we ever question this law?
If you answer:
Yes - then i would like to know how you reconcile that with your statement that we can not be 100% certain about anything.
No - then i would like for you to give an example of something that is and is not in the same respect and at the same time.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 5, 2007 12:46 AM
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Oops ... that was me! Sorry!
Posted by: wm | January 5, 2007 12:30 AM
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Doug, the stimulus for me basically involved a moment of intense cognitive dissonance between action and beliefs and a question I asked myself to try to figure out whether the action was in error or the belief was in error. The details are personal enough that I'm not too excited about sharing them on the internet - and I don't think that they'd be useful in trying to provide a similar experience for others (believe me, I wish they would, I have a few family members that I think could use it!)
I think that there were several major things contributing to the change:
- The situation that I was in with respect to those heavily invested in my beliefs had changed. I was no longer physically dependent on them and there was some distance between us as well.
- I was in a place where I came into contact with people of many varying, conflicting beliefs. I think that this helped unleash my imagination of alternatives to my beliefs as well as emphasizing what should have been obvious - that beliefs do not necessarily correspond to reality.
- I was in such a miserable state of mind due to trying to live up to various beliefs and expectations that something had to give.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 5, 2007 12:29 AM
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WM - what was the nature of the stimulus that triggered your change?
Posted by: Doug | January 5, 2007 12:08 AM
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WM
Nothing could be more hopeful than your story.
Logic cracked the armor of belief.
You are proof that it can happen.
Inspiring.
Posted by: timmy | January 5, 2007 12:00 AM
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See WM?
Aren't you glad I defined the word "Timmy" for you?
All empiricists must answer for what I said. Sorry about that.
I only said that I was certain enough for me but he won't let it go.
And the irony of someone who can not answer 1+1 or any question for that matter calling someone else a coward for not answering his question.
The irony.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 11:54 PM
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Jason, I apologize if I misunderstood the nature of your inquiries. My understanding from the nature of your questions and comments was that you see a significant difference between 99.99% certainty and 100% certainty and think that science’s – indeed anybody’s – inability to achieve 100% certainty destroys any validity that it might have. Perhaps I misunderstood you. If so, maybe if you let me know where you were going with that line of discourse would help me engage you in a more meaningful dialogue.
I’m sorry that I can’t answer your question about the law of contradiction being open to doubt. I am not a philosopher, scientific or otherwise – I am sure that there are much better minds than mine much better schooled in philosophy who would be better at discussing that question with you. As an engineer, I would tend to say that X cannot be true and not true at the same time – but I am a simple engineer and tend to think very practically! It wouldn’t do me a lot of a good if my circuits and software worked, yet didn’t work! I am curious as to where you are going with that, though, assuming you got any particular answer.
Posted by: wm | January 4, 2007 11:54 PM
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Thanks, Timmy. I have been enjoying your posts! I have trouble believing that Jason is a lost cause, though. I'm pretty sure that there's a rational soul underneath all that rusting armor of belief just aching to let in the pure, sweet light of reason.
I have sympathy for Jason because I too was once a believer. I grew up in a situation in which for me not to believe would have been intolerable. So I'm well acquainted with how one can use pat arguments provided by authorative sources to construct a set of armor around a set of prepackaged beliefs. I know how the mind can latch on to these arguments and use them to deflect contradictory evidence and arguments, carefully avoiding subjecting the armor itself to scrutiny, much less the beliefs that it protects. I also know what a toll this can take on a person who is trapped within that armor.
I was very fortunate that I finally had my moment of awakening when I was in college - and it really was something that occurred in a moment. Somehow, a critical question managed to make it through a chink in the armor and the suit just blew up. My life has been so much more beautiful and meaningful since that moment that I can't help but hope that the light of reason reaches others who are in a similar situation. I don't know if Jason is one of them, but if he is, I believe there is hope for him. From the tone of his emails, I suspect he is fairly young - maybe that improves the odds in his favor.
Posted by: wm | January 4, 2007 11:39 PM
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Well it's late and in extra innings , but I'd like a turn at bat if I may: First, Victoria deserves a bowling trophy or something for her bravery in even posting on this blog...if the wrong (or most pious) imam gets wind of it, it may be off with her head. (That's what religious certainty get you jason--I'll take scientific uncertainty, thank-you) I admire your courage Victoria and hope that you continue to study the history of your religion as well as others throughout the world. (You are aware that mohammad's wife dictated the koran from memory for her illiterate husband are you not?) Like all "holy" books, there is nothing holy about them and they belong in that fire that Timmy started where they will burn baby burn, much to jason's chagrin.
Although I'm not a fan of book burning, our world would be safer and more rational without them. The problem lies in the fact that too many religious-minded folk use their "holy" book as a "how to" manual for living their life. When that particular manual encourages death to the infidel or non-believer (which is especially ironic in the koranic sense, because non-believers are non-believers because allah made them non-believers....mmmm, what a yummy god that is: I'll make non-believers so you can murder them in my name), that manual ceases to be useful, not to mention inhumane. I propose that any "holy" book that does not conform to the UN's Declaration of Human Rights ought to be relegated to ashes.
I believe it was Doug, no, I think it was, (with 99.999% certainty), who got a good start on a list of changes we can make to help the religous-minded out of their "holy" book-imposed inhumanity. (Maybe we could replace their old books with "The Zen of Motorcycle Maintenance" or anything by Dr. Phil...)
Well, my turn at bat is done, hopefully nobody got hurt or fired or caught for illegal betting. I will now exit stage left with the brilliantly existential lyrics of Billie Joe Armstrong: "I walk a lonely road, the only one that I have ever known. Don't know where it goes......
Sometimes I wish someone up there will find me, 'til then I walk alone..."
Peace to all of us on our solo journeys in this life. J.
Posted by: janine | January 4, 2007 11:37 PM
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WM,
"I think that you may be struggling with the idea of likelihood. Nobody that I know can be 100% certain about anything, whether the question is whether or not paper always burns or ones favorite deity exists and communicates with select people."
Actually, if you've been paying attention, you'll notice above that i was the one that actually expressed doubt concerning Timmy's claim that newspapers always burn when thrown into the fire.
Timmy said it's certain. And he bases this certainty on previous observation.
I then asked Timmy to provide a logical syllogism that demonstrates for me how he deduced that "certainty" from his previous observations.
He said he can't. It burns because it just does. And i'm a retard for doubting it.
So WM, your post to me is uncalled for. Perhaps you need to chat with Timmy.
Secondly, since RB is too much of a coward to answer the question, I'll ask you...especially since you believe that we can not be 100% certain about anything:
Is the law of contradiction open to doubt?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 11:15 PM
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Okay, I'm on that site, whoo-hoo, lots to chat about with those folks!!! See ya!
Posted by: Kaattie | January 4, 2007 10:59 PM
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Welcome WM,
A few tips on dealing with Jason,
1)Logic is out of the question.
2) and you will notice that he uses the word "Timmy" a lot.
It means, everyone else on this thread but Jason.
He named the term after me because I said that I was certain of something and now I represent all empiricists.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 10:38 PM
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I'm going to check it our Katie,
See you there.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 10:28 PM
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Okay, just registered for that person's chat. Very distasteful but if perhaps the pot is well-stirred, it could have beneficial effects...Whoever goes there, just make sure you don't accidentally click on something that could make her more money!
Posted by: kaattie | January 4, 2007 10:05 PM
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When are we moving to the Ann Coulter site? I have been reading this thread from the beginning and I'm really tired of Jason's nonsense; maybe we can get better nonsense somewhere else. I agree with Timmy, Jason's posts don't exist - who here can prove that they do?
Posted by: Kaattie | January 4, 2007 9:55 PM
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Thank you all for the unusually interesting posts – I appreciate all the food for thought, despite the thread stalling out in a few places …
Jason,
I think that you may be struggling with the idea of likelihood. Nobody that I know can be 100% certain about anything, whether the question is whether or not paper always burns or ones favorite deity exists and communicates with select people.
But we can evaluate the evidence for various claims and make rough evaluations of their likelihood. For example, I can be fairly certain that I will not find quarters growing on my pea plant when I go outside. Maybe if I’m lucky I will find peas, but nothing that I have read or personally experienced provides good evidence that it is possible for quarters to grow on pea plants. I am confident – in every practical sense, certain – that coins do not grow on vines.
In the same sense, I am certain that paper burns if the typical conditions for burning are met (hot fire, dry paper, etc). If I ever come across a case in which it does not burn, I will reevaluate my estimation. For now, I feel that behaving in line with this certainty will serve me in good stead.
Fortunately, we do not need 100% certainty in order to make reasonable evaluations of what is likely and what is not. I, like previous posters, am certain that it’s not a good idea to step out in front of a fast-moving truck, jump off a high building, or spice up my tea with a little arsenic. I can make the reasonable evaluation that none of these things would normally end well for me. If I needed to be 100% certain of evaluations of these types before I acted on them, I would never have survived to adulthood.
All this talk about absolute certainties is pointless. Nobody lives his/her life with perfect knowledge of everything that has happened and will happen everywhere. But at least science provides a good framework for evaluating likelihoods, which is more than can be said of magical thinking, in which anything goes if you just believe hard enough.
I hope that enough people of faith reevaluate their unreasonable certainties that we on this planet are able to survive to a more highly-evolved “adulthood.”
Posted by: wm | January 4, 2007 9:32 PM
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Jason: go away until you have something cogent to add.
Ok, I'm quite intrigued by Richard Dawkins' explanation for the origin of religion, from his most recent book, the God Delusion:
From an evolutionary POV, why does religion exist?
The hypothesis is childish gullibility. Children who obey their parents' admonistion: "Don't swim in that lake, a monster will eat you." Because it's true, the lake is full of crocodiles. Kids who listen will survive.
Religion is a by-product: An authority tells them something, they listen. Some people -- we all know some -- never outgrow this.
Bruce, Victoria: are you victims of childish guibillity?
Posted by: RB | January 4, 2007 9:30 PM
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RB,
Is the law of contradiction a principal that is open to doubt?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 8:50 PM
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Who was it earlier that had the line about non stamp collecting.
I liked that one.
Surely if 60 to 70 percent of the worlds population collected stamps, we would need a term for non stamp collectors other than "non stamp collectors".
Just like we have had to come up with a name for the non believer, (Atheist) because 60 to 70 percent of the world are believers.
I am an atheist because when people tell me about God, I do not believe them. I do not believe them on my own. Not as a group with all of the other atheists. I did not ever have to be told about atheism or what atheism was before I could decide if I was an atheist. In fact, I was an atheist long before I knew what an atheist was.
Hence, when I became an atheist, I did not join any group or belief system. I simply didn't believe when somebody told me about God. I didn't have to be told about the option of not believing. It was a natural state of being for me.
If nobody ever told me about God in the first place, I would be the same person I am today, but not an atheist, because I would have nothing to "not believe".
In other words.
Athee ain't no "ism" man.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 8:39 PM
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Jason:
Please define "define" as you are using it.
Ah, shucks rube, here it is:
dogma: a principal or set of principals set down by an authority as incontrovertibly true, ie the Christian dogma of the Trinity.
or the dogma that the Aryan race was superior to all, or Pol Pot's dogma that, first, all educated people must be killed, or Islamic dogma that only those who die by the sword in Mohammad's name can ascend to heaven instantaneously to enjoy the nirvana of 72 virgins.
Take your pick. (Is your answer "2"?)
Posted by: RB | January 4, 2007 8:30 PM
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"They reject dogma of all shapes."
RB,
Please define "dogma" as you are using it. One naturalist named Pam told me that dogma is only the stuff of religions, and here you say "religious" dogma is a subset...
so please, define what you mean by "dogma" so that i know what you are saying.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 8:14 PM
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(Whisper) He's not taking it well.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 8:14 PM
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Jason:
You need to convert to Shi'ia Islam. Then, you can self-flaggellate to your heart's desire... in Iraq.
Meanwhile: 1+1=?
BTW, are you an albino?
(Yes, everyone else, see DaVinci Code for this obscure reference. Indulge me.)
Posted by: RB | January 4, 2007 8:13 PM
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Timmy is such a hypocrite.
Timmy claims he is after peace, yet he calls me a "retard" because i doubted his "certain" claim that newspapers always burn.
There is no peace between empiricists and Christians and those that walk the middle are either ignorant or too much of a coward to fully embrace the logical implications of their worldview.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 7:55 PM
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Hi all:
I haven't commented for a few days, but I've read it all.
Bruce (you are polite, thoughtful and civil, the 1st and 3rd I'm not):
" But it is naive to think that only religious people do evil, nasty things. Look at that shining atheist utopia, the Soviet Union. Or the PRC. Or North Korea. Or Cuba. Or the Pol Pot regime."
You say you've read Harris and Dawkins and Dennett. They reject dogma of all shapes. Religious dogma is a subset. The dogmatic regimes you listed differ not at all from the Taliban. They too we reject. The focus, in this forum, is on dogmatic religious.
But your charge should be addressed. The religiously dogmatic frequently pull out these examples -- Stalin, Hitler -- and claim, ...what, that religious murder has been no different than those who have set themselves up as God and murdered?
Are you saying that crimes in the name of religion are "better" than crimes committed by those who have set themselves up as demi-Gods?
Again, one should reject all forms of dogma, whenever and how so ever it appears.
But to assert: Stay with the devil you know, well, not a strong argument, dude.
And please be accurate: Cuba under Castro has not been accused of mass murder.
Posted by: RB | January 4, 2007 7:50 PM
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Puzzled,
Do you believe in absolute certainties...yes or no? And if so, name one.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 7:47 PM
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LT
My most recent post is a response to yours.
In it you will see that I do not believe that all Christians are bad nor do I believe that the good Christians are responsible for the actions of the bad ones.
I do state however that your answers to the religious questions on the census form lend support to Pat Robertson and Gerry Falwell and Dick Cheney and so on. This is not support that you intend to give. But it happens anyway.
Further to that, My last post sums up my feelings about how we can work together. For the sake of peace.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 7:13 PM
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Re: responses to my post from two nights ago:
RB: "The burden of proof (of God) lies not with non-believers. It lies with thee..."
To RB or anyone who thinks that believers have the burden of proving God, I would like a clarification of why that is. I'm not pursuaded of the standard that whoever advances a belief has to prove it. By that standard, the quoted statement above, which looks like a belief, needs to be proven before I accept the burden of proof of God. That doesn't mean I couldn't accept the standard, but it means I need to see a more cogent argument, for my edification.
Also, how strong is this burden of proof anyway (RB or anyone)? If you're going to tell me I have to prove God, surely you'll also tell me what constitutes an acceptable proof to you before I attempt one. Otherwise, it's another effecive a priori rejection of God.
RB also wrote: "The blasphemy of faith (can't you see this?) is that anything goes." I already gave an example showing that not anything goes in my post from two nights ago, but I don't see a rebuttal. RB just repeated Sam Harris' argument using a made-up religion without showing why example was faulty.
Now on to Timmy's comment, very briefly:
I thought he would counter my post with reasoned argument. Instead, he resorted to an ad hominem attack on the "dangerousness" of all Christians that isn't even valid. Most of the Christian beliefs he points to are not dangerous, only offensive to some. Only this one smacks of dangerousness.
"And you think that legal policies and political decisions should take into consideration what your Bible says on the matter."
"Take into consideration" isn't dangerous; it's intellectually honest. "Derive literally from"? That's dangerous, and here he has a point. But Timmy knows Christians aren't a monolithic group, so he adds another inaccurate ad hominem attack:
"And if you don't agree with the last one then you support those who do."
Well, I can bear it. If Jesus could bear suffering and death on the cross, I can bear an ad hominem attack.
So why am I writing this? In part to defend my arguments, yes. Also to suggest that atheist arguments seem less problematic when the rules for what counts as valid argument haven't been agreed on.
Posted by: LT | January 4, 2007 6:43 PM
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Jason continues to engage in word play. What is "[fill in your favorite word]"? Then, what is "truth"? Let me guess: God!
What is interesting is that he challenges people to define words like "truth" and yet cannot tell us why the Bible is the definitive word of God.
By his own logic (some ramblings following Gordon Clark), nothing is certain. But, how can anyone say with any certainty that God exists and God is the way some book describes (in myriad forms, too)? Essentially what you're saying is: "I cannot be certain of anything, but I will assert that God exists and he is the ONLY source of 'truth' (there's that word again)."
Actually, assertion of God as Truth is an empty statement: it is closer to a kind of assumption built into a model, something that you assume to be correct for the sake of advancing an argument. And within this model, one might find internal consistency (although the Bible is riddled with inconsistencies and omissions). However, as with any model, if it lacks predictive power, then no matter how good-looking the model with its black leather bindings, it is useless (read Milton Friedman).
One of the objectives of scientific inquiry is to be able to predict ("if A then B"), but not necessarily with mathematical certainty (which is the closest we can get to absolute certainty). That is where probabilistic models come in. For instance, in statistical models, we use confidence intervals as measures of accuracy: Given the emprical data (sample), and if we assume that the sample is representative of the population, then if repeated 100 times, about 95 times X will happen.
Now one might argue (and Jason might sputter) that empirical observation is unreliable, or, there might be measurement errors. Sure. That does make the problem more difficult. That is why we remain very pessimistic until other studies have corroborated the results. Even then, we don't say that hypothesis is right, but just that "the data are consistent with the hypothesis." Researchers do the best they can with the measurement instruments available to them. If that makes science unreliable, fine. But more pointedly, if you don't accept that the airplane will likely not crash, for instance, then you have to drive. But how do you trust your car not to crash? You can't. You cannot go anywhere, and you would have to build a bunker that can withstand nuclear war and go inside (although the people who built that bunker perhaps may have done a poor job... ad naseum).
Absolute certainty does not exist. The Bible? Please! What is a Bible? By your own logic, you cannot define it. The only answer possible from Jason's perspective: "Try again, moron." I don't know why Jason needs to call others "moron." No decent religion I know teaches that. I know, I know, what is "religion"? What is "decent"? What is "is"?
If that is what being a believer is, then church is an insane asylum. I don't know who should be more disturbed at such irrational ramblings: atheists or Christians?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 4, 2007 6:41 PM
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What I learned on this thread.
Believers will believe.
There is no evidence or argument that will make them not believe. Why?
Because they believe.
Although it was fun putting that theory to the test one more time with such inspired intellectual back-up.
It held true. The believer will believe.
We can not offer the believer an alternative.
It is not community, belonging, charity or emotional support that draws them to religion.
It is hope.
Hope that the end of this life is not the end of life.
We can offer them community, emotional support and charity, but we can not offer them an afterlife.
Therefore we have nothing for them.
So the believer will believe.
But I take hope of my own from this thread.
It's very existence is hope.
But I think I found something useful and positive here.
I found out that a believer like Bruce, can be made to see that the problems that are created by religious dogma out of control are not just atheist problems.
In fact, I think I got Bruce to realize that his responsibility to do something about religious extremism is perhaps even greater than that of the non believer.
Not because any of it is his fault for believing what he believes.
But because it is a world problem, and a serious one.
And Bruce can see now that his responsibility to help, is not because it is his fault. It is because of his unique qualification to be able to talk some sense into dogmatic religious fanatics. He can speak to them in a language we can not.
So for those who say that it does no good to debate the believer, there is no talking sense to them.
I did not have to make Bruce stop believing to talk some sense into him. He was quite open to the sense that I talked him into.
Did you see Bruce last night decide to engage Jason believer to believer?
Of all people on this thread, it is Bruce who has given me the most amount of hope. And a new way of looking at the solution more closely than I have been looking at the problem.
Peace be with us all.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 6:38 PM
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Guten abend Andy. Ich will mit dir sprechen. Jetzt, bin ich auch friedlich.
Ich verstehe, nur eine kleine bischen, was sie haben gesagt.
Sie sind richtig. Jason ist ein dammlicher Trottel. Er ist auch nicht ganz richtig.
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 4, 2007 5:19 PM
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From thereignofchrist.com:
The Gospel of Jesus Christ is first and foremost the Gospel of Restoration and Reconciliation. Our motto is, “Relating the Gospel to the world through knowledge in order to bring healing to the nations.”
Mahatma Gandhi:
Truth and love will always prevail.
Truth: Seek, explore, experiment and so on, with an open mind and a clear head, and it will reveal itself, step by step, layer by layer.
Love: Suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune and be slow to anger, be clear with your enemies and kind to your friends.
All this is good. Let the rest go.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 4, 2007 5:13 PM
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Skeptic takes the position that my whole core religious experience is based upon "wishful thinking." By taking this position, he is able to dismiss everything I say. He cannot conclusively prove that Jesus did not rise from the dead, but he wishes very strongly that He did not, because if He did, then Skeptic is totally wrong. He is emotionally and intellectually invested in atheism, so he must take the position that Jesus' resurrection is a myth. Is that his own wishful thinking? I could never convince Skeptic that I am not engaging in wishful thinking, because no matter what I tell him about my own mental processes, he will play the "wishful thinking" card. Easy out.
Andy Ross, who most us think is the most intelligent person on this thread, was surprisingly open to my experience. I hesitate to interpret what he said, since it is probably miles over my head, but I understand him to say that it is possible to receive information from people who have lived in the past. If I said that, I would be immediately attacked as being irrational, but Andy can get away with it because he is basically a materialist and is smarter than most of us. But maybe the line between the physical and what the Bible calls the spiritual isn't so broad. There is much that we don't know.
It is popular to mock the stories and concepts in the Bible, and while I see some of them in a more metaphorical light, if I try to explain my position I am immediately accused of cherry-picking and inconsistency. I can give you my whole theology, but you don't want it, so I won't bore you. Let me try another approach. Some of you have said that you sought to have an experience with Jesus (asked Jesus into your heart, etc.) and experienced nothing. Hypothetically, assume that you did in fact experience something - some sense of joy, peace, relief, forgiveness, the presence of the divine. You might very well have thought something like "well, maybe there is something to this Jesus stuff, after all." You would have immediately been more sympathetic to the Bible, because it is the book that contains the information about Jesus, whom you felt that you had just experienced in some way. That would have been the beginning of your experience, and over the years you would have refined your understanding of that experience. A sympathetic reading of the text yields a different view than mocking and scorn. You would have struggled with some of the stories, but perhaps you would have adopted a more metaphorical interpretation, as I have on some of them. But you would not reject them, because they are part of the faith environment that explains the experience you have had.
I cannot defend myself against a charge of wishful thinking, because you will level that charge against any defense I attempt to make. You have made the a priori assumption that the resurrection is false, so anything that even hints at supporting it MUST be wishful thinking or irrational.
I have enjoyed participating and have learned much, but I have decided to end my participation in this thread - I've said all I have to say. Here is my e-mail address in case anyone wants to contact me: bruce@bburlesonlaw.com. Let me know if you go to another site like Ann Coulter.
Peace
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 4, 2007 4:53 PM
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Andy the Moron,
Good...you know it's Thursday. I didn't ask about "Thor", but thanks for the additional info.
Now, what is a "day"?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 4:50 PM
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Sam,
Do forgive the descent into childishness in my last three comments on your blog. I had hoped to enjoy some more civilized discourse but the mood is gone. When humor dies, it is time to gird the loins for war. Let someone else edit all these comments for you. There's gold in all that dirt somewhere, but you have better things to do. I wish you well in your further work.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 4, 2007 4:28 PM
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Ted, i thought so...
I'll let you two be then...you know, the one that says he's certain about the newspaper and the other one he says no one can be certain...
i hope ya'll have a productive conversation...you two...
ha.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 4:18 PM
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Jemand redet mit mir? Ich sehe niemand anders in der Nähe mit der Name Andy.
Ich werde einmal behilflich sein. Heute ist Donnerstag. Der Gott des Donners ist Thor.
Thor donnert mit einem grossen Hammer. Dazu kommt auch Blitz.
Heute bin ich aber friedlich. Die alten Götter sind für mich gleichgültig.
Ich denke, Jason ist ein dämmlicher Trottel. Schönen Tag noch an allen!
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 4, 2007 3:54 PM
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In her recent post Karen said “One last thought. I am amazed by how many people tell us what God should be like, if he existed, how he should act, what he should want of us etc. God existed before us and will exist after us. he does not need our approval or us dictating his behavior so that we can then accept and worship him. What kind of a God would that be? Certainly not one that is worth worshipping. As He said: I am that I am.” I don’t know why Karen is so amazed by people, including myself, who tell her what God WOULD be like, if he exists. After all, by telling us what God IS like, she has gone one step beyond telling us what God WOULD be like. She has already decided what God WOULD be like and this decision allows her to decide what she accepts as true and false from the Bible. I could be going out on a limb here, but my guess is that Karen does not think that God has commanded us to stone homosexuals, even though this is clearly stated in the Bible. I suspect that she does not go out and stone homosexuals herself. But why doesn’t she? I suspect that she has decided that God WOULD NOT make such a commandment, that the God she believes in WOULD NEVER require us to stone homosexuals. Therefore, she probably makes frequent use of the question “What would God do or not do?” as she analyzes the Bible and makes other decisions. I don’t begrudge her for using such a method, but I do find it hypocritical of her to criticize others who use that same method (question). We are not using this method to dictate to God, if he exists, how he should behave. We are using it to try to understand how God might be, if he does exist. If Karen accepts the idea that if he exists, God is an eternal, all-knowing, all-wise, all-powerful, perfectly good being who created the universe, then certain behaviors are compatible with that nature, and certain behaviors are not compatible with it. It is legitimate (for theists and atheists alike) to ask, if God exists and if he has this nature, how would he act and not act. Some of us believe that God WOULD NOT create a place of eternal suffering in which he placed some people, that he WOULD NOT want us to stone homosexuals, and that he WOULD NOT cause a resurrection of a man two thousand years ago to communicate a lesson. Karen is entitled to believe, mistakenly, that God WOULD DO these things, but she needs to explain how these things are compatible with the nature of the God which she postulates. She also needs to give up her criticism of those who use the same “WOULD method” that she herself employs.
Posted by: Skeptic | January 4, 2007 3:48 PM
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Words of Hope: John 3:16
Words of even greater hope:
The category of "Not Religious" recently replaced "Muslim" as the fastest growing demographic in the world.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 3:41 PM
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Right Timmy:
I hereby join you and pledge never again to reply to any of Jsaon's poste. It is quite simply a waste of time.
Posted by: Ted Swart | January 4, 2007 3:36 PM
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:4. Because for people of other faiths or of no religious faith, being in effect forced to pay lip service to the Christian version of the calendar by uttering the letters "A.D." is frankly unreasonable, just as it would be unreasonable to expect everyone to keep saying "Hail Mary, full of grace.":
Hey Andy the moron, what day is it?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 3:29 PM
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Oops, sorry, folks, I did a blooper.
The phrase "moronic inferno" did not originate with Nabokov but with Wyndham Lewis, who passed it on to Saul Bellow, who passed it on in turn to my old buddy Martin Amis, who used it as the title of one of his books. Martin was always fond of Vladimir, hence the confusion.
Anyway, I guess the insult remains.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 4, 2007 3:19 PM
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This thread seems to be petering out, so I don’t know if others will even read these comments, but I will offer them anyway.
Bruce said “I have believed in the resurrection of Jesus for decades, and never once in that time did I ever sense, feel or otherwise irrationally conclude that I was supposed to kill anyone, abortion doctors or otherwise, on orders from heaven. Even if I wanted to (which I don't), that would be clearly against the teachings of the one I say was resurrected.” If Bruce is being sincere here when he says that he has never thought about killing anyone on the basis of divine orders, then I, for one, am pleased about this and congratulate him for it. (I suspect that because of his confidence in the value of faith and revelation, however, he is more prone to have such violent thoughts in the future, but I won’t go there.) I don’t think that Bruce read my post very carefully. My point there was that FAITHISTS, like Bruce, provide a fertile ground for violence, not that he has or would engage in violence himself. Bruce preaches, encourages, and models for others an epistemology which contributes to the CULTURE OF IRRATIONALITY in our world, and this fuels others who are prone to violence. Bruce’s FAITHISM is unethical in and of itself. It is intellectual dishonesty and an abuse of intelligence. But, it goes further than that because it encourages and enables others to commit more serious unethical acts.
Bruce makes a mess out of the ancient hunter parable that I presented in my last post by first suggesting that the hunt be one for “ultimate knowledge” and then ending up by accepting the original purpose of the hunt– to find animals for food. Bruce’s FAITHIST claim is that revelation is a viable road to objective knowledge. He actually believes that Jesus rose from the dead (a conclusion about objective reality) not because that belief is supported by rational thinking about the objective evidence that is available to us but remarkably because he allegedly had a REVELATION! The point of the hunter parable was to demonstrate that revelation is not a reliable path. If some members of the hypothetical clan split off to follow Bruce using his method of revelation, they would not survive very long. This is because revelation just doesn’t work! Yet, Bruce continues to push the idea that it is legitimate to apply this method to the ultimate questions of the universe. It is unethical for him to do so.
The actual trinity for Christians like Bruce (and for other religious people for that matter) consists of FAITH, REVELATION, and WISHFUL THINKING. These are their gods! They can’t even get to propositions about God, Jesus, an afterlife, Heaven, Hell, etc. without first kneeling at the altar of the F.R.W.Trinity. Their religious dogmas ride on the back of a slow moving turtle of an obsolete epistemology. If they were to cast aside their three false gods and kneel down instead at the altar of the god of TRUTH, they would quickly adopt a different methodology.
Bruce said “You conclude that it is more likely than not that he [Jesus] did not rise from the dead. This tells me nothing - either he did or he did not. Of course it is improbable - that is why it is unique. The universe is improbable, and it is here; life is improbable, and here we are. It is improbable every time someone wins the lottery. Probabilities are meaningless in the individual situation. Something either happens or it doesn't.” No, I make a much stronger claim about the probability that Jesus rose from the dead than what Bruce implies. I claim that after one considers all the available evidence and applies rational principles, one must conclude that it is extremely unlikely (nearly but not quite impossible) that Jesus rose from the dead. It’s not even a close call! Yes, Bruce and I agree about at least one thing– either Jesus rose from the dead or he did not; it can’t be both ways; it is a matter of objective fact whether he did or he did not. However, Bruce is mistaken that “probabilities are meaningless in the individual situation”. Probabilities are extremely meaningful in the individual situation. Since we can not go back in time to observe a series of events, we must carefully examine the evidence we have with a rational approach to conclude WHAT PROBABLY HAPPENED. We engage in this type of probabilistic thinking everyday, and we do it with respect to events of the past and events of the future. Of course, Bruce would want us to put aside this type of thinking because it will lead to a conclusion which is the opposite of what he WISHES TO BE TRUE. Bruce misses the mark on a couple of his other claims in this regard. First, it is not improbable every time someone wins the lottery. It is highly probable that someone will win the lottery; someone does nearly every week. The lottery was designed for someone to regularly win. It is only improbable that any particular individual will win. Secondly, the universe is not improbable. It is 100% probable. We don’t have to guess at this– we have a universe! I don’t know why anyone would say it is improbable. Thirdly, it is not clear that life is improbable. It might be, but this is a debatable issue. One can make a pretty good case that life is more likely to occur in our universe than it is not. Given the enormous opportunities in our vast universe for the right molecules to come together, it seems a good bet that life would develop. We know that it did at least once.
Bruce said “The inward revelation I experienced is similar to meeting a person, but on the level that Christians refer to as "spirit." To me, this confirms that Jesus is alive.” Bruce and other Christians have these revelatory experiences. We ought not deny these experiences in the same way that we ought not deny the experience of somebody having a stomach ache. After all, many of us nonbelievers have had these experiences ourselves! (I had them once as a Christian.) The problem is that Bruce and other Christians have the wrong interpretation of their experiences. The intuition that they have during a “revelation” may be like meeting a person, but that does not mean that they are actually meeting a person. The way it seems is not the way it is. Jesus died nearly two thousand years ago; he is not alive today. What is going on with Bruce and other Christians is that they are pretending that Jesus is still alive. They are “acting as if” Jesus were still alive. It would be like pretending that Abraham Lincoln is still alive, but have a feeling of certainty that he is, and actually talking to him. Or it would be like pretending that a loved one who had died was still alive, feeling certain that they are still alive, and talking to them. In fact, this latter experience is probably the origin of the concept of the soul. People just don’t like it when their loved ones die, they usually WISH that they had not died, and they sometimes WISH IT SO STRONGLY that they deny that they died at all. Bruce WANTS Jesus to be still alive because he has come to love the character of Jesus described in the NT, and he WANTS IT SO STRONGLY that he has come to deny that Jesus ever died. Probably Jesus’ disciples were subject to this same kind of psychological process as they suffered deep grief over their fallen leader. But once again we must grow up and acknowledge that WISHING DOESN’T MAKE IT TRUE! Bruce and the other Christians would do best to simply recognize that Jesus was a man who died and stayed dead like any other man, who was not divine in any way, who had his flaws and made his mistakes, but who had many outstanding ideas and qualities from which we can learn. They should revere Jesus somewhat like most of us revere Abraham Lincoln.
Bruce said “ The encounter with Him [Jesus] is like a sensory experience in another level or dimension.” Bruce has no idea of what a sensory experience in another level or dimension would be like, therefore to make comparisons to such an experience is fruitless.
Bruce said “ So far, while your arguments confirm to me that I cannot prove the resurrection objectively, they have not convinced me that I am just engaging in wishful thinking.” I agree with another person who posted recently on this site who said Bruce is “half way home”. However, not only can Bruce not prove the resurrection objectively, he can not show that it was more likely to have occurred than not. Bruce frequently talks about “proof” and I think he uses it as kind of a “straw man argument”. Most of us nonbelievers would be quite satisfied with something short of “proof”, but Bruce can not come even close to it. We should not take too seriously anything which Bruce offers from his TRINITARIAN GOD of FAITH, REVELATION, AND WISHFUL THINKING.
Bruce said in response to another poster “On the choices you mentioned, if you don't even believe in Jesus, then hell shouldn't even be an issue for you. If you believe in him, then you aren't going to hell. If you believe in him but you still don't like the idea of hell, then you are just disagreeing with him, not doubting his existence. The question only becomes relevant when you believe in God to begin with.” Huh? Bruce seems really confused here. I certainly believe that Jesus existed. He was a man who lived from about 4 BC to 30 AD in the Middle East. I do not believe that he rose from the dead, that he was God or the son of God, or that he was without sin (he committed some whoppers). Now does Bruce believe that I am going to suffer eternal torment in Hell or not? He seems to have confused the issue of Jesus’ existence with other issues about Jesus.
Bruce said “If God exists outside of this universe, in another dimension or reality where other laws apply, he may be infinitely more complex that [than] this universe, and there may be no need in that realm (eternity?) for him to have been created. Now, I can't prove that is the case, but that is one possibility that the scripture allows for.” I am glad that Bruce begins his statement here with the word “if”. It shows a recognition that he is proposing a hypothesis. So far, so good. But the problem is that he asserts in other posts, that he is certain or very confident that everything which follows the “if” is true. He quickly fills the gap between plausibility and certainty with faith-based thinking. Furthermore, there is no evidence that there is another dimension, another reality, or another realm in which other laws apply. This is pure speculation.
Bruce said “My question about the brain did not imply anything about a monotheistic God at all. I simply wanted to know why directionless evolution would produce such a brain. Either there is direction or there is no direction; either there is design or there is no design. If there is no design or direction, why should such a brain exist? I think it's a valid question.” I think Bruce has a good question here and I’ll attempt an answer. Through evolution a bigger, more complex, and more adaptive brain gradually developed over millions of years. This was not a sudden leap from no brain to an advanced brain (as Creationists might want us to believe). Evolution does not have a direction in advance of changes. We humans only perceive some direction in the products of evolution as we look back on changes. The direction we see in hindsight involves increasing size, complexity, and adaptability. Mutations in genes occur by “chance”. These mutations result in body structures which produce an advantage, disadvantage, or no effect in the struggle for survival. Those organisms with the structures leading to an advantage end up living longer and reproducing more than other organisms for whom the structures have no effect or lead to a disadvantage. The organisms with the advantages gradually come to be in a higher ratio in the population. Changes producing a bigger and more complex brain have survival advantage.
Bruce said “But to put all Christians in the same category as Osama Bin Laden is ludicrous, just as it would be ridiculous to put you in the same category as Stalin.” Most of us posting on this website are in at least one same category as Stalin; we are in the category of ATHEISTS. On the other hand, Bruce and his other Christian buddies are in at least one same category as Osama Bin Laden AND Stalin; they are in the category of FAITHISTS. They believe in the value of seeking knowledge through an irrational method called FAITH. Furthermore most of us posting on this website, including Bruce, are probably in the category of NONVIOLENT PROBLEM SOLVERS.
Bruce said to one poster “If I understand the revelation to be of a person [Jesus], and not just a proposition, can you accept that over the past three decades that I have, by my own internal testing, refined the belief in that revelation into a knowledge - not an absolutely certain knowledge, but a working engagement (I avoid the overly used and trite word "relationship") with an entity that I understand to be Jesus? Is that so irrational that my experience can be referred to as "blind faith" or "wishful thinking?" The answer to Bruce’s question here is “YES!” Bruce’s fractured thinking goes something like this: 1) Jesus died almost 2000 years ago. 2) There are unfounded claims in the Bible that he came back to life after he died. 3) I sure wish that Jesus did not die; I wish that he were still alive today. 4) I have had one or more intuitive experiences in which it felt that I was in the presence of Jesus. 5) Therefore, Jesus must not have died at all; he must have been resurrected from the dead! Once again, it is WISHFUL THINKING which drives his thinking. Not only does Bruce wish that Jesus were still alive because it gives him hope that he will survive his own death, he also wishes that God would install in him an intuition that Jesus is still alive because it gives him a feeling that he is special.
Faith, revelation, and wishful thinking are like litter thrown along the roadside. They pollute our beautiful natural world. Those, like Bruce, are behaving unethically by continuing to litter and pollute the intellectual and cultural landscape. They know they are behaving dishonestly, but they continue to do it anyway. Why? Because they value wishful thinking to a greater degree than intellectual honesty.
Posted by: Skeptic | January 4, 2007 3:02 PM
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Keep it coming Andy,
And don't listen to the plees to dumb it down for us mortals.
I learn everytime you type.
I'm going to have to read your books.
Cheers
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 2:57 PM
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Hmm, morons ...
Ann Coulter: "When did "B.C." (before Christ) and "A.D." (anno Domini, "in the year of the Lord") get replaced with "BCE" (before the common era) and "CE" (common era)? ... These new linguistic conventions — like going from "winning" to "losing" in Iraq — simply spread like an invisible bacterial invasion." [December 13, 2006]
Wake up, Ann. When we decided to be nice to Jews, that's when. But why should we be so nice to Jews that we respect their sensitivity to how we number the years?
1. Because it's elementary human decency to be nice to people who have given you no reason to be nasty to them, and Jews as a group have given us no good reason to be nasty to them.
2. Because many fine people who have made outstanding contributions to the civilization that we know and cherish have been Jews, including Jesus, and we can use this small opportunity to help honor that fact.
3. Because the Nazis were nasty to them and we want to put as much symbolic distance between ourselves and that sort of outrageous behavior as possible, even if it means overdoing it slightly.
OK, this is a fine concession to political correctness but surely this is such a trivial issue that it borders on absurdity. Why is this issue even worth talking about?
4. Because for people of other faiths or of no religious faith, being in effect forced to pay lip service to the Christian version of the calendar by uttering the letters "A.D." is frankly unreasonable, just as it would be unreasonable to expect everyone to keep saying "Hail Mary, full of grace."
5. Because by bowing to political correctness on this salient but essentially trivial issue, we reduce the opportunity for disaffected people to start findng fault with our social conventions in more important areas.
6. Because other people such as Muslims and the Chinese have other calendars, and we want to make our base as solid as possible before we start having to explain to them all why we are unwilling to fiddle any further with the calendar.
Maybe so, but the numbering still starts with the conventional year of the birth of Jesus. Why perpetrate this altogether unnecessary outrage to all red-blooded non-Christians?
7. Because the choice of numbering system is arbitrary, and at least there are plenty of Christians who are satisfied by the choice, just as there are plenty of English speakers who are happy that English is the international default language.
8. Because at least all the peoples of the Abrahamic faiths can settle for "BCE" and "CE"; after all, even Muslims accept Jesus as a prophet, so nothing stops them from regarding him as a sort of patron saint of the calendar, who may be allowed at least this enduring influence on the course of history.
9. Because we already have a patchwork of religious traces in our calendar, such as Roman names for the months and the names of Nordic gods in our days of the week, not to mention ancient Sumerian numbering conventions for hours, minutes and seconds.
All this is rather untidy, but I think we're stuck with the Abrahamic calendar of years and Jesus as the Time Lord. But I guess so long as we still have Juno's month and Woden's day and so on we can do equal-opportunity dating.
So what about that special nod to the Jews we started with? If we offend everyone somewhere in our time accounting, why not stick tight with "B.C." and "A.D." and offend a few Jews too?
10. Because I for one am not prepared to start gratuitously offending a few inoffensive people when a large number of offensive people require me on pain of death to show due respect for the Prophet Mohammed, Peace and Blessings Be Upon Him.
But back to the point. Invisible bacterial invasion? What on Earth is Ann Coulter going on about? This is a classic case of rather visible viral transmission of memes. What sort of educational standards prevail in the Christian right if such an educated member of the clan can't distinguish her viruses from her bacteria? Is this not a prime illustration of why novelist Vladimir Nabokov called modern America the "moronic inferno"?
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 4, 2007 2:37 PM
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Timmy,
stick to the joke telling...leave ethics/morality, etc. to the "rational" ones.
adios butt-monkey
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 2:35 PM
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anony,
thanks for the link. perhaps i'll find the same disagreements there that i have with Cheung. ( ;
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 2:32 PM
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My response to any and all of Jason's further posts is contained in my last post. It ends there.
Bye Jason,
All done here.
For all of your verbosity, you have said nothing that everyone here doesn't already know.
Cuckooo Cuckooo Cuckooo
So alone.
99.999 percent dude.... even the believers.... ask them.... try it...
Bye bye
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 2:28 PM
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Ted says: "We can neither logically nor scientifically say with 100% certainty that the paper thrown into the fire will burn"
Timmy SAID: "Yes Jason, it burns. Yes I am certain of this."
Ted, your problem is not with me but with Timmy.
Also Ted, what exactly is "common sense"? According to Harris, "common sense"...well, at least "87% of the population claims “never to doubt” the existence of God; fewer than 10% identify themselves as atheists".
Who here is more in "common" with the population?
See, you guys can not even use one or two words without sounding like morons.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 2:09 PM
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Posted by: Anonymous | January 4, 2007 2:07 PM
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Timmy, I have seen it. I watch southpark.
it's actually a perfect illustration of the "validity" of science.
great link butt-monkey.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 1:57 PM
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Jason:
In the name of all that is holy please stop this ridiculous discussion thread.
If you throw a piece of newspaper into a fire there is a non-empty chance that it will not catch fire. Likewise, if someone pushed you off the top a of a tall building there is a finite -- but extremely small -- probability that you will not fall to the ground and die. We can neither logically nor scientifically say with 100% certainty that the paper thrown into the fire will burn or that you will die if pushed off a building. Can we not all just simply agree on this and move on to a more constructive discussion.
My reaction to these truths is simply: So what!
What you say is true but it has no bearing on the success of the scientific method. In fact the probability of certain things occurring or not occurring is built into the very structure of science.
I don't think you even bothered to read my earlier contribution to the paper burning issue. You certainly did not comment on it -- maybe because it contained too much common sense.
Posted by: Ted Swart | January 4, 2007 1:57 PM
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Still,
No one can argue that what Jason is saying is not true, for what is "true".
We can not argue with him, he has us.
So the only thing that we can do is point out the difference between him and us.
Given that Jason is right, (and he is) Jason reacts as follows:
"I know that none of my observations and inductive reasoning can be trusted because this is the fundamental flaw of science. Therefore I will never trust my observations or inductive reasoning. Ever."
Given that Jason is right, (and he is), the rest of us react as follows:
I know that none of my observations and inductive reasoning can be trusted because this is the fundamental flaw of science. But what choice do I have really? I have to trust my observations and inductive reasoning? How else could I function? How could I trust doctors to help me when I am ill or I break my leg. It really sucks to have to trust the collective observations and inductive reasoning of science, but what choice do I have. They are my senses and my brain. How else would I know not to step in front of that speeding car. I really have no choice in the matter. I'll just have to hope that next piece of paper burns like the last one. Otherwise I'm screwed.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 1:54 PM
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And seriously everyone,
If you haven't seen it, you really must check out MRS Garrison teaching evolution. Here's a link to that scene on You Tube.
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=MRS+Garrison+evolution&search=Search
If the link doesn't work, just go to You Tube and search under
MRS Garrison Evolution.
Hilarious!
It's like what would happen if Jason were somehow forced to teach evolution to school kids.
Jason if you haven't seen it you should watch the entire episode. It makes fun off atheists and shows Richard Dawkins unwittingly having anal sex with a transvestite.
I can't imagine Jason having a good laugh about anything but this should do it.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 1:31 PM
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Ask them Jason,
Ask all of the believers.
Don't tell them it' a test of their faith ahead of time.
Just ask them the question about what will happen to the little piece of paper when thrown into the fire.
Don't tell them why you are asking, just ask.
99.99999 percent dude.
So alone
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 1:30 PM
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Timmy the genius says,
"I expect if one walked up and down a busy street continuously for 10 days and asked everyone you met the question:
"What happens to a piece of newsprint when tossed into a fire?"
Jason would find 99.999 percent of the population are equally as irrational as the morons in this thread.
All of theses idiots would say "It Burns"
Timmy, if 99.999% of the population argued like you that they can produce a "rational" certainty that paper will always burn deduced from previous experience, then yes...they are morons like you.
but hey, wait a second...Sam Harris says,
"A remarkable 87% of the population claims “never to doubt” the existence of God; fewer than 10% identify themselves as atheists"
hmmmm...my gosh man...you're getting dumber with each post.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 1:19 PM
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Jason is right,
There is nothing rational about us. Any of us.
Jason is the only one here being rational.
I expect if one walked up and down a busy street continuously for 10 days and asked everyone you met the question:
"What happens to a piece of newsprint when tossed into a fire?"
Jason would find 99.999 percent of the population are equally as irrational as the morons in this thread.
All of theses idiots would say "It Burns"
Jason is so very alone.
Note how he uses the word "Timmy" in place of the phrase, "Everyone else but Jason" to make himself feel less alone.
The following two statements are both, equally irrational and filled with hubris.
1) I know that when I throw this piece of paper into the fire that it will burn..
2) I know who God, the creator of the universe, is, and what he wants from all of us.
Equally arrogant statements don't you think?
And equally troublesome don't you think?
lol
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 1:11 PM
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Sam Harris - another Professional Moron
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 1:09 PM
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Like Dirk and Timmy I do not mind sharing my email address. Six of us in the original Sam Harris thread
have already done so. My address is: ted.swart@shaw.ca
Posted by: Ted Swart | January 4, 2007 12:51 PM
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Wow...we have a new MORON on the board: Phillip
He says, "How about if we test a different hypothesis? Let's all meet at the top of a 40 story building somewhere. We will then throw 99 common everyday objects from the roof and we will all observe and discuss what occured. For our 100th object, Timmy will throw Jason from the roof."
Actually Phillip, in form, there is nothing different about this - same inductive reasoning. You simply swapped "newspaper" with Jason and "throwing in fire" with "throwing off buiding", and you "reason" from previous observation that Jason will fall.
So, Phillip, since you're the "rational" one here, please demonstrate to me in a syllogism how you can conclude the certainty of me falling based on your previous experience.
Timmy already answered your question: "I can not prove it."
Again: "[David] Hume asserted there is no logical necessity that the future will resemble the past. Justifying induction on the grounds that it has worked in the past, then, begs the question."
Again: Bertrand Russell - "All inductive arguments in the last resort reduce themselves to the following form: "If this is true, that is true: now that is true, therefore this is true."...If I were to advance such an argument, I should certainly be thought foolish, yet it would not be fundamentally different from the argument upon which all scientific laws are based.
You morons just don't get it. There is nothing "rational" about you.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 12:32 PM
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Timmy wrote: "Reasonable believers like Bruce could do more good than us in stopping the ideology of the fundaMENTALists from continuing to be the popular view. If they really see it as, at least as much their problem as ours."
Huh? Reasonable? Let's see:
* a universe in which all that exists are the earth and heaven
* solid 'firmament' structure (the sky) separating the earth from heaven (terrarium earth)
* talking snakes (with legs) and donkeys
* shepherd staff turning into an asp
* demons chased out of people and into pigs
* friendly spirits
* evil spirits
* walking on water
* multiplying loaves and fishes
* food falling from the sky
* conception by a ghost
* people raising from the dead
* the sun stopping in its tracks
* parting seas
* people being bodily sucked up into heaven (which, by the way, lies on the 'other side' of the sky)
* world-wide flood that drowned the earth to a depth of 40 feet above the tallest mountain
* creating people from dust bunnies and ribs
* magical tree of knowledge
* god speaking from a burning bush
* ritual cannibalism, by eating god in the form of a cracker (thank you Sam)
In a sane world, anybody running around spouting ANY of that crap, would be locked up in the State Farm for the Funny. Apparently, though, mass insanity seems to convey some sort of free pass for the loony.
As a human being, I am embarassed to know that in our society, irrational, deluded people who ACTUALLY BELIEVE that such nonsense is TRUE are permitted to vote, hold public office, procreate, and shape the minds of trusting, vulnerable children.
And it disgusts me to know that these same people think that there is something wrong with those who DON'T believe all of this ridiculous crap.
Posted by: DuckPhup | January 4, 2007 12:30 PM
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Doug,
"As Sam Harris has pointed out very well - 21st century weapons in the hands of religious zealots operating from 2000 year old dogma is not a safe combination. Worse (in some ways) is having irrational dogma and outdated morality hampering progress to a better future."
First, i agree that religious zealots with weapons is dangerous. Who ever said i didn't? And as i have hinted to here, I actually hold conferences to debate these "rapture" quacks.
However, explain to me how it follows that because a few "Zionist" "Christians" are off their rocker, that now, all of a sudden, the Bible is wrong?
Sam Harris basically says, "yeah, but the Bible teaches the end of the world and such..."
uhhh...no it doesn't. Harris and these other goofs need to leave theology to the theologians.
You guys don't like us meddling in science, so why in the hell do you meddle in theology? Sam Harris doesn't have a freaking clue as to what the Bible teaches.
Yet, i quote the problem of induction from the very man Harris uses in his article (Bertrand Russell) and ya'll throw hissy fits.
Timmy says to the effect, "Jason is a retard...of course we can know things for certain, like paper will burn based on previous experience."
I asked Timmy to prove it. He says he can't.
Secondly, why is "weapons in the hands of religious zealots" wrong, anyhow? How do you account for "wrong"? Wrong is not "true"...well, what the heck is "truth"?
Again, i answers to religious soldiers...you know, that "irrational dogma and outdated morality" that says "thou shall not murder."
duh...
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 12:01 PM
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Bruce, you give these morons too much credit.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 11:48 AM
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Bruce says: You could have simply agreed that the paper would burn without doing damage to your thesis.
uh, Bruce...what does this have to do with me? I'm not the one that made a universal rule that paper will always burn, Timmy did. Timmy said it was certain, but then tells us that science produces no certainty. Furthermore, Timmy called me an idiot for doubting it, though he can't prove it.
Bruce, I have an answer to why paper burns. I have an answer to why the three men in Daniel did not burn, though the guard throwing them in did.
But that's not my discussion. I'm simply asking ole Timmy here to give me reason to accept his theories, like God doesn't exist, evolution, and so on...yet he can not do something as simple as explain to me the "certainty" that paper will burn everytime.
Yet...I am the "retard" for questioning his unprovable assertion....hmmmmmm...
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 4, 2007 11:47 AM
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Andy, Timmie, Bruce, Philip, Ted, Doug, and all contributors of goodwill
Could someone let me know where you're going to continue the conversation? My email address is info@dirkcampbell.co.uk.
I don't get infuriated by testosterone-brained teenagers, I've learned to tune them out. (I was one myself once, you know). I can't, however, prevent myself from feeling more than slightly irked by mature, thoughtful people who persist in believing preposterous ideas when they really are old enough to know better.
Please consider the following:
Billions of people believe in one God. Roughly half of them believe in one presentation, the other half in a different one. Each half believes that the other half will be punished in a most horrific way for all eternity for believing the wrong presentation.
Doesn't that strike you as absurd? Do you remember reading Gulliver's Travels where the Big-Enders are in a state of perpetual war against the Little-Enders? Swift wrote that satire around 200 years ago and it's never been more relevant.
Also:
There exists on some discworld somewhere a deity who for some unfathomable reason imposes barbaric, wasteful and time-consuming laws on people and punises them severely if they don't obey. After 1500 years of this treatment this same omnipotent, omniscient, cruel-to-be-kind Whackford Squeers character says: 'Now I'm going to be a nice guy and here is my lovely son to prove it. Who I am going to kill and resurrect just to show you all how much of a nice guy I am. And then you can all talk to him because actually he is the same as me.'
I wouldn't trust this guy further than I could throw a Higgs boson. And neither would you if you met him in real life.
Philip to Andy: 'keep saying all the great stuff, but try to to bring it down to an IQ of about 130.' That would be good for me too.
Best wishes
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | January 4, 2007 7:38 AM
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Mr/Mrs Garison's description of Darwin's natural selection is the funniest thing I've ever seen on TV.
You Tube it.
Hilarious!
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 3:58 AM
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I'm just watching the South Park episode with Richard Dawkins.
Have you guys seen it? Very funny.
Jason would love it. It takes the piss out of atheists.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 3:55 AM
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Philip,
Thanks for the summary of our efforts here. I'm based in Germany (software, as you guessed, but old enough to have studied and written a lot - www.andyross.net) so my sleep rhythms are out of synch with most of you.
Bruce,
Thanks for your acknowledgment. Distilling belief into knowledge can take many years, and only integrity can see you through. You have convinced me anew that one can relate to Jesus as readily as to any documented figure from the past (as I have done with many philosophers). A model that may get us away from the idea that this must be some kind of fantasy or hallucination is to imagine the brain on the analogy with a radio receiver. We pick up and resonate to vibes from the past. Our own brainwaves tune in to these vibes and begin to sing the same song. But physics has a long way to go before we can put that into equations. There's a lot - such a lot - we just don't know.
Timmy,
Thanks for your witty badinage. I'm intrigued by your screenplay (I wrote a sci-fi novel some years ago - pdf on my site) and would be delighted to look at a copy. You could send it to me@andyross.net, or do you have a site where I could download it?
I feel like rapturing to another site - could we meet at Ann Coulter's place? Can someone post a link?
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 4, 2007 3:04 AM
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Philip,
Oh yeah, on your hypothesis for Jason,
Very funny I laughed my ass off.
I doubt Jason will give you any kind of a gratifying response though. He's rather humorless. He's funny. But not in the way that a person would want to be funny, if you know what I mean.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 2:56 AM
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Philip,
People can click on my name and go to my website and e-mail me through there. So no harm in publishing it here I guess.
him@timrykert.com
I'd be happy to send you a copy.
All feedback is good feedback to me.
There's no question that, if there's an audience for this movie, it is here in this blog. I think.
The main character is God. Should spark enough interest.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 2:47 AM
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Timmy, congratulations on finishing your screenplay. I would love to read it. My significant other is in the business. She has her SAG card and we are very much into film.
I am reluctant to publish my e-mail address on this site. I hope you can understand that. Perhaps if you are a brave man, you can publish your e-mail address. I will e-mail you right away. You will then have my address and can send my a PDF of your screen play.
How did you like my hypothesis? Do you think Jason will take me up on it?
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 4, 2007 2:16 AM
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Philip,
Wish you had more time on your hands, I enjoy your comments.
Jason certainly is not under my skin there's no room under there. I get a kind of sick joy when I see someone who is so wack and I have to play with them.
And I have so much time right now because the screenplay is written. It's done. First draft anyway. I am currently waiting for a couple of more peer reviews before beginning a second draft.
When people ask of fellow atheists on this blog what can we all do to help the situation? I can do something.
I am not a scientist, or a professor, or even a university graduate. I'm just a comedian. You know, the kind you see in comedy clubs.
People in show business can affect change not by what they say in public but with the movies and television shows that they make. They can tackle these issues in forms of entertainment where the message doesn't sound so preachy.
My attempt to help is by writing the screenplay that I just finished.
It's called "God's Universe".
It's a science fiction comedy that will raise this conversation to a much more public forum.
As I said I am currently waiting for a few more peers to read it and give me notes for my second draft.
I feel as though I have some new peers here who are my target audience with this movie.
Anyone want to read it?
Let me know, I will e-mail you a PDF.
I have it registered and I have a copy-write, So I'm not concerned about letting strangers read it.
Anyway, science isn't alone. Atheists from all walks of life can help. Historians, comedians etc.
Check out my screenplay, you will love it.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 2:00 AM
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I would think that Sam Harris is in awe of the responses to his article and blown away by the the legs this blog has. Those of us that are non-believers are, in a sense, Sam's deciples. We are carrying on some of his ideas with our own personal input to this very important subject.
I am guessing that many of the contributors are students and are out of school for a few more weeks. How else do I explain entries at all hours of the night and day for many days now from the same people. More power to you guys. Us working stiffs just can't compete with you guys.
I have been working the past two days, "a job", and have spent about two hours this evening trying to catch up with this roller coaster ride. I am on the left coast so it's 10:00pm for me. Almost time to call it a night.
Timmy, you poor guy. Jason really got under your skin. He was really goading you into a fight. You got sucked into his nonsense. It seems like you finally figured it out and are just not responding anymore. Good choice man!
When Jason said you were arrogant and stupid for insisting that the paper will burn, at 9:19PM on 2/2/07, I couldn't help but want to help out with a little humor.
How about if we test a different hypothesis? Let's all meet at the top of a 40 story building somewhere. We will then throw 99 common everyday objects from the roof and we will all observe and discuss what occured. For our 100th object, Timmy will throw Jason from the roof.
Now Jason asserts that there are no certainties in the world except the word of God, or something to that effect. So Jason asserts that Timmy can't be sure that the paper will burn, and undoubtedly will also assert that the 100th object thrown from the roof will not, for sure, hit the ground.
Jason, would you care to take Timmy up on this hypothesis. How sure are you about your assertions?
I really don't have much else to add. Most everything that I have said and others have said have all been reformulated and resaid in a myriad of different ways. It's all good.
A couple of comments however. RB absolutely cracked me up a couple of times in going after poor Jason. Try 2/2 at 10:16PM. Priceless! Good stuff man!
Andy Ross-Maybe the smartest guy on this blog. Andy, I get most of what you write. Your grasp of so many subjects is astounding. What do you do? Student or Professor? You obviously are deeply involved in computer technology. How old are you? My only concern is that some of your mathematical proofs go way over my head. If all of you are getting that stuff, then I am the moron on this site. What I am asking is, keep saying all the great stuff, but try to to bring it down to an IQ of about 130. I can't handle much more.
Timmy-If you keep battling with Jason, you are not going to get that screen play written. It is not going to write itself. Good luck with that.
Bruce-You and I must be about the same age. Your wisdom of years is obvious but so are the cracks in your armor. You seem to question an awful lot of doctrine. The cracks in my armor started when I was 10. Timmy's even earlier. I think your cracks are there. Whether they will develope into something deeper, only time will tell.
You guys have well over 400 blogs and if printed, takes up almost 300 pages. Trust me, I know. Tell me that is not passion in its purest form. I will try to keep tuning in to this thing. Does the word infinity mean anything to you guys? How long can this thing go on? All the best. Philip Tripp
Posted by: Philip Tripp | January 4, 2007 1:03 AM
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I wish I could be there the next time Jason goes to the doctor so I could ask him what he is doing having an empiricist scientist taking care of him? How could he possibly believe a word this empirical evidence believing wacko says?
LOL
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 12:44 AM
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Doug's point:
"If you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem."
Is very well taken here. And this is the hope of this thread I believe. I discovered that I could never de-convert Bruce nor do I need to.
But it seems as though I have just convinced him to try to be more part of the solution. A very valuable part.
Reasonable believers like Bruce could do more good than us in stopping the ideology of the fundaMENTALists from continuing to be the popular view. If they really see it as, at least as much their problem as ours.
Go Bruce Go.
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 12:32 AM
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Ted: I agree that it is possible that the universe simply exists. I agree that if it is not necessary that God be created, then it is not necessary that the universe be "created." I agree with that proposition. I am not saying that it is "necessary" that God exists - I am simply saying that He does. I have given my views on this ad nauseum, and will not bore the panel further.
I have no idea what happens in heaven. I don't know why Catholics believe in purgatory. I don't know why people watch Oprah. I don't know, I don't know. I know what I know, if you know what I mean.
A face-to-face is a good idea. When, where and how?
Good night all.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 4, 2007 12:20 AM
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Jason has admitted that he can not answer any questions because he is not an empiricist.
I just don't know how one can get through life without answering any questions.
Do you want fries with that?
My impression of Jason at the doctor.
Doctor: Does it hurt when I press here?
Jason: What? How am I supposed to answer that? What are you an empiricist or something? You probably think that paper burns in fire don't you doc. You moron! You are probably friends with Timmy! Does it hurt when you press there? The answer is God stupid. God God God God God God God God God God............................
Would you like fries with that sir?
God
Posted by: timmy | January 4, 2007 12:17 AM
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Perhaps I should clarify exactly where I stand.
I am an atheist - actually I prefer areligious, but atheist is really close enough. I do not believe in the Gods of any religion. The writings in the Bible and other religious documents are essentially meaningless to me.
However, I also recognize that there is a wide spectrum of styles within the broad category of religious believers. Some of those styles I consider very dangerous to the modern society I am a part of. Others of those styles I regard as strangely combined, but workable for the people that choose them and not particularly dangerous.
It is the dogmatic absolutist styles that are the most dangerous - the ones that polarize debates and lead to violence and bloodshed. If it were not for the danger these styles pose to the culture I want to protect and further I wouldn't care at all what anyone believed.
As Sam Harris has pointed out very well - 21st century weapons in the hands of religious zealots operating from 2000 year old dogma is not a safe combination. Worse (in some ways) is having irrational dogma and outdated morality hampering progress to a better future.
If you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem. The problem is a population stuck in out-moded religious dogma and everything that threatens in the present and the future. I choose to be part of the solution.
Posted by: Doug | January 4, 2007 12:14 AM
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The thread lives! It has been resurrected! (Sorry)
Jason: I think that your position on the paper in the fire example invited the opprobrium that it received. You could have simply agreed that the paper would burn without doing damage to your thesis. In the end, you ran the risk of looking silly. Overall, everyone probably agrees: we don't have absolutely certain knowledge about what will happen on the next try, whether it be the lottery or the resurrection. Millions of people died and stayed dead before Jesus. Then He resurrected. (Most will not agree with this, but it is the fundamental article of our faith) Totally unexpected (except to him). Then billions more died and stayed dead. I understand what you are saying, but you have to pick your battles with more discretion. You can choose where to draw the line in the sand. Choose with discretion.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 4, 2007 12:03 AM
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Okay Bruce:
You say:
"Ted: I gave you my views on a creator God in a previous post. If God exists outside of this universe, in another dimension or reality where other laws apply, he may be infinitely more complex than this universe, and there may be no need in that realm (eternity?) for him to have been created. Now, I can't prove that is the case, but that is one possibility that the scripture allows for."
Good thing that you admit you cannot prove this supposition. This other postulated dimension or reality where "other laws apply" sounds to me like special pleading. It doesn't really matter if God is supposedly in some other dimension or reality. This must surely be part of the universe of everything that -- here and now -- exists. And, if God is an integral part of everything that exists, and this complete cosmic realm has no need to be created (because it is eternal?) then why try and parcel off some add-on to this this cosmic realm which needed to be created by God?
Surely there must be some universal laws and logic which are true in all realms. Astrophysicists at one time believed that protons and neutrons and electrons and quarks and neutrinos and mesons etc were all that existed and they now have evidence for the existence of both dark matter and dark energy. They are still mystified by dark matter and dark energy but they don't expect to find these unexpected additions to the repertoire of particles provided by nature to represent God.
Forgive me if I am being a little obtuse but the nub of what I am trying to say is that if God had/has no need to be created then why does anything need to be created? Why cannot the universe or the cosmos -- that is to say everything that exists -- simply be what it is.
"My question about the brain did not imply anything about a monotheistic God at all. I simply wanted to know why directionless evolution would produce such a brain. Either there is direction or there is no direction; either there is design or there is no design. If there is no design or direction, why should such a brain exist? I think it's a valid question. Your physicist's "self-reflective" universe sounds very dangerous to the atheist position to me. It implies purpose in evolution, which is NOT what current neo-Darwinian theory holds."
Good points. My notion of a self-reflective universe may indeed run counter to the notion of a directionless evolution. But our knowledge of evolution is still very incomplete and it may be quite wrong to speak of it as being directionless.
At the risk of being repetitive let me make my position quite clear. I think the occurrence of evolution is too well established to be denied (by Jason or anyone else) but the push/pull mechanisms involved are very far from being fully understood.
I presume (I am not trying to put words into your mouth)that your faith is directionsl -- towards heaven in a sense. But I cannot help but ask: What am I supposed to do when I get to heaven? and what are the poor people in hell supposed to do? The Roman Catholics even invented purgatory to cater for those who wer supposedly not bad enough for hell but not yet good enough for heaven. This notion of heaven and hell and redemption through Jesus seems so concocted out of thin air.
As always, I enjoy interacting with you and, as I have suggested before, face-to-face would be welcome.
Posted by: Ted Swart | January 4, 2007 12:01 AM
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"Because his argument, as you have pointed out yourself Bruce, is that no question can ever be answered and stand up to his logic."
if you're an empiricist, which I am not.
try again moron.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 11:58 PM
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Bruce,
This is what you're in for if you want to take on religious wackos with me. I admire your bravery. Very much.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 11:53 PM
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Well Bruce,
What do you make of that?
Tel Jason that I will take back every mean thing I said about him especially the retard comment, if he just answers one question.
Any question.
Answer any question and I will retract it all.
This is how I destroy Jason's argument.
He destroys his argument the minute he attempts to answer any question.
Because his argument, as you have pointed out yourself Bruce, is that no question can ever be answered and stand up to his logic.
He is a paradox.
And a parasite.
Which I will also take back if he answers one question. ....Any question.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 11:50 PM
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And what you are doing is actually legitimizing their atheist beliefs. You are in essence agreeing that their empiricism is ok, even though they have come no where close to justifying it.
Timmy here can't even tell me what "true" means.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 11:43 PM
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Doug says, "Just because someone believes in God and the Resurrection doesn't mean they can't be brought to believe in evolution and the rest of science"
Doug, I think you're part of the problem.
See, here's the thing. I AGREE WITH THE ATHEISTS that empiricism and Christianity can't mix.
The "scientists" understand this...great theologians /philosophers like Gordon Clark understood this...and then people like you step in and say, "Ahhhh...we can have both. We can be empiricists with God thrown in the mix."
ummmm....no you can't. You have no "empirical" evidence whatsoever for the existence of God.
Again, the atheists understand this and the non-empiricist theologians like Clark understood it, but we can't seem to get 90% of the Church to understand it.
This middle ground baloney has got to stop.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 11:38 PM
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Andy Ross: Thank you for your very thoughtful post this morning at 6:10 a.m. One statement in the response had a significant impact on my thinking: "Faith is a strategy for holding out until mere belief has been refined into knowledge." Brilliant insight. My revelation and my belief in that revelation occurred more than 30 years ago. Since that time, faith has been "holding out" and my belief has been in the process of being refined into knowledge. If I understand the revelation to be of a person, and not just a proposition, can you accept that over the past three decades that I have, by my own internal testing, refined the belief in that revelation into a knowledge - not an absolutely certain knowledge, but a working engagement (I avoid the overly used and trite word "relationship") with an entity that I understand to be Jesus? Is that so irrational that my experience can be referred to as "blind faith" or "wishful thinking?"
I agree with you that my last statement about being genuine is cheesy (or in Dirk's word, "unctuous"). Sorry, I am still trying to shed my religious skin. Thanks for your insight.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 11:35 PM
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Bruce,
Sure, I love to debate Ann Coulter's minions.
Let's pick a day and time.
I'm Game.
Doug,
Great comments. A welcome addition.
This is exactly what I was just talking about with Bruce.
And now he is trying to engage Jason.
This is hope I think.
The harmless believers like Bruce can help the most. I can't wait to see the experiment of he and I going on Ann Coulter's site.
The only reason atheists like Sam attack belief as a whole is that most atheists believe that the religion of Abraham will be a historical note one day as Pagan gods are now.
We didn't talk people out of smoking. It just became kind of a dumb thing to do and it was no longer cool.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 11:33 PM
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Bruce,
Yes...empiricists can claim no certainties. But Bruce, here's the thing...I didn't make that up. I'm quoting their own "experts". I'm merely repeating what they have pointed out.
YET,
Timmy here turns right around and asserts a logical certainty about newspapers burning. And when i ask him to "prove it", he tells me he can't and i should just believe it because he says so. But wait, i thought that was what made Christians so arrogant and stupid? hmmmm....
And he still won't tell me what "true" means, though he uses the word.
And as I have stated a number of times, I'm not interested in trying to substantiate my claim about the Bible in this thread. That was merely an alternative that was thrown in at the end, but that was not the main point of the post. I can and have substantiated it, but again, that's not the point here.
I want Timmy to justify his calling me a "retard" for agreeing with the atheist Bertrand Russell concerning the problems of empiricism.
I want Timmy to explain his epistemological justification for anything he says.
Just what in the world is so great about Timmy's worldview that we "idiots" are missing?
Timmy wants to tell me about the "certainty" of evolution yet he can't even prove that newspapers will always burn when thrown into fire...at least he can't without contradicting himself.
But wait, what is "contradiction"? What is "logic"? Atheists tell us that logic is conventional.
Atheists tell us the most stupid things like:
"logical reasoning is not an absolute law which governs the universe"
http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/mathew/logic.html
Hell Bruce, forget what the Bible says...they can't even account for their own system.
They can't even speak without sounding like complete morons...thus the Bible rightly speaks of them:
Psalm 14:1 The FOOL says in his heart, "There is no God."
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 11:26 PM
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Jason:
I didn't realize I was "rambling on" about the bible. Please point out where and when I was doing so. Perhaps I was sleep walking.
To be honest, I have no desire to argue with you or anyone else about the contents of a piece of odd, quaint and curious literature engendered by ignorant, superstitious peasants, and cobbled together over the centuries by all manner of people who thought they knew the "truth," and who bore a strong interest in controlling the lives and fortunes of others. Boring, really.
I do have an interest in determining the meaning of certain pat phrases tossed about by modern believers in magic, however; thus the questions about "blessings."
Do you have the title deed to, or are you the webmaster for, this site? If so, who entitled you? Do you wear a badge of authority? A special suit, perhaps? Magic shoes?
Methinks you a phony, sirrah. But you do put on a good show.
Ta-dah!
Posted by: Pecos (NM) Skeptic | January 3, 2007 11:25 PM
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I have been following this thread in hopes of finding insight into how atheists can help the religious lose their faith. Even before I read "The End of Faith" I had come to believe that Faith was a serious problem - both for the World and for the individual believer. It has taken me a long road and a lot of years to get here. I HAVE experienced "communion with God", only now I believe it to be something similar to autosuggestion from immersion in religious training.
What has been demonstrated at length though this thread is that both atheists and believers can use a huge quantity and variety of arguments and still not effect a change of belief.
I find this disappointing, but not un-expected. The insight of value is that many of the arguments put forward by the atheist side (although ineffective against the core belief in God and life after death) may be far more effective against literal interpretation of the Bible and the most dangerous forms of religious dogma.
It seems that telling someone to stop believing in God because it is silly to believe in God isn't a very effective way to accomplish anything. (Other than inciting a flame war, which we've seen some of.) But, to chip away at the support for Dogma, by a variety of means could be effective in reducing the danger to the World. I am very aware that this could be only a partial, unpredictable, and potentially temporary change, but it is better than nothing.
Sam Harris targets the moderate believer for providing cover and inhibiting criticism of the literal or fundamentalist believer. Well, we know what to do about that - just keep talking. A believer like Bruce isn't the type that worries me the most. You can talk with someone like Bruce. They don't get physical. In fact I would be happy to sit down and have a friendly drink with Bruce.
Just because someone believes in God and the Resurrection doesn't mean they can't be brought to believe in evolution and the rest of science, thereby learning some critical thinking skills that have many benefits for the individual and society. Religious literalists know science is dangerous to their worldview. That's why they work so hard to keep others literalists.
So instead of targeting faith in God itself, I am suggesting that it is more effective to target the dogmatic beliefs that threaten our modern culture. Here is a generalized partial list:
1. There is only one right way to worship God/Jehovah/Allah/Great Spirit.
2. Science and religion are mutually exclusive.
3. The morality of 2000 years ago is still the best.
4. Allah wants us to kill infidels.
5. Aethiests are sinners doing the devils work.
The list can go on and on and become much more specific, but I hope it is obvious that these are beliefs that are much more susceptible (than the core beliefs) to logical argument based on rational modern worldviews.
Posted by: Doug | January 3, 2007 11:16 PM
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Victoria: It's good to have you back. Where have you been hanging out? I think this thread is about dead. Have you found another forum - where's the action?
Question for our resident Muslim: I have read the Quran a couple of times. Why does Allah seem to speak in the first person plural "We"? That's how the translations I read have it. Thanks.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 11:12 PM
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Timmy: Ann Coulter's web site has some fori. Want to try something there? If we can't find something to argue about there, we aren't trying very hard.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 11:08 PM
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TED its nice you tried to answer the question bruce posted- i dont think it was inherent in his meaning that the universe have meaning only in a monotheistic sense-
so how about any other sense?
Posted by: victoria | January 3, 2007 11:07 PM
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Jason: OK, I haven't called you any names. I think that most people's problem with your posts is that you stated that, logically, no one could be certain of anything, and then you immediately followed that up with the unsubstantiated statement that the Bible was absolute truth. Now, I share a belief in scripture with you. But I don't see how you get there using your logic. Tell us how you arrive at the conclusion that the Bible is the truth.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 11:03 PM
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Let me put this way:
According to Timmy, I'm actually the "retard" for agreeing with Bertrand Russell, Hume, and others.
The irony.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 10:53 PM
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More than 50 words, but it's quite simple to figure out.
Bertrand Russell:
"All inductive arguments in the last resort reduce themselves to the following form: "If this is true, that is true: now that is true, therefore this is true." This argument is, of course, formally fallacious. Suppose I were to say: "If bread is a stone and stones are nourishing, then this bread will nourish me; now this bread does nourish me; therefore it is a stone, and stones are nourishing." If I were to advance such an argument, I should certainly be thought foolish, yet it would not be fundamentally different from the argument upon which all scientific laws are based."
Here's another quote from Wiki concerning David Hume - same problem:
"Hume asserted there is no logical necessity that the future will resemble the past. Justifying induction on the grounds that it has worked in the past, then, begs the question."
Here's a repeat from my first post here:
"Universal propositions can never be validly obtained by observation."
Now, interestingly enough, i post these quotes and i catch heat. Now, I'm stupid, a moron, retarded, etc. YET, in spite of this we continue to find empiricists, like Timmy, asserting universals. In fact, he even called me an idiot for not believing his universal assertion that if i throw a newspaper into the fire, it will burn.
So, like a "rational" person would, I have asked Timmy to "rationally" demonstrate how his previous observations LOGICALLY infer that if i throw a newspaper into the fire, say, within the next ten minutes, it will burn.
Timmy is arguing for logical certainty based on inductive reasoning. I've asked him to prove it. He now tells me he can't. He tells me it's true because he says its true and I am a retard for saying otherwise. He tells me science doesn't deal with certainties yet he asserts that the newspaper will burn is "certain".
YET, somehow at the end of all this, I'm still the "idiot" that doesn't know what he's talking about by quoting Hume, Russell, and the like.
In short, I've stated the problem of empiricism (and this is just one of many)...I've provided quotes from their own heroes...Timmy tells me I'm an idiot and don't understand what I'm talking about...I put him to the test...he concludes that he can't prove it, ie. he has no answer to the problem and then he calls me the "retard".
Sounds like a "religious dogmatist" to me. { ;
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 10:43 PM
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Bruce you have a deal,
Except you pick the site. I wouldn't know how to find a Christian site with this kind of open forum but maybe you can.
If you do? I will go there with you and I will be the lamb in the lions den.
I will be back in a couple of hours.
Peace
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 10:37 PM
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Note that the "question of the day" for this thread was whether atheists and believers could engage in productive conversation, and on what issues. This thread was supposed to be for both atheists and believers, so that is why I was engaging you here.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 10:34 PM
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Timmy: OK - I have proposal for you. You pick a Christian site, and we will log on together. I will identify myself as a believer, and you as a non-believer. We will then engage them as each of us sees appropriate. What say?
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 10:27 PM
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Bruce,
You have spent the last five days engaging us. Atheists.
You are arguing with our points.
My point is, if you want to help, engage all of the people of your faith who are voting for Dick Cheney, and supporting Pat Robertson, and Gerry Falwell. Engage those crazies who are hoping that, what we are seeing in the world, is the start of armageddon because of what that will mean.
Engage them, instead of battling our thoughts on how to deal with them.
If you want to help.
If all Christians were like you Bruce, we would not have a problem with Christians.
But you can not engage them any more than one line or two in a post like this. Because that would be, being mean to other Christians.
Hence
You support them morally.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 10:19 PM
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Jason, brother, could you put in 50 words or less exactly what your point is so I can comprehend it, since I am far too simple to be able to follow what has gone before. Just a few bullet points would do. Then maybe I can join in the fun. Thanks.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 10:14 PM
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Seriously, my browser is like molasses. Shall we put in a request for the site owner to open a new site? Or we could go to another Sam Harris site.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 10:11 PM
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Hey,
have you guys noticed that the weaker someone's argument is the more they have to used CAPS
Just an observation.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 9:58 PM
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Dirk says, "We will have to carry on fighting the insanity of religion because millions of Americans actually want the world to end so that they can be bodily hoisted up in mid air and then bodily transported off to heaven."
Dirk, i find it amazing that you scientists get all bent out of shape when someone like myself attempts to assert what scientists believe etc... yet you, Tim, and others continue to distort what Scripture teaches and continue to lie about what the Bible actually says concerning the parousia of Christ.
Scripture does not teach the end of the world.
See, if you and morons like Sam Harris were actually theologians and would actually study the Bible in its entirety, you would understand the symbolic language used by the prophets. You would understand the patterns, the idioms, etc. You would understand how Jesus can refer to the first century Temple as "heaven and earth" and speak of its passing away in "this generation", that is the generation He was speaking to in the first century - events which all occurred circa ad70.
You would understand that there is an entire movement within Christianity (Preterists - see my site) that has thrown down the gauntlet for the "rapture" folks to prove their case from the Bible and they have miserably failed.
But no...your reading abilities are just as elementary as the left behind rapture wackos you criticize.
However, I quote scientists themselves that recognize the problems within their own framework (problem of induction), to which you all throw a fit, and so i then ask for your alternative explanation.
And what do i get?
Timmy here can't even prove from his past observations that the next newspaper thrown into the fire will burn.
HENCE, HE HAS JUST DEMONSTRATED THE VERY PROBLEM I STARTED WITH.
AGAIN, I QUOTE BERTRAND RUSSELL:
"If I were to advance such an argument [inductive], I should certainly be thought foolish, yet it would not be fundamentally different from the argument upon which all scientific laws are based."
Forget me - BERTRAND RUSSELL CONDEMNS YOU AS A FOOL.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 9:51 PM
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Tonio: I agree that the atrocities of atheist totalitarian regimes do not justify religion, and I was not using those examples in that way. I was simply pointing out that evil is a human problem, not simply a religious problem. And I am right about that. Secondly, what happened at Columbine was simply a tragedy - I don't know what the young lady said or didn't say - I do believe that Christians ought to get their facts straight, however.
Timmy: I have engaged Christians whom I think are erring, even on this thread. I stated my opinion about Jason's science argument. I said that I was appalled by Pat Robertson and his embarrassing pronouncements. I wish he would be quiet. I wish Jerry Falwell, James Dobson and Richard Land would all retire. They are hurting true faith. Go get 'em. But to put all Christians in the same category as Osama Bin Laden is ludicrous, just as it would be ridiculous to put you in the same category as Stalin.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 9:50 PM
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Wait, I have even better examples of using others' deaths as conversion tools - demagogues like Pat Robertson claiming that tsunamis and hurricanes are God's punishment on "heathens" and "fornicators," or Fred Phelps making the similar hateful claims at military funerals.
I hear many Christians condemn Robertson as a disgrace to their religion, and I appreciate them saying that. But I don't understand who makes up his base of support and why that base still seems large. (His old CBN network is now ABC Family, but it still runs "The 700 Club.")
Posted by: Tonio | January 3, 2007 9:43 PM
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Timmy: For crying out loud, I am not cherry-picking. I acknowledge everything the NT says about hell. I was just expressing the fact that I personally am still working through issues. As I said before, I may be wrong, I don't know everything. I am not so sure that I cannot change my mind about things. I know what I have experienced and what I believe, and I know that I cannot convince you or anyone else. That's not even my job, even according to the NT. I just share my thoughts on subjects. I'm a work in progress, just like you. You won't let me say certain things, so I'm trying other avenues to communicate. I'm baring my soul. I'm communicating.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 9:38 PM
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Bruce
When can Atheists and believers live together and accomplish something that is important for both of us?
When the majority of believers are as harmless as you Bruce.
And as harmless as atheists.
Atheists battle against the majority of believers who are far from harmless.
We will live in harmony when all believers are as harmless as you Bruce.
But you are doing nothing to help get us there.
You will not engage the troublesome believers.
Because in the end. They are on your side.
Fundamentally, you think that we are more out of touch with reality than anyone who believes in your God.
We have to engage them. Because you will not take on that responsibility. They're not your problem. You don't think that way. You just believe what you believe and you're not hurting anyone.
So spend your time engaging us while we try to engage them.
Just sit back and take on our assertions and let us deal with the looney's of your faith.
Not your problem.
Right?
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 9:38 PM
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"But it is naive to think that only religious people do evil, nasty things. Look at that shining atheist utopia, the Soviet Union."
Bruce, while your posts here have generally been well thought out, I think it's inappropriate to use communism and fascism to discredit atheism. Others on this site have refuted that argument, so I won't repeat their words. Instead, I emphasize that those ideologies murdered tens of millions of people. Would those victims have wanted their deaths to be used to justify someone's argument about religion?
I've seen it happen with a more recent tragedy, the Columbine shootings. The myth about Cassie Bernall being a Christian martyr was refuted years ago, but the Scott family and others keep pushing the myth to promote their religious beliefs. Bernall's senseless death doesn't prove anything about any religion.
Posted by: Tonio | January 3, 2007 9:33 PM
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Ted: I gave you my views on a creator God in a previous post. If God exists outside of this universe, in another dimension or reality where other laws apply, he may be infinitely more complex that this universe, and there may be no need in that realm (eternity?) for him to have been created. Now, I can't prove that is the case, but that is one possibility that the scripture allows for.
My question about the brain did not imply anything about a monotheistic God at all. I simply wanted to know why directionless evolution would produce such a brain. Either there is direction or there is no direction; either there is design or there is no design. If there is no design or direction, why should such a brain exist? I think it's a valid question. Your physicist's "self-reflective" universe sounds very dangerous to the atheist position to me. It implies purpose in evolution, which is NOT what current neo-Darwinian theory holds.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 9:31 PM
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OK Timmy - The OT applied until Jesus, and it applied to a particular people, the Jews, who entered into that covenant with God. What you refer to as misogyny in the OT was an improvement on the status of women in surrounding cultures. Even war in the OT had a certain protocol and morality as set out in the Torah - not by our standards, but by those that existed at the time. In other words, it was an advancement and improvement over what immediately preceeded it. God is timeless, but man is not. As others have noted in this thread, at some point in the past man's brain began to think differently. At the right time, Jesus came - after the Greeks had introduced abstract thought, after the Jews had lost all their wars and broken all their laws, after the Romans had brought in some social stability - Jesus came, and (I believe) showed us the way.
I'm ready to move on to other issues, such as how atheists and believers can live together and accomplish something that is positive for both of us, without everyone killing everyone. I could say lots more about the resurrection, and you could say lots more against it. Cease fire. You are happy with your condition, I am happy with mine. I'll give you the last word, but I want to move on.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 9:20 PM
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Bruce
You are clearly cherry picking.
"I'll level with you. I don't like the concept of hell, and I have not fully come to terms with it. It is taught by Jesus and the rest of the New Testament writers, and to what degree it depends on metaphor and to what degree it is literal, the jury is still out on that one in my mind"
This is the new testament you are referring to Bruce. You are questioning the gospels. Are you saying the resurrection was literal but hell isn't? What?
Oh right. Contradictions aren't a problem in your philosophy.
And this one:
"I never use it to make anyone afraid. Shame on those who do."
Three sentences earlier
"If you know that a certain path leads to destruction and a certain path leads to prosperity, and you choose the path that leads to destruction, whose fault is that?"
My head is spinning Bruce.
And finally,
"Jesus offers salvation from hell (whatever that is) by faith in Him. That is a simple requirement"
Really? A simple requirement?
Believe without doubt in a God you can not verify in any way? Give up your own free inquisitive thoughts on the origin of the universe and consider the puzzle solved?
This is a simple requirement for you?
It is obviously a monumental requirement for me.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 9:16 PM
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Bruce:
Thank you so much for clarifying your knowledge about and agreement with scientific knowledge regarding the age of the earth and the universe and also regarding the occurrence of evolution. I note that you say it is not a "first step" for you -- which is information I am totally delighted to learn. It serves to reinforce my view that you are indeed half way home. You would, however, have to agree, on the basis of numerous surveys, that an incredibly large percentage of American Christians do think the earth is only 6,000 or so years old and do reject the occurrence of evolution outright. And, for them, accepting these scientific truths would indeed be a first and major step in the right direction.
I note that you cannot resist putting forward the contention that God in his/her capacity as creator may well have intervened in the evolutionary process which, as you no doubt know in advance, is not something I can accept. I cannot even imagine a God who is a creator. Such a God would have to be more complex than the universe itself which would leave us with the unanswerable quesion as to who it was that created this God.
On another tack you write as follows:
"Realist: Why are our brains wired to make sense of the world? That is not necessary for survival, as many life forms survive with no brain at all. What mindless evolutionary force would lead to a brain that tries to make sense of a universe that is ultimately pointless? Patterns are one thing - we need to see the tiger. But we go far beyond that. In fact, our great ability to make sense of things threatens to destroy us. We now have too much power. How did this happen?"
Victoria suggests that you ask good questions and I am inclined to agree with her. She believes in Allah and you believe in the Christian triune God of Father,Son and Holy Ghost. And both of you speak of mystical experiences involving your respective faiths. And I also have had mystical experiences not involving any faith. So I am hard pressed to see how your mystical experiences in any way validate your faiths.
Now, to come to your actual question. Why are our brains wired in such a way that we are holding this discussion? Why do we try to make sense of the universe and our personal lives? I am an agnostic and not an atheist and I don't know the answers but I see no reason why the universe should be pointless without the kind of monotheism exemplified by Christianity and Islam. Having moved beyond formal religion I am puzzled as to how it ever could or can proved answers to this ultimate conundrum. I find the notion of heaven and hell and redemption utterly inept when it comes to this conundrum.
Physicists have been struggling to arrive at what they choose to call a "Theory of Everything" and I had the privilege of listening to a presentation by one of the world's leading astrophysicists called Ellis and he pointed out that we will never arrive at a theory of everything until we can explain why the universe includes intelligent creatures who can ask the kind of questions you raise. It is as if the no universe can exist without being self-reflective.
As I say, I do not know the answers but I am not ashamed to admit this and not frightened because I don't know the answers. I am as frightened, as you rightly are, about our growing scientific/technological knowledge threatening our very existence as a species.
Where we differ, is that I do not see faith based religion offering any help in staving off disaster. Just the reverse. I see the rejection of scientific knowledge -- as so many fundamentalists of various faiths do -- as a huge danger in and of itself. To reject known truth cannot be a basis for a sound future.
As always, I enjoy my interaction with you and wish you well in every way. . . Ted . .
Posted by: Ted Swart | January 3, 2007 9:05 PM
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Bruce,
Statements like
"God interacted with man in the OT on man's terms. This involved war, blood sacrifice, etc."
Earlier on the question of faith you said that God interacts with man on God's terms.
But I know that contradictions in your faith are not a problem for you so I'm sure you see no problem with this one.
And this one:
"So there. For me, the OT doesn't apply any more"
When did it apply? When was war and misogyny the correct way for man to live?
Isn't God timeless?
The point is that the credibility of the people who told you who God was in the first place comes into question when reading the OT. Excuse me did I say Comes into question? I meant gets squashed.
Your faith is based on the resurrection which proves that Jesus was the son of a God who can't be verified. And makes no sense at all.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 9:02 PM
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Dirk: I was in London in August - great place - are you near or from there? My comments on hell were not sophistry. You posit the alleged contradiction between a "loving God" and one who sends people to hell. Where do you get your understanding of God's nature, Dirk? You do not believe that God exists, so from what source do you glean information about Him? Is it not from the Bible? Does the Bible not present God as both loving AND wrathful (against sin)? Since the Bible itself presents God in this fashion, it is not a contradiction to understand God as both merciful and wrathful. That's how he's presented in our book. You are drawing on a book you don't believe in to judge the character of a God you don't believe in. Who is being hypocritical here? You are the sophist, not me.
I'll level with you. I don't like the concept of hell, and I have not fully come to terms with it. It is taught by Jesus and the rest of the New Testament writers, and to what degree it depends on metaphor and to what degree it is literal, the jury is still out on that one in my mind. Whatever the fate of the damned, it is clearly their own choice, however. If you know that a certain path leads to destruction and a certain path leads to prosperity, and you choose the path that leads to destruction, whose fault is that? Jesus offers salvation from hell (whatever that is) by faith in Him. That is a simple requirement. Whatever hell is, I believe that God will never do less than justice, although He may do more than justice (which is mercy). Sincerely, I don't worry about hell, and if you don't believe in it, why are you concerned about it? It is easy to avoid for a believer. I never use it to make anyone afraid. Shame on those who do.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 8:59 PM
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Timmy: glad you agree with me on the important stuff. There are many fine minds here on this thread and it's a shame I haven't had time to respond to all the great posts, but I enjoy reading them.
Bruce: Glad you like the term 'unctuous'! How about 'sophistry'? 'Cause that's what you're engaging in when you try to argue that the question of hell is only relevant if I believe in God in the first place. Surely the idea of hell is used to frighten you into believing in religious authority and then to feel smug that you're not going to hell - be honest. Why would you believe a loving God even considered inventing a place where his own creatures suffer in agony for eternity? The religious idea of God is self-cancelling in so many ways that it's amazing to me that any intelligent person entertains it. Many of the posts above have pointed this out in detail.
I'd like to discuss your other very worthwhile points but I'm off to bed, it's half past one here in England and I have to get up in the morning.
Best wishes
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | January 3, 2007 8:34 PM
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Timmy: OK, I won't talk about "that" anymore.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 8:15 PM
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I agree with Andy Ross - can we cut this thread or start a new one - my computer is getting really sluggish. I'm not technical enough to know how to do that.
Timmy: Dang it! You continue to force me to talk about religion. Because of your post of 7:38 I have to explain my entire Old Testament theology to you (not!). I'll do it in one paragraph. God interacted with man in the OT on man's terms. This involved war, blood sacrifice, etc. (the Torah) He identified with man, and little by little began to draw man out of that religious mindset, as man began to see the futility of law-based religion and war (the Prophets). The final step was to come in human form himself (Jesus). Then "religion" (interaction with God) was personal - a "spirit and truth" interaction - not based on complex religious ceremonies. But the religious instinct in man is strong, and soon Christianity was hijacked by legalists, who took it back to the OT. This was a step backward.
So there. For me, the OT doesn't apply any more - it was "fulfilled" by Christ, and I am not "under the law." I have no need to hate, kill, enslave, abuse anyone. If I do ever have any such impulses, they are the result of my own human faults, not Jesus. So I have a real problem making the connection between my view of religion and suicide bombers. That kind of sentiment is absolutely foreign to me. I do not believe in the same God as suicide bombers, whatever they call their god.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 8:11 PM
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And Bruce
I'm perfectly happy continuing to converse with you on this thread, you have been very pleasant and insightful, although not at alll convincing.
I didn't want you to go away.
Just this "personal spiritual conversation of clarity that we can not understand because we have not had one" thing.
We get it. We're not buying it.
I kid you not Bruce, twice in my youth and early adulthood I, on the advice of clergy, sat at home alone in my room, or on a hill top in an open field, and asked for Jesus to come into my heart. several times. I wanted him to so badly. I believed, at that point in my life, that he would............ nothing......... years later, tried again............. Nothing.
I remember the last time that I tried, I thought to my self, "One more time". And Jesus will know that he will lose me forever if this one doesn't work. I was very concerned. It had to work. I tried so hard. I believed so hard................................................................................ Nothing.
Don't feel bad for me Bruce.
I thought I was going to feel bad, but I didn't.
I felt.......enlightened. I felt certain.
I felt....... free.
Completely freeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee.
Think what ever I want.
About anything.
And compare it to what other free thinking people think.
I felt LIBERATED!
So I'm not offended by your personal conversation with Jesus that I could not have. I just don't buy it and don't want to hear it as an argument again.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 8:05 PM
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Hey Dirk: I haven't responded to everything everybody has said because frankly, I'm overwhelmed. No offense. I'll give some attention to your post, at the risk of someone telling me that my usefulness in this discussion has ended.
I rarely spend my time on discussing this kind of stuff, but Sam's book and this thread captured my imagination, so I joined the debate. I think it's interesting, not a waste of time. I spend lots of time problem-solving, but I won't go there for fear of being called "unctuous" (I did like that term).
Yes, many people fight about religion, and that is a bad thing. But it is naive to think that only religious people do evil, nasty things. Look at that shining atheist utopia, the Soviet Union. Or the PRC. Or North Korea. Or Cuba. Or the Pol Pot regime. Or ...... Come on - war, hatred, bigotry, violence - those are human problems, not just religious problems. Religious wars are only one flavor.
God did not, I repeat, did not create religion. God created man, and man created religion. God interacted with man in the religious terms with which man had become familiar. The history of revelation is the story of God attempting to deal with man in terms that man understood. From my worldview's perspective, the final step was for God to appear in human form - Jesus. Faith then became an interaction with Jesus, in "spirit and truth", not religious ceremonies. Christianity has been hijacked by religionists, and they are destroying it, perhaps for the better. Individual Christians just need to get back to what they were originally called to do - love him, love each other, and share their faith. It was supposed to be that simple, but we blew it. I guess I agree that religion is a bad thing, once it is made clear that faith in Jesus is not "religion" in that sense.
On the choices you mentioned, if you don't even believe in Jesus, then hell shouldn't even be an issue for you. If you believe in him, then you aren't going to hell. If you believe in him but you still don't like the idea of hell, then you are just disagreeing with him, not doubting his existence. The question only becomes relevant when you believe in God to begin with.
The Christians I know look forward to seeing Jesus, but they all want to live and they want their children and grandchildren to live. I don't think the idea of an afterlife actually affects believers in the way you fear. Come on - lots of Christians have made wonderful contributions to society, to science, to life in general. They want to have a positive impact on the world, and believe it is God's will that they do so. Has any particular Christian told you that he wants the actual apocalypse to come tonight? I don't know any.
We can agree generally that organized religion needs to vanish, at least in its current form. But people will always have faith experiences. I think one of the main benefits of threads like this one is that it gets people talking - if you talk to someone, they are less of a mystery, and you are less likely to fear them. Atheists fear Christians and Christians fear atheists because they never talk. This forum is a potential solution to that problem.
Peace.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 7:49 PM
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Bruce
You didn't offend me. No need to apologize.
I didn't mean to offend you.
I was giving you credit for being one who can see that what Dick Cheney has done is wrong. I implied clearly that you did not agree with him.
I asserted that your association with all who believe in God as laid out in The Old testament supports not only Dick Cheney, but Osama Bin Ladden and everyone in between.
You don't have to agree with them to lend moral support to their ideology. You just have to profess to believe in the same god as them.
The sheer number of people who do, gives them strength.
Just a fringe radical element you say?
Their prediction of an endless line up of suicide bombers seems to be holding all too true.
But then again,
There is no truth but God.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 7:38 PM
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Hey!
This is great discussion again.
What happened?
Oh yeah, Jason is not distracting us with his malicious word play.
We must not allow him back in.
No one should respond to any of his posts or mention him ever again.
As Dirk says, this whole conversation is a distraction from larger, more important and looming issues facing humanity, but we all agree that this distraction conversation is imperative.
Jason's argument is a distraction from the distraction.
I really don't like Jason.
I'll bet nobody does.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 7:23 PM
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Hi Timmy: I didn't think you wanted to discuss anything with me anymore, so I had directed my question to Realist. I didn't say anything critical of science, nor did I bring God into the question (which, by the way, you didn't even come close to answering). I simply asked Realist how our brains came to be wired to try to make sense out of the world. Sorry to offend you.
By the way, I did address Jason in a brief earlier post. I told him that his attack on science was marginalizing him. I disagree with his position. As I clearly stated in an earlier post, I have no quarrel with science.
Finally, I have no idea what you are talking about with respect to Dick Cheney. I have come to profoundly disagree with his position on Iraq. I happen to agree with your last statement about the effects of his policy, but I sense that you have lumped me in with others in a "religious right" category that you have in your head. If you want to inquire about my politics, I'll be happy to explain them to you.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 7:15 PM
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Dirk,
Dito.
Especially
"I do see religion as a monumental waste of time and energy. Just look at all the effort that's gone into posting on this thread. Without religion, intelligent people could all be concentrating on solving the problems that really matter, like climate change, peak oil descent, and making the transition into a post-carbon economy for the benefit of the majority."
"On the current scientific evidence, the majority of us will probably not survive this century unless all of us consciously co-operate to solve the problems that really face us. It is for that reason that all religion must be abandoned as soon as possible."
Amen
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 7:09 PM
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Andy,
Manifesto?
Careful man. This is the armor the religious nutballs are looking for. If Atheism has a manifesto, we are just as creepy as them.
It makes it sound like atheism is the new religion replacing the old religion.
Atheists don't all think alike. We can not have a common manifesto.
I agree that atheists need to press for social and structural political change through government but individually.
As soon as we do it as a group, we are them.
We can discuss our ideas in forums like these and others as individuals, but we should never make a plan.
Again I assert that Sam and Richard and Dan are not advocating a rallying of atheists or realists or agnostics or what ever you want to call it. Their books are not a call for action.
Just a call for an end to the self imposed taboo on discussing the troubles of religion openly and honestly.
Evolution not Revolution.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 6:51 PM
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Posting in answer to a point made some time ago but relevant to some of the subsequent points:
Bruce, I retract the calumny about St. Paul. No-one knows whether he had a brain seizure or not.
Now, can I assume that you agree with me on all the other stuff, since you haven't taken issue with it?
OK, that's unfair, I know. But look, you're not really in a lion's den here, unless you want to see it that way.
Having said that, I do see religion as a monumental waste of time and energy. Just look at all the effort that's gone into posting on this thread. Without religion, intelligent people could all be concentrating on solving the problems that really matter, like climate change, peak oil descent, and making the transition into a post-carbon economy for the benefit of the majority. Instead of which we're arguing about stuff which only matters because some people WANT to fight about it, not because they HAVE to. (Capitals only employed because italics unavailable.)
You don't want to fight about it, I'm sure. But thousands, maybe millions, do, if we're to believe the statistics. And that's not for any sane reason but only because they want to defend their religious beliefs! We non-religious people don't want to have to oppose anyone, in case that's not immediately obvious. We're only fighting religion because a large number of religious people (not you) want to fight each other, and in doing so, drag us down with them.
I am firmly of the opinion that religion is a bad thing. Friendship is a good thing. It is more important than membership.
Let's put it this way: If God likes us, why did he give us religion? Let's consider what he might do if he didn't like us. Stop us co-operating and have us destroy each other? Religion would seem to be a pretty good way of ensuring that outcome. Oh, he has had a long wait, but for God a thousand years are but a single day. Maybe the truth is that he just likes mass exterminations and enjoys setting them up.
I know you think God leaves us free to exercise choice, but the religious imperative doesn't offer much choice. Either believe in Jesus or fry for eternity in Hell. Doesn't sound like much of a choice to me.
The one I think we ought to be exercising is to leave the whole mess alone and concentrate on the issues that really matter. Unfortunately the religious bigots - of whom you are not one, I hasten to add - don't allow us that choice.
We will have to carry on fighting the insanity of religion because millions of Americans actually want the world to end so that they can be bodily hoisted up in mid air and then bodily transported off to heaven. Which is impossible. But they believe it because - well, anything's possible for God and because one guy said so 2000 years ago. He believed it was going to happen in a few decades at most. It didn't. But thousands of people believed it would, on his authority. And still do. And this is the guy you are asking me to believe did not have a brain malfunction. Well, maybe, maybe not. Who can possibly know?
On the current scientific evidence, the majority of us will probably not survive this century unless all of us consciously co-operate to solve the problems that really face us. It is for that reason that all religion must be abandoned as soon as possible.
Best wishes
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | January 3, 2007 6:31 PM
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Bruce,
Too powerful? I assume you are talking about how science has lead to bombs.
You might have also been referring to the fact that we are now too powerful for many of the diseases that used to kill millions of us. But of course that was just us interfering with God's plan.
Thanks to science, the common man is now too powerful in access to knowledge and communication, for the religious leaders tell them that the sun revolves around the earth.
Bruce I thought of another new way for you to stay involved.
You could comment on Jason and his argument.
You haven't.
I have no doubt that you would have many disagreements with some of his arguments. But you have not challenged or addressed him at all.
Because he is a believer and you don't challenge each other on your disagreements because you both believe in God and are on the same side in general.
I think this is a profound illustration of what I said earlier about how, no matter how much you personalize your faith Bruce, you still support Dick Cheney (The Puppeteer) who has created a world where the literal Jihadists are more dangerous than ever.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 6:30 PM
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On Sweden: Olaf Palme, its prime minister, was assassinated in 1986. Google violence in Sweden - it's got its problems.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 6:23 PM
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Realist, Trish, Timmy, Rich, ...
Sweden still has plenty of Lutherans, plus quite a few Neonazis, come to think of it. But the point is well taken. Northern Europe in general is very secular compared with the U.S. of A. The other salient characteristics are declining birh rates, well below replacement levels, plus substantial and growing Muslim minorities.
We have spent too long debating religious ideology, particularly Christian ideas. We need to see the practical effects of waning religiosity in general in the more advanced economies. For example, the state performs many of the welfare functions that religious groups still provide in bulk in the U.S.A. So democratic pressure on governments can change welfare policy for whole nations.
If there is an AA pressure group (by the way, I vote we adopt the name "realist" instead of AA or its variants) to lobby such democratic governments, what should its manifesto be? What changes are most urgent?
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 3, 2007 6:10 PM
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excellent question bruce
i look forward to the answers
Posted by: victoria | January 3, 2007 6:03 PM
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Realist: Why are our brains wired to make sense of the world? That is not necessary for survival, as many life forms survive with no brain at all. What mindless evolutionary force would lead to a brain that tries to make sense of a universe that is ultimately pointless? Patterns are one thing - we need to see the tiger. But we go far beyond that. In fact, our great ability to make sense of things threatens to destroy us. We now have too much power. How did this happen?
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 6:00 PM
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Realist,
You mentioned that Japan still uses ancient rituals and Buddhism as a substitute for religion.
What has Sweden used?
Nothing.
Atheism or Non Believing, works just fine on it's own.
A rational collective morality.
Can't remember the last story I heard about Sweedish aggression or violence.
Religion need not be replaced by anything including science for a society to function in peace. People in sweden deal with the death of their loved ones just fine. They cry, they mourn, and they don't kid themselves.
Individual people need to find nothing but rational spiritual thinking to replace religion. Then join a bowling club or something for the social belonging thing.
No?
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 5:49 PM
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Thanks, Realist, this is excellent comment. We need more discussion with this quality.
This whole thread has really cheered me up. Too many online discussions are worthless. This is a good hot-button issue with aspects that deeply challenge the imagination. Let's try to cover more than just Christianity as the target religion.
By the way, is there a chance of chopping this page up? It's slowing my browser down.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 3, 2007 5:39 PM
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Sorry for the duplicate but it was worth saying twice.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 5:36 PM
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I will no longer engage Jason and his meaningless word play.
I have soundly thrashed his logic into oblivion. Not in his mind of course. But in the minds of anyone who has any rational credibility at all.
This isn't to sat that I will no longer comment on his postings, I certainly will.
I will not however address him directly or answer any of his questions until he answers just one. He can even pick the question.
All Jason has to do is ask any question he wants to ask, and then answer it.
If he can not do this (and he can't) there is absolutely no reason for anyone to answer any of his questions.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 5:33 PM
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I will no longer engage Jason and his meaningless word play.
I have soundly thrashed his logic into oblivion.
Not in his mind of course. But in the minds of anyone who has any rational credibility at all.
This isn't to sat that I will no longer comment on his postings, I certainly will.
I will not however address him directly or answer any of his questions until he answers just one.
He can even pick the question.
All Jason has to do is ask any question he wants to ask, and then answer it.
If he can not do this (and he can't) there is absolutely no reason for anyone to answer any of his questions.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 5:31 PM
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Trish wrote:
"I am interested in the views of unbelievers or agnostics [I count myself as an unbeliever] - about the idea that because religion exists in some form in all human cultures, it must be useful somehow. There is crime in every culture - even murder - yet no one argues "ubquitousness equals usefulness" when it comes to crime. I am inclined to think that religion is a flawed by-product of some sort of social function - a sort of price-we-pay for the ability to pass info quickly with language, emotions or facial expression. I also think it is entirely possible to have an ethical, religion-free society."
I think there are many answers to this question because religion is not a single thing. Religion serves many purposes. It provides social functions, and helps cohesion of society. It provides emotional support. It provides answers to questions that people wonder about. I've always said that atheism is not an alternative to religion, because atheism does not provide any of these things in itself.
If we think we see a tiger in the woods and there is no tiger there, it is not a big problem, however if the tiger is there and we don't see it - then that IS a big problem. So our brain is wired to find patterns. Our amazing ability to find patterns in the world around us comes at a price because we often see patterns that aren't there. We are wired to try to make sense of the world.
I think that belief in the supernatural is a byproduct of this. When you combine this with the fact that our memories are very unreliable (consider the testimonies of witnesses at crime scenes - the typically have different versions of the story). I think this explains why people believe in astrology, UFOs etc, and most irrational religious beliefs.
Morality is universal in human culture. I think this is natural for social animals. Even chimpanzees exhibit social customs and consideration for other animals.
I think we can have a religion free ethical society (Sweden is pretty close to that - and Japan too), but we can't just throw religion out wihout having other things to replace them with. Japanse society still follows religous rituals and practices and Buddhism influences their morality, but there is little belief in the supernatural or the divine.
Posted by: Realist | January 3, 2007 5:16 PM
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Timmy says he can "argue for the obvious".
Really? I gave you a simple task of "arguing" for the "obvious" that the next newspaper I throw into fire will burn based on your previous observations and you "can't prove it", though you will continue to assert it as some universal "fact" and call anyone who doubts your assertion a "retard".
So much for being a humble, "rational" free-thinker.
No wonder you joke for a living.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 5:14 PM
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Another note on Jason non argument,
The conclusions of science are only that the previous assumption was wrong, not that the current assumption is correct. The current assumption is a theory until a new conclusion proves it to be incorrect.
We all understand that this is the limitation that science accepts.
Jason needs for us to not accept this for his argument to be an argument at all.
Since we do accept this.
Jason's argument in not an argument at all.
I observe this.
I am certain of this.
Until someone proves this to be incorrect.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 4:45 PM
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Rich are you talking to the believers or the non believers.
I assume the believers.
If your answer is both, I would have to inform you that non believing isn't a religion so it wouldn't apply.
I'll assume you were suggesting something for the believers to do.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 4:43 PM
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Historically there seem to be two methods for the rapid spread of a new religion or ideology.
May I humbly suggest, in place of pointless debates, that one of the following might be more effective:
1. Forced conversion.
2. Have lots of babies.
Posted by: Rich Laughlin | January 3, 2007 4:31 PM
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Has anyone ever been so verbose as Jason Bradfield whilst saying nothing at all?
To the rational,
I don't think that Bruce and Jason have tested us at all, but they have exercised us. We are more prepared than ever to, as Sam says, "argue for the obvious"
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 4:30 PM
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I have a new observation for you Jason, that I can not prove.
I think Andy Ross is God.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 4:08 PM
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Jason,
I see that it is impossible to carry on a conversation with you. You read something and then immediately latch onto a concept that you hardly understand and now you tell me to answer a question that is nonsensical (naturally) and then call people stupid. And you quote Yosemite Sam!!! Maybe YS is your God (long-beard and all).
If your faith in God is so fragile that you cannot reconcile your beliefs with empirical evidence and well-established facts, then perhaps you need to look at what it is that you really believe, and how does that matter to you and to your family and friends.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 3, 2007 4:03 PM
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Jason,
I see that it is impossible to carry on a conversation with you. You read something and then immediately latch onto a concept that you hardly understand and now you tell me to answer a question that is nonsensical (naturally) and then call people stupid. And you quote Yosemite Sam!!! Maybe YS is your God (long-beard and all).
If your faith in God is so fragile that you cannot reconcile your beliefs with empirical evidence and well-established facts, then perhaps you need to look at what it is that you really believe, and how does that matter to you and to your family and friends.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 3, 2007 3:57 PM
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Here I offer my very own sketch for a logical reconstruction of the mindset attributed to Jesus in the New Testament. In fact, I developed the idea years ago to reconstruct what the young Ludwig Wittgenstein said in his Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus. From it I now deduce that Jesus may have been suffering from solipsism. You first saw it here, folks.
Definition 1. Reflection principle
At each and every moment in time, I am logically equal and opposite to a momentary view alpha of my world, equal to the world we live in.
Definition 2. Momentary worldview
For any index ordinal i, let the set alpha_i be a momentary determination of the word we live in, that is, a state of the world indexed by a time parameter, and let the index run over successive moments in my world.
Definition 3. The primordial world
Let the first (null or trivial) momentary view alpha be the set indexed as alpha_zero, where ordinal zero indexes the first moment of recorded time.
Definition 4 . The ultimate world
If ordinal theta is the first inaccessible ordinal (that is, the first ordinal not definable from a countable ordinal by means of a recursive function), then let the set alpha_theta also be called omega. The view omega is future to all accessible views.
Lemma 1. Any logically articulable worldview is logically isomorphic to (or morphs) a set alpha_i, for some ordinal index i.
Lemma 2. If a set alpha_i morphs a given worldview, the power set of alpha_i (that is, the set of all its subsets) is big enough to morph its successor view alpha_(i + 1).
Theorem (Ross--Hofstadter). I am a strange loop.
Proof
0. Assume all the axioms and rules of ZF (Zermelo--Fraenkel) set theory.
1. Initially, I am isomorphic to alpha_zero, or zero, the null set.
2. For any successor ordinal n, if the set alpha_n morphs my current worldview, the power set alpha_(n + 1) of alpha_n morphs my next worldview.
3. For any limit ordinal lambda, if for all n less than lambda, sets alpha_n morph my previous worldviews, the union alpha_lambda of all alpha_n morphs my current worldview.
4. By transfinite recursion, at the limit of accessible time I become equal and opposite to alpha_theta, or omega.
5. No set has a lower index than zero and no set has a higher index than theta. In ZF the ordinal line is only defined between zero and theta.
6. The ordinal line can be looped by setting zero and theta back to back. The loop is a strange loop in the sense of Douglas Hofstadter.
7. In the eternal limit, I am morphed in the loop.
Corollary 1
Omega is the standard or natural model of ZF set theory.
Corollary 2
I am the alpha and omega.
QED (quod erat demonstrandum)
Acknowledgment
I would like to thank Jason for being idiot enough to make me feel less foolish posting this, which is not to be taken too seriously. In particular, no disrespect is meant to Jesus, who can hardly be blamed for having a worldview for which the young Wittgenstein was greatly celebrated.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 3, 2007 3:56 PM
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Jason said,
"Well, another morning goes by and still no one can prove Timmy's universal that all newspapers will burn if thrown into fire."
Chemists like me measure the enthalpy of combustion of molecules (like the cellulose in paper) and I could indeed guarantee you that if your fire were hot enough, that I could burn it in the fireplace. And you can never, ever disprove it. In that sense, my "proof" is that my prediction and theory and explanation of chemistry is incorrigible.
When you say, "prove", exactly what do you want? Formal math? In the same sense, can you "prove" anything about your own system of belief? And what of presuppositions? Of course those don't require proof and can't be proven (except via circular reasoning).
How do you explain the natural world without observation, inference and induction? Oh, yeah, I forgot...YOU DON'T. You just sit on your knees and sing to your great big invisible friend in the sky.
Now, to flip the tables a bit, do you think that absolute, universal propositions are the only ones that are true? How many truths are there, then?
Is the statement:
"The sky is blue" a true proposition?
Only for a few hours every day, right? So...what sort of epistemology do you possess? Lay it out for us. What are your presuppositions?
Posted by: Anonymous | January 3, 2007 3:55 PM
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Jason I have answered your question.
Stop saying that I haven't.
I CAN'T PROVE IT!
that is your answer. And I have already said this.
Do you need anything else from me?
Will you stop saying that I am avoiding the question?
I'm right here buddy.
Paper burns is my answer.
And I can not prove it.
I have given you an answer that I can not prove.
It's just the answer that suits me and most people just fine, unprovable as it may be.
And my definition of the word truth remains that which is widely accepted in the dictionary. And no I can not prove that either.
Now do you have a point?
Is your point that nothing can be proven?
As I have previously said, thank you for stating the obvious.
Has anyone ever argued with this assertion?
I sure haven't.
You are arguing with yourself Jason and calling it Timmy.
You are right about science not being able to prove any certainties Jason.
Do you have any other points to make?
Like "Jesus is the way"
or something like that.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 3:54 PM
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Timmy: I intended to bow out yesterday, but Skeptic keeps challenging me. Sorry. Can you mediate a truce between us? Then I'll confine myself to just critiquing you guys for a change.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 3:40 PM
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ummm..still no answer. In the voice of Yosemite Sam..."Scientists are sooo stupid."
puzzled, it's very easy to grasp what I am doing.
Timmy here says I am an idiot for accepting the Bible and not his empirical explanation for things.
I have a perfectly valid reason for doing so - science is inductive and inductive reasoning is formally fallacious.
Timmy then responds something to the affect - "well, what kind of idiot denies that if you throw a newspaper in the fire, it will burn?"
Timmy went on to say that the "reason" he knows this "certainty" is because of previous observations.
So, i have asked Timmy to prove his assertion that his past experience logically infers beyond any shadow of a doubt that if i were to throw a newspaper in fire right now, it will burn...a simple "science" test.
YET, Timmy has failed to prove this. And not only has he not even attempted it, he then goes on to say that i am retarded for doubting him.
You morons want me to deny the divine logic (Christ Jesus) and embrace evolution and all the rest of the crap, yet you can't answer this one simple thing.
Furthermore, Timmy is the one using the word "true" - so to understand what he means, I have asked for a definition and he refuses to give one.
- "The fool says in his heart, "There is no God."
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 3:38 PM
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Bruce,
What good will it do for Karen to talk about her personal experience with Jesus?
Will one more person claiming to have a secret conversation with the son of the creator of the universe as laid out in the Old Testament help those of us who have sincerely tried to have such a conversation with your lord and been left sitting in silence?
Won't that just piss us off all the more, that here is yet another person who Jesus has made himself known to and yet he still won't do it for me.
Actually it wont piss us off.
We will just think here is one more lost soul who needs to find the certainty of religion so badly that they are willing to talk themselves into believing, arrogantly so, that they had a spiritual experience that others can't understand.
Why can't we understand Bruce?
Are we stupid?
Are we not worthy of Jesus showing us his presence as he has shown himself to you?
No.
Jesus isn't there.
You just think that he is.
You have no more discussion left here as I see it.
Your so called evidence of the resurrection has been blown out of the water six ways from Sunday.
All you have is this personal revelation that none of us can have. (I've tried)
Tell me what more you have to offer this discussion.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 3:34 PM
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Ted - Based upon the evidence that I have seen, it appears that the universe is somewhere around 13.5 billion years old and that the earth is somewhere around 4.5 billion years old, as we experience time. Hugh Ross, a Christian astrophysicist, (www.reasons.org) does a good job of explaining the current science in a readable fashion. I will add that God apparently experiences time in a much different fashion, based upon the revelation of scripture.
Based upon the evidence that I have seen, it appears that evolution of species has occurred. Whatever information God placed into the universe at the Big Bang has lead to life. The vast difference between human beings and their closest relatives (not in the DNA, but in intelligence and ability), the precambrian explosion (and all punctuated equilibrium examples, as documented by Stephen Gould), and phenomena such as irreducible complexity (as documented by Michael Behe) all leave open the distinct possibility that the creator invervened in the evolutionary process or jump-started it. Even if he didn't, his initial creative act set everything in motion that ultimately led to us.
Ted, this is not a "first step" for me. I don't have a problem with science, period. It's a gift from God. Good to hear from you.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 3:32 PM
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Skeptic says,
"Believers and nonbelievers start with the same data of the senses and the recollected images of the senses. They both reach conclusions from this data, conclusions in the form of propositions about the world."
How so skeptic? Please explain to me how this works?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 3:22 PM
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Bruce,
Your whole argument of late is that science can not satisfy the spiritual because science has no answer for ultimate truth.
Once again you point out the fundemental difference between you and non believers.
You need ultimate truth. So you make one up. Not you personally. I know that you did not make up God. Someone else did, upon realizing that it would appeal to those who were tormented by not knowing the absolute meaning of life.
The atheists you are debating with, as all atheists are people who do not need an answer to that ultimate question.
The mystery suits us fine.
Science does not leave us in need of something more in terms of an absolute answer.
We enjoy taking what science has taught us, and pondering the mysteries of the universe on our own.
And what ever spiritual thoughts our mind comes up with, we are satisfied. We do not require a large communnity of people who came up with the exact same thoughts to validate our own personal spiritual feelings.
Vive le mystery.
It's a wonderful spiritualy uplifting thing. The wonder of the universe.
I will die a happy man, never needing to know the answers to the mystery of the universe. And yet I will never stop seeking those answers. And yet I am okay with never finding them.
I can actually understand why that doesn't work for you Bruce.
It takes bravery.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 3:19 PM
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Karen: Hi. Help me out here. I'm probably not expressing myself very well when I tell them about my personal experience with Jesus. Tell them your experience. Don't fear the lions. After awhile, you get numb to the tearing of your flesh.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 3:08 PM
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If people cannot answer questions like "what is truth" then what does that mean? Beyond the dictionary meaning of "truth," I am not sure if the question actually has substance. Saying something like "God is Truth." It's like saying "Truth is Life" or "Life is Death" (to quote a song lyric). It means so many things (and nothing at the same time) that it doesn't further any reasonable discourse and necessarily requires more precise and specific questions.
Jason, you ask questions like this, and in response to whatever people say, "I am still waiting" or "Ah-Ha!" So what do YOU take away from this? I think the burden is on you (or those like you) to demonstrate that this is not just word-play and provide more substance to debate.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 3, 2007 3:05 PM
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Jason.
Does God exist?
Can't answer that can you.
Not here on this forum.
It would destroy your argument that no one can answer a question they can't prove.
I wonder how the minions on your website would react if they knew that Jason Bradfield was being asked the simple question:
Does God Exist?
And He could not answer.
He had no answer.
He sat there...Silent on the issue
As silent as God himself
LoL
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 3:03 PM
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Skeptic: Now who is the fear-monger? Killing abortion doctors? I have believed in the resurrection of Jesus for decades, and never once in that time did I ever sense, feel or otherwise irrationally conclude that I was supposed to kill anyone, abortion doctors or otherwise, on orders from heaven. Even if I wanted to (which I don't), that would be clearly against the teachings of the one I say was resurrected. You are the one who is brainwashed to think that this is an urge of the normal Christian. What compels non-believers to murder? It certainly isn't the resurrection.
Let's look at your analogy of the clan of ancient hunters. Only instead of hunting for animals, let's hunt for ultimate truth. The clan has been led by scientists who rely on the scientific method and observation to seek for this prize game, but it has left many in the clan spiritually empty. A deep sense of meaninglessness has overtaken some in the clan, who have been told that the universe is pointless, that their lives are an accident, and that it will all end with the universe burning itself out. A believer asks to take the lead for awhile, and he uses "faith" (an inward response to revelation) as his primary method of hunting. Using this process, a number in the clan find spiritual fulfillment with an experience of the divine. Others prefer to continue using the old ways. The clan is split, each group claiming to have the right path to truth.
The closest that you can take me to the question of whether or not Jesus was resurrected from the dead is a statement of probabilities. You conclude that it is more likely than not that he did not rise from the dead. This tells me nothing - either he did or he did not. Of course it is improbable - that is why it is unique. The universe is improbable, and it is here; life is improbable, and here we are. It is improbable everytime someone wins the lottery. Probabilities are meaningless in the individual situation. Something either happens or it doesn't.
The inward revelation I experienced is similar to meeting a person, but on the level that Christians refer to as "spirit." To me, this confirms that Jesus is alive. It changed my whole attitude about the new testament, and I began looking at it not as a set of propositions to be proved or disproved, but as a revelation about the person of Jesus. It is not the resurrection itself as a proposition that is revealed, it is Jesus himself. I didn't get an inward vision of Jesus rising from the dead - we believe in the resurrection because we encounter Jesus. The encounter with Him is like a sensory experience in another level or dimension.
There has been much said about Christians being "certain." I always admit that I may be wrong - and I will say it again "I MAY BE WRONG." I am always seeking to understand my own experience better. I don't think that I am any more certain in that sense than you are. I believe that I have experienced something, so I talk about it. So far, while your arguments confirm to me that I cannot prove the resurrection objectively, they have not convinced me that I am just engaging in wishful thinking. My experience of a few decades is that I am communing with Christ. I will continue to listen to your critique, however, as it makes me reflect on my experience. I really did not intend to say this much, but your comment left me no choice.
Last comment - you guys all seem like you believe Christians are about to destroy you. Has anyone out there ever personally suffered physical violence in the name of Christ? Please let me know. For what it's worth, I am just as appalled by Pat Robertson as you are. I wish he would just shut up.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 2:58 PM
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Hi Bruce:
It was good to see your statement that: "I don't have any fight with science anyway". It makes me continue to believe that there is real hope for you.
I know you say you are not a scientist but you don't have to be a scientist to understand the evidence for the age of the earth or the occurrence of evolution. So I assume you regard my two statements about the age of the earth and the occurrence of evolution as true. This is a very good first step.
Keep moving along on the road.
Posted by: Ted Swart | January 3, 2007 2:51 PM
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No Canyon:
You say:
' "Ted, I would like to correct you in one major point.
You said, "Scientists -- on the basis of overwhelming evidence -- contend that these two statements are true facts."
What you meant was, "Scientists -- in spite of overwhelming evidence -- contend that these two statements are true facts." '
And all I can say is that you have now gone completely off the rails. How on earth can you claim to know my mind and what I meant to say? I actually wrote exactly what I meant to write and you must know that. There is no evidence for the earth being only thousands of years old and there is no evidence that evolution did not occur. If you regard my two statements as untrue it simply means you have not dared to look at the scientific evidence for their truth.
Posted by: Ted Swart | January 3, 2007 2:26 PM
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Take careful note of the fact that Jason has not and can not answer a single question.
1 + 1
is the sky Blue?
Does Paper burn in fire?
etc.
Go ahead and ask Jason what his name is?
He can't even answer that.
He can not answer any question because he can not prove any answer. Even that his name is Jason.
What happens to paper in fire?
My answer: It burns
Jason's Answer: God
What is 1 + 1?
My answer: 2
Jason's answer: God
Is the sky blue?
My answer: Yes
Jason's answer: God
What is your name?
My answer: Timmy
Jason's answer: God
Is Jason Crazy?
My answer: Yes
Jason's answer: Shut up you stupid stupid head. You can prove anything so you should just shut up. I talk to God so I know everything. I am the king. Woooohooooo! Yippeeeeee! Bbllblblblblblblblblblblblb weeeeeeeee! Hey I smell burnt toast?
what the....... (SFX) Kaboooooooom!
Ooops, Jason blew up. Did you see that? He just blew up.
Oh well.
On with the intelligent discussion I guess
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 2:25 PM
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It requires no more that a critical reading of the first few verses of Genesis to ascertain that it (and everything which depends from it... i.e., the rest of the wholly babble) is myth. It requires a literal interpretation, in order for it to make sense of it... no metaphors... no allegory... no hidden meanings. In biblical times, people thought that the earth and heaven were all that there was... and that the earth was essentially a 'terrarium'. They thought that the sky was a solid object, called the 'firmament', and that the sun, moon, and stars were affixed to it. So, essentially, heaven is 'on the other side of the sky'.
The story of Genesis is comprised of the myths, superstitions, fairy tales and fantastical delusions of an ignorant bunch of Bronze Age fishermen and wandering goat herders, lifted from the oral traditions of other cultures, and crafted into a tale that incorporated some of their own folk tales and pseudo-history. This collection of ignorance provides the basis for the Abrahamic death cults of desert monotheism... Judaism, Christianity and Islam.
The cosmological aspects of Genesis are perfectly understandable, if you contemplate them in the proper context. At the time the bible stories were concocted, the perception was that the earth was the object and the center of creation. Why? Because they had no reason to think otherwise. Today, as we advance science, we stand upon the shoulders of all the scientists that came before. Back then there were no shoulders to stand upon... so they did the best they could with what they had... their senses and their imaginations. They were desperately trying to answer profound questions of their existence, such as "What holds the sky up?"
* They had no concept of 'outer space', and so they conceived that in the beginning all that existed were dark waters.
* They had no concept of 'nothingness'. Remember, the concept of 'zero' wasn't invented (discovered?) until thousands of years later. With that in mind, the term 'void', as it is employed in Genesis, can not refer to 'nothingness'... it can only be applied in its alternative definition, which is 'empty'. So, the waters were dark, formless and void (empty - devoid of content).
* They thought that all of creation consisted of the earth and an unseen 'heaven', and they thought that the sky was a 'thing'... a substantive 'firmament' that was created by god to separate the waters and differentiate earth from heaven, when both were created.
# They had no idea that Earth was a planet, orbiting the sun.
# They had no idea that there is no firmament... that the sky is not a 'thing'.
(If you don't believe that they thought the sky was an object... a solid barrier... consider the Tower of Babel, that they were building to reach heaven. Apparently, God ALSO thought that the sky was an object, since it concerned him so much that he confounded their speech, so as to disrupt their project and keep them from reaching his domain. God must be pretty much of a dumbass, if he doesn't even know the actual configuration of the universe that he created. So much for the 'inerrant' bible.)
* They thought that the sun was a light that god had placed upon the 'firmament' to differentiate night from day.
# They had no idea that the sun is a star... the center of our solar system.
# They had no concept of 'stars' in the same sense that we understand them today.
* They had no idea that night and day were a consequence of the earth's rotation.
* They thought that the moon was a 'lesser' light that god had caused to travel across the firmament to enable man to differentiate the seasons, and provide illumination at night.
# They had no concept of the moon as a satellite.
* They thought that the stars were tiny lights that god had placed upon the firmament to provide for omens. (Some thought that the stars were 'holes' in the firmament that allowed the 'light of heaven' to shine through.)
# They had no idea that the stars were suns, just like our own sun.
# They thought the eyeball-visible planets (Mercury, Mars, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn) were 'wandering stars'.
# They had no idea that the planets were actually sun-orbiting bodies, just like earth.
* They had no idea that the earth, itself, is a planet.
# They had no clue as to the actual nature of the earth, our solar system, the place of our solar system in the galaxy... or even of the existence of our galaxy. (Up until very recently, we didn't even know that there even WERE other galaxies. Our galaxy, when it was first known that there actually WAS a galaxy, was thought to comprise the whole universe.) From their perspective, the 'earth' and 'heaven' (i.e., whatever existed on the other side of the sky) represented all that there was. A terrarium.
I do not say these things to disparage what they thought back then. They were trying to do what science is trying to do today... trying to understand nature and reality. Today, we have technology and disciplined meta-procedures (scientific method) to help us extract answers from nature.
Back then, they did not.
Today, we have 'theories' to provide a consistent explanatory framework for what we are able to observe in nature, supplemented and validated by the additional information that we are able to extract from nature by means of our technology, our disciplined methods and our intellectual tools (mathematics, logic). Most of our theories are incomplete, so we continue to work on them... because we know that they are incomplete.
Back then, they did not have disciplined methods, and they did not have the technology to extract answers from nature. The only information they had access to was what they could see with their own eyeballs. There was no technological knowledge base or scientific context in which to interpret their observations, so they had to appeal to their imaginations... and the 'supernatural'... in order to make sense out of what they saw. Actually, what they really achieved was deluding themselves into thinking that they knew the truth. Amazingly, over time, this delusion has become codified, institutionalized, and incorporated... complete with franchises.
***********
"The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance... it is the illusion of knowledge." ~ Daniel Boorstin
***********
Basically, Genesis... and the very concept of god(s)... can be thought of as a 'hypothesis', concocted by people who were constrained by lack of technology, methodology and intellectual tools... but they sure weren't constrained by lack of imagination.
Today, we try to interpret Genesis in the context of what we KNOW about the universe... galaxies, stars, planets, moons, gravity, orbits, inclination of the earth's axis, planetary rotation, etc. They problem is that Genesis CAN'T be interpreted in terms of those things, because Genesis was written by men, based on oral traditions, and those men DID NOT KNOW about those things. They could only write about what they could see and what they could guess and what they could imagine about the reasons that lay behind what they saw. In any event, it provided them with a mechanism to quell the innate anxiety that comes with fretting about how and why they came to be here.
They guessed wrong.
So... the cosmological aspects of Genesis require a literal interpretation... no metaphors... no allegory... no hidden meaning. The key, though, is in understanding that the literal interpretation DOES NOT lead to a description of the way things ARE... it leads to a description of the way they THOUGHT things are. It leads to a naive description of reality, concocted by people who were doing the best they could with what they had.
It is absolutely appalling, though, to realize that hundreds of millions of people, TODAY, including participants in this forum, ACTUALLY BELIEVE that this mythological nonsense is actually TRUE.
***********
"Myth has been needed precisely because we were not in a position to understand the universe on its own terms, through the language of natural law and direct examination of its workings on a material, rational level. Once that process of understanding is completed - and we are well on our way to achieving that - the use of myth can be discarded. Its continuing retention is already proving to be counter-productive." - Earl Doherty
***********
Posted by: DuckPhup | January 3, 2007 2:25 PM
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What has Jason shown us?
The difference between the believer and the non believer is that the non believer requires no certainty to enjoy life.
There are no certainties in life as Jason has shown and he is right.
Nothing can be proven.
And we are all just fine with that.
The believer on the other hand needs certainty.
The unkonwn scares Jason and his kind.
This is why they make up an all knowing deity to pray to and attach the meaning of their life to.
The unknown is not wonderous to them as it is to us.
It is scary and must be replaced by certainty of God.
If I ever throw a piece of paper into a fire and it does not burn,
I will immediately drop to my knees and start praying to Jason's God.
Until then,
I will consider Jason and all like him as those who need to escape the reality of uncertainty.
It scares you doesn't it Jason. Admit it
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 2:14 PM
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Duckphup: regarding the dating of the gospels, there is currently a very interesting exhibit at the Smithonian's Sackler Gallery in D.C, titled "in the beginning" that looks at biblical documents from the first millenium. According to the biblical scholars and curator that have put the exhibit together, the first gospel was written by 70 A and the last (John) by 90 AD. Paul 1st lettter to the Corithians is dated at 15 years after the death and resurrection of Christ. So these are accounts by witnesses to the events, written shortly (by historical standards) after the events occured and while there would have still been other witnesses around to step up and vehemently disagree with those accounts if they chose to. Not all scholars may agree with these dates but enough of them do for you to amend your statement to: some biblical scholars say... Believers are always accused of cherry picking the evidence but evidently non-believers do the same thing.
Bruce: you have been a great encouragement to me and I am sure to many others. I rarely post on these blogs because, in general, the tone gets way too personal and mean. By your thoughtful and kind approach, you set a tone that ended up influencing the overall tone of the discussion and you are to be commanded for that. I also appreciate the many thoughtful and respectful posts by Timmy and many others. Having said that, Bruce, I agree with you that the basis for our faith, more than any book, is our personal relationship with the living Christ.
One last thought. I am amazed by how many people tell us what God should be like, if he existed, how he should act, what he should want of us etc. God existed before us and will exist after us. he does not need our approval or us dictating his behavior so that we can then accept and worship him. What kind of a God would that be? Certainly not one that is worth worshipping. As He said: I am that I am.
Posted by: Karen | January 3, 2007 2:11 PM
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Canyon: And I encourage you to continue to defend your faith, as well. One conclusion that I have come to is that I need to pick my battles carefully. I decided a long time ago not to get into fights about science because 1) I am not a scientist, so I am not really qualified to dispute their findings or theories, and 2) I don't really have any fight with science, anyway. Everything it currently holds could be true, and Jesus could still be the resurrected Son of God. That is the ultimate issue for me, and science really has nothing to say about that. The God of the Bible exists outside of this universe and is not subject to its laws. Science, even if it admitted that He might exist, could not observe, measure or test Him. He is only known by revelation - self-disclosure. So pick your battles carefully, and have fun.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 2:07 PM
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Bruce said “The issue of Christian faith is, I believe, an epistemological issue. The non-believer sees Christian faith as a belief that is not based upon any evidence at all (or insufficient evidence, as Skeptic writes) because it does not fit into any of his categories of knowledge. Those categories are generally rational, based upon the perceptions of the senses, scientific evidence, logic, etc. The believer simply has a different experience that allows him to experience the knowledge of God (in the sense of knowing a person and knowing certain things about that person, not in the sense of knowing everything). A revelation comes to the believer, and it creates the phenomenon of faith. This appears irrational to the non-believer, because he does have any epistemological frame of reference for such things.”
I think that Bruce is correct that the nature of the main issue which we have been discussing is epistemological. And it is a very important issue.
Bruce continues to use the word “faith” in different ways which creates confusion. I suggest that we use the terms “worldview” and “confidence” to refer to two of the meanings of “faith”, while reserving the word “faith” itself for the meaning which I targeted in my last post. Faith is a particular irrational way of arriving at conclusions from evidence. Bruce is familiar with faith in this sense and he recognizes that belief in the alleged resurrection of Jesus is based on this process of faith. But instead of recognizing that faith is a vice, Bruce wants to make it into a virtue. He is not alone in that project since many of the NT writers and subsequent Christians do the same thing.
Bruce thinks that we non-believers lack an epistemological frame of reference for such things as revelation and faith, but I disagree. Believers and nonbelievers start with the same data of the senses and the recollected images of the senses. They both reach conclusions from this data, conclusions in the form of propositions about the world. They both have degrees of confidence in their conclusions, ranging from very low to very high (certainty). They both experience feeling states such as joy, peace, exhilaration, awe, and curiosity which are sometimes associated with the conclusions which they draw. Where believers and nonbelievers differ, however, is in how they bridge the gap from data to conclusions. Most nonbelievers use a process called “rationality”. Most believers use a process called “faith”, and they use this process only in certain areas of their lives or with certain questions. They are quite content to use rationality in other areas, especially where their immediate health or well-being is on the line. Now, how does “revelation” fit into this? Bruce might say something like this “The truth that Jesus rose from the dead came to me in a revelation.” So, what’s really going on here? Bruce holds a particular proposition to be true, but he does not use a rational process to reach that conclusion, as he himself admits. He also has a very high degree of confidence that the proposition is true; he is either certain that it is true or nearly certain that it is true. Perhaps he had a “flash of insight” involving feelings of certainty about the proposition, feelings of awe or joy, and maybe even some visual images. He then attaches other beliefs to the experience, i.e.“My insight came from God!” and “Nonbelievers just aren’t able to reach knowledge like I can; I must be special.” Very often the propositions which Bruce ends up endorsing are ones which he WANTS to be true; WISHFUL THINKING plays a major role in his selection of beliefs. The problem is that faith and revelation are just not reliable roads to knowledge. Christians and Muslims both indulge themselves in faith and revelation, but they come out of these processes with opposite conclusions. Christians conclude “Jesus rose from the dead.” Muslims conclude “There is only one God and no human can be divine.” or “Jesus was made to appear to rise from the dead.”
There once was an ancient clan of hunters. Everyday the clan had to select which direction in which to go in order to seek animals which they would kill for food. Some members of the clan said “Let’s track our prey by looking at the tracks of animals in the soil.” Over the years, they learned that this was a good method by which to find their prey; it worked well. One day, one of the clan members (his name was “Bruce”) said “Let’s not track our prey using tracks in the soil. I have a better method.” The other members of the clan said “What is your method? We’re always seeking better methods.” Bruce replied “Sometimes I have this subjective experience in which I see which way we should go to find our prey. I’ll just tell you when I have this experience and we’ll go that way.” The other clan members decided to humor Bruce a bit, so they tried his method on ten consecutive days. It worked once in ten tries. Finally, hungry from their relative lack of success, the rest of the clan said to Bruce “Looking at tracks in the soil brought us success nine times out of ten, but your method brought us success only one time out of ten. We’re not going to listen to you anymore or use your method of seeking our prey. Thanks anyway.” Bruce kept pestering the clan with his revelations, but the clan did not listen. One day Bruce even suggested that by his own subjective revelation he could determine where to plant seeds so that they would grow into plants which could be eaten. But, the clan just wouldn’t listen. They knew that Bruce was prone to flights of fantasy. Faith and revelation are simply unreliable methods for seeking knowledge. In fact they don’t bring knowledge at all; they simply bring a false sense of confidence.
Bruce said “ Faith is an experience in a realm of knowledge that those without faith simply do not have.” Bruce is trying to invent realms of knowledge which do not exist. Either Jesus rose from the dead or he did not. There is only one realm of knowledge which contains the truth about this. Suppose we had a time machine by which we could travel back and observe Jesus (I’m assuming here that he actually existed) every single minute of the day during a 60 day period beginning one week prior to his crucifixion (I’m also assuming here that he was hung on a cross). What would we observe? According to Bruce, we would observe that Jesus was removed from the cross, placed in the tomb, was confirmed to be dead by his handlers (they determined he had no heart beat or lung action and was in a state of rigor mortis), and then at some time when nobody else was around, Jesus came back to life, exited the tomb, and later met with his disciples and others. Now according to nonbelievers, we would observe something quite different, and there are several alternative sequences of events which we could envision. The truth of the matter is that nobody living today can know what happened with Jesus; we don’t have the imaginary time machine that I described. The only thing we can do is to approach the truth. We can make statements about what PROBABLY happened. Now, what method shall we use to make our approximation. Maybe we should examine all the relevant evidence with rational principles. After all, that approach seems to work better than anything else in other areas. But no, Bruce and most other Christians think that they have a better method. They think that they know the truth from subjective experience, revelation, or faith. They think they have a magical pathway to truth. The problem is that it just doesn’t work! Not only that, it is unethical to use that approach. It is an act of intellectual dishonesty or abuse of intelligence.
Some nonbelievers might say “Just let Bruce maintain his delusion about Jesus rising from the dead. It’s no big deal. He’s not hurting anyone.” However, other nonbelievers such as Sam Harris are beginning to point out how faith-based thinking IS harmful, and I expect that a lot more investigation will be done on this in the next few years. Relatively peaceful faithists (believers in the value of faith), such as Bruce, act as ENABLERS of other faithists to engage in violence. The peaceful faithists contribute to a CULTURE OF IRRATIONALITY which is fertile ground for people that are already prone to aggression for other reasons. It is a very short step, for example, from a belief in the resurrection of Jesus to a belief that Jesus wants you to kill abortion doctors.
So much more can be said about the problems of an epistemology based on faith, revelation, and dogmatism, but I think I’ve said enough for one post.
Posted by: Skeptic | January 3, 2007 2:05 PM
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hey, lookey there...two more people who can't do it either....
Once again:
Timmy says,
"No one needs to prove my newspaper theory,
It is mine.
I push it on no one else."
You don't push it on anyone?! What a joke.
Timmy earlier:
"Yes Jason, it burns.
Yes I am certain of this.
Everyone on this post other than you is certain of this.
You are the only one who questions this.
because you are an idiot."
and
"Jason is...logically, rationally and emotionally retarded.
Hence,
Idiot."
Again, I have asked Timmy (the "rational" one) to prove his assertion that his past experience logically infers beyond any shadow of a doubt that if i were to throw a newspaper in fire right now, it will burn...
His answer again: I don't have to prove this. It's true because I say it's true. I don't push my theory on any one. And Jason is a retard for doubting it.
okie dokie.
-------------
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 1:37 PM
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Science does not 'prove' things. 'Proof' is for mathematicians, coin collectors and distillers of alcoholic beverages. Proof in science is applicable only in the 'negative' sense... i.e., hypotheses and theories must be 'falsifiable'. When scientists do experiments (to validate 'predicted' results), they are NOT trying to 'prove' they are RIGHT... they are trying to FIND OUT if they're WRONG. NOT being wrong simply builds confidence that one is on the right track... it 'proves' nothing.
Evolution is a scientific theory. In science, theories occupy a higher tier of importance than mere 'facts'... theories EXPLAIN facts. The theory of evolution explains the OBSERVED FACT that the genetic makeup of populations of organisms changes over time. These observed facts are NOT in dispute, and they are readily evident in the fossil record, biology, genetics, palentology, etc.... moreso now than they were in Darwin's day.
The theory identifies two primary mechanisms which ACCOUNT FOR the OBSERVED FACTS:
* genetic drift... statistical variations in allele frequency, over time
* natural selection... the non-random survival of randomly varying replicators Dawkins' excellent phrase)
The FACTS (the genetic makeup of populations of organisms changes over time) ARE NOT in dispute. There is ongoing conversation about OTHER possible mechanisms which may ALSO account, in part, for the OBSERVED FACT that the genetic makeup of populations of organisms changes over time, such as 'punctuated equilibrium'.
However, the word 'fact' CAN BE applied to evolution in the sense of COMMON USAGE in science... that being:
"In science, 'fact' can only mean 'confirmed to such a degree that it would be perverse to withhold provisional assent'. ~ Stephen J. Gould
In THAT sense, 'evolution is, indeed, 'fact'.
Posted by: DuckPhup | January 3, 2007 1:22 PM
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Ted, I would like to correct you in one major point.
You said, "Scientists -- on the basis of overwhelming evidence -- contend that these two statements are true facts."
What you meant was, "Scientists -- in spite of overwhelming evidence -- contend that these two statements are true facts."
Posted by: Canyon Shearer | January 3, 2007 12:47 PM
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Paper burning and the nature of truth:
All this talk about paper -- tossed into a fire -- burning or not burning is just a total waste of time. I have thrown tightly rolled up paper into a waning fire and it has failed to catch alight. So what?? This has nothing to do with the fact that paper normally does burn when thrown into a fire. If a fire is burning well and the paper is not folded up too tightly the fact that it will burn is "beyond reasonable doubt" as the lawyers say.
And what on earth these facts have to do with the truth or lack of truth in science is beyond me. Galileo confirmed, by direct observation, that the earth revolves around the sun. And for reporting this true observation he was persecuted by the Roman Catholic church. And it is only very recently that the church has had the decency to posthumously apologize.
But, and this is the important point, no scientist who knows anything about the subject believes that the earth will continue revolving around the sun forever and a day. Astrophysicists believe -- for sound reasons -- that once our sun has used up most of its hydrogen fuel it will expand tremendously and swallow up the earth. None of this means that right here and now the earth is not revolving around the sun.
Much the same situation applies to the occurrence of evolution. All the fossil and DNA evidence points to the fact that evolution did actually occur. Moreover, all the radioactive dating evidence points to the fact that the earth is billions and not thousands of years old. And all those fundamentalist Christians and Muslims who reject these true facts are simply being wilfully blind and deliberately turning away from even looking at the evidence.
So let me try and take the discussion away from paper burning or not burning. Here are two statements which are either true or false:
1. The earth is billions of years old.
2. The evolution of living species on earth -- including the evolution of mammals into humans -- actually occurred.
Scientists -- on the basis of overwhelming evidence -- contend that these two statements are true facts. Many individuals -- led astray by baseless religious musings -- refuse to look at the evidence and claim that these facts are false.
Now decide for yourselves if my two statements are true or false. And if you insist that they are only true "beyond reasonable doubt" I am not going to quibble. But if you say they are indubitably false -- as many deluded fundamentalists claim -- then it is quite clear to me that honesty has deserted you.
Posted by: Ted Swart | January 3, 2007 12:43 PM
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FYI ALL
Beliefwatch: Blasphemy
'Hi my name is Lindy and I deny the existence of the Holy Spirit and you should too.'
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16409851/site/newsweek/from/ET/
Posted by: Pam Meloy | January 3, 2007 12:42 PM
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Timmy says,
"No one needs to prove my newspaper theory,
It is mine.
I push it on no one else."
You don't push it on anyone?! What a joke.
Timmy earlier:
"Yes Jason, it burns.
Yes I am certain of this.
Everyone on this post other than you is certain of this.
You are the only one who questions this.
because you are an idiot."
and
"Jason is...logically, rationally and emotionally retarded.
Hence,
Idiot."
Again, I have asked Timmy (the "rational" one) to prove his assertion that his past experience logically infers beyond any shadow of a doubt that if i were to throw a newspaper in fire right now, it will burn...
His answer again: I don't have to prove this. It's true because I say it's true. I don't push my theory on any one. And Jason is a retard for doubting it.
okie dokie.
Posted by: Jason | January 3, 2007 12:29 PM
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I know scientific concepts outside the boundaries of what you as religious followers "know" is hard to understand. I'm sure your brain hurts when you are forced to think. It's like a muscle you've never used before. One that's never been used because its easier just to attribute anything you don't understand as God. Its harder and requires more effort to think, discover, and come up with ways of looking at things in ways never done before. Science has no boundaries; has many different categories of inquiry; many books; many changes as time goes on. Religion is a cop-out to thinking. The exact opposite. Everything is spoon fed to you in one, incredibly crazy story. How convenient and without effort. No wonder our country has so many fat, lazy, stupid people. I still maintain hope for us as a species. Let's use science as a candle to light the dark side of every human mind. Amen.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 3, 2007 12:24 PM
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The link is her name. And it offers nothing in the way of evidence, only confidence. The claim that Jesus rose from the dead is in an entirely different category from Tim McVeigh. Resurrection and blowing up a building are very different actions. One is possible, and the other is not. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. Heresay is not extraordinary evidence. George Washington is not alleged to have risen in the sky on a chariot, he was a president. This is a reality that is completely possible. No one is arguing that he couldn't be the president. Most skeptical, rational people don't believe in things that the laws of nature do not allow! Period. I can't believe I have to point out these glaring and obvious deficiencies in your "evidence". I don't think you understand the word evidence. Science is how we more forward; religion, backwards.
Posted by: Shemp | January 3, 2007 12:01 PM
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As I have said Jason,
No one needs to prove my newspaper theory,
It is mine.
I push it on no one else.
It is not a certainty
Just that I am certain
And I don't need to prove it to you either
Bye crazy boy
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 11:46 AM
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There is no link.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 3, 2007 11:27 AM
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Well, another morning goes by and still no one can prove Timmy's universal that all newspapers will burn if thrown into fire.
Instead, Timmy calls you a idiot if you don't take his word for it. And I am the arrogant one...riiighhhttt..
"Jason: I think you have painted yourself into a corner, and are just arguing for the sake of argument. I think you would do better if you just analyze what you really believe and why you believe it, and try to express that. Attacking science is simply going to marginalize you."
Well Anony, perhaps then you can take a shot at the newspaper problem. www.reasons.org is nothing more than the same ole' unjustified empiricism of atheists with God thrown in the mix. The site is a joke and one the main reasons why morons like Harris are even getting a foothold. Instead of attacking the presuppositions of empiricists, you legitimize it. thanks alot. ::rollseyes::
lastly, Timmy...I noticed you keep referring to the "rapture". Maybe you should spend more time on my site. The "left Behind" rapture baloney is unbiblical. ANY system that teaches a future coming of Christ is baloney and in direct opposition to what Christ taught in Matthew 24, etc.
leave the theology to the theologians.
oh, and where is your proof that your past experiences necessarily infer that if i were to throw a newspaper in fire right now, it WILL burn?
Wow...all this activity and yet not one person can logically demonstrate this assertion.
Scientists by butt.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 11:27 AM
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Dear Bruce,
Thank you for defending your faith, keep up the good fight.
I would like to point out that there is only one absolute truth in this world, and that truth being God, Jesus Christ.
It is therefore impossible to prove anything with absolutes, which is why the legal system uses the term, 'beyond a reasonable doubt'.
It is possible to prove the resurrection beyond a reasonable doubt.
Just as we believe that George Washington existed based on a series of first hand accounts, we believe the Jesus Christ existed based on seven histories of direct observers, and many more of second and third-hand writers.
For an excellent proof(beyond a reasonable doubt) for the resurrection, please click on the link I included in my name above.
Yours, in Christ,
Canyon
P.S. Jesus didn't write a book, He wrote 66 Books.
Posted by: Canyon Shearer | January 3, 2007 11:02 AM
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Dirk: I know Jesus never wrote a book - I guess I will have to be more precise. I simply meant the book about him. You have no evidence whatsoever that Paul suffered a "brain seizure." You are no more capable of making a medical diagnosis about him than I am capable of proving the historicity of the resurrection. To make a differential medical or psychological diagnosis of Paul, you must have facts illicited from a clinical exam, as well as diagnostic tests. If you accept that you have accurate facts about Paul's condition, you have implicitly accepted that the accounts in Acts about his conversion are true. If you are going to accept the facts about Paul in Acts, you must also accept the facts that that book gives about miracles. Which will it be? You are assuming that he had a brain seizure because you have no other categories of knowledge that explain his experience. Stick with the strong points of your argument - I can't prove the resurrection.
Peace.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 9:27 AM
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I mean the profession of faith, of course, not the support of dependent people.
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | January 3, 2007 9:03 AM
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Bruce
'Jesus has made himself available in his book and in the lives of his people. You have read his book...'
Jesus never wrote a book. Everything that was written about him in the Gospels was hearsay. The history of Christianity is one of the greatest marketing campaigns the world has ever seen. It had to be advertised, otherwise it could not have succeeded.
As the Permaculture thinker Bill Mollison famously said: 'Anything that has to be advertised must have something wrong with it.' (emphasis on 'has to be')
One good reason why all intelligent people should oppose belief is that human beings are so susceptible to it. If an American politician stands up and says 'I believe...' it is an effective way of priming people to accept what follows. Weird or what?
St. Paul, the marketing genius behind Christianity, used this tool very skilfully. 'If Christ is not risen, my faith is vain.' To which the intelligent response is: So what?
If St. Paul had not suffered from a brain seizure very similar to that of Philip K. Dick, he would have carried on using the same set of psychological tools to bludgeon the Christians, and they would have remained a minor Jewish heretical sect.
In psychological terms, what does the profession of faith ('I believe...') really mean? Surely it means 'I surrender to the group'. We are, it seemed, primed by some neocortical reflex to support a person who reveals his dependence on us. Evolutionary tribal survival strategy on the savannah, maybe. Not a very good survival strategy for the human race in the 21st century.
Best wishes
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | January 3, 2007 8:57 AM
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Jason must have two hands over his eyes, two fingers in his ears, and a sock in his mouth.
He can't hear, see, or speak science (which he derisively denotes "science"), because science is "always false" according to his quoted source.
Funny. I guess the poor bastard lives in a cave somewhere back in the Bronze Age and has carrier pigeons that he sends with his comment responses to some friend of his that lives in the post-Enlightenment era.
"Science is false, and must always be false...The issue is as clear, and as simple, as that."
I can't believe someone who pretends to have an IQ greater than his own age would write an endorsement of such a claim. Perhaps this Jason character is in fact just a sock-puppet Christian, an atheist in his bathrobe having us all on for fun. I can only hope so. For his sake.
Posted by: Daniel Morgan | January 3, 2007 8:48 AM
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Jason Bradfield says:
"inductive reasoning is ALWAYS fallacious"
Always? So how does that apply to the universal declaration you just made? What is the epistemic basis you have for making such a claim?
Bwa-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha
Go take a course in logic, and quit reading Christian apologists who try to twist logic into a pretzel to make invisible magic beings appear.
Posted by: Daniel Morgan | January 3, 2007 8:38 AM
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"Even more sadly (to go by the body count), the Russian revolution was explicitly atheist. It was state-of-the-art atheism, as of 1917."
I think it's a mistake to point to Soviet history as proof that atheism is evil. I also think it's a mistake to point to various Popes and the Inquisition as proof that Catholicism is evil. Such body-count games are pointless, since both were ultimately about power for power's sake. I suspect Soviet history would have been just as bloody if Lenin and his successors had not claimed allegiance to atheism. As others here have noted, totalitarianism may only be atheist in the technical sense, since it really replaces traditional religion with dictator-worship.
Posted by: Tonio | January 3, 2007 8:28 AM
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Hi Bruce, welcome back.
I am not dismissive of your experiences, as I have said before. I wish religious people well and hope that they wish me well. Non-religious people (myself included) have experiences with the same characteristics as those of religious believers. Just that the conceptual framework is omitted. I am not threatened by fear of hell nor seduced by hope of heaven. On the other hand, conviction unsupported by experience is easily threatened or seduced: the result is hysteria, as we have observed on this thread.
My worry about depending on religious authority is that it is trying to make modern sense out of ancient ignorance; a convoluted process at best. It would be more enlightening in my view to look first at the psychological motivators that lead people to be religious, rather than try to argue backwards from a religious position. As I've tried to point out before, spiritual experience is no justification for selecting one belief system over another.
I've had a look at the website www.reasons.org. It contains a lot of material and I don't have time to read it all, but the contributors are intelligent and restrained, which is good. Much of the talk seems to be about the Big Bang and how it proves the existence of God. A chap called Hugh Ross is the star speaker.
'The big bang ... makes the universe too young (only a dozen or so billions of years old) to support any hope of a nontheistic interpretation for life's origin.'
(Who's Right? Who's Wrong? Guideline of Christian Scholarship by Hugh Ross, Ph.D.)
'Stephen Hawking and George Ellis describe Einstein's universe as follows: "Amazing fine tuning occurs in the laws that make this [complex universe] possible. Realization of the complexity of what is accomplished makes it very difficult not to use the word 'miraculous' " '
(Overture To a Dialogue on Hugh Ross by Douglas K. Matthews)
This seems to me to be arguing from belief, trying to make the facts fit the conviction, much like 9/11 conspiracy theory. Actually it feels quite medieval. A lot of time was taken up in the middle ages trying to make the observed facts fit doctrine when there was a perceived problem of incompatibility.
The assumption in general seems to be that thousands of years ago, people knew what modern science is only just discovering. To which my response is: How? Because God told them? If so, why didn't he give them the straight, unadorned facts? And why did he tell them so much total junk at the same time? Even if you do accept the (extremely tenuous) correlation between the Genesis account and Big Bang theory, how do you explain the Earth being created first, then the sun, moon and stars, Eve being made out of Adam's rib, the talking snake and all the rest of it?
My conclusions from reading the world's holy books is that they are myths and they serve the purpose of myth. The (solely American?) attempt to make the Old Testament into science is so far-fetched as to be incomprehensible to me.
Best wishes
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | January 3, 2007 7:42 AM
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Dan Dennett did an interview with Bill Moyers on the Charlie Rose Show and it's worth watching. This idea of faith and playing the "god says so" card is a great understanding and answer.
Dennett further describes the idea that ALL religions should be taught in schools, just the facts, so that students can make their own decisions. He goes on to say, and I agree, that when students understand how their particular religion is in a minority to all the other religions that are being taught it will be difficult to logically take the stance that your particular religion is the RIGHT religion.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 3, 2007 7:38 AM
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To tidy up ... some short responses:
LT: God might break laws of buoyancy to make the axhead float if he had a reason to.
AR: Scientific laws describe patterns that only make sense when they are universal, without exception. To use a POETIC METAPHOR, they are God's laws and God cannot break His own laws because God is realized in the inner harmony of the universe as revealed through the patterns and regularities of nature. This is a POETIC VIEW with no factual value, as its "prophets" Einstein and Spinoza would be among the first to insist, but as a metaphor it captures the implicit faith that makes organized science possible. Without universality, science as we know it would make no sense. If we find an exception, we look for reasons and find an explanation, until the exception ends up confirming the rule. A radical atheist may wish to deny this faith in universality. OK, we can discuss this too, but we need at least the rules of logic and philosophy to do so. I predict that if we follow those rules honestly and consistently, they will boot us back up to universalist science.
Disciple: What is "logic"? What is "truth"? ... What are your epistemological justifications for such concepts?
Teacher: Logic is the science of valid inference, and an inference is valid if, under all admissible interpretations under which the premises are true, the conclusion is true too. An assertion "S" is true if and only if S. To quote Willard Van Orman Quine, truth is a device of disquotation, and all instances of the previous schematic sentence are true which are obtained from it by substituting a well formed assertoric sentence for the schematic variable S. This logical definition of truth is due to Alfred Tarski.
Disciple: Please demonstrate to me in a syllogism how you deduce ... that if i were to throw a newspaper in fire right now, it WILL burn.
Guru: A syllogism is an ancient construct. Today we talk of IF loops in program code. You want a single IF loop that will print correct predictions in a range of circumstances involving combustion. I say get real! Either you write more code than you ever saw before to cover all the cases or you make do with a single loop and your predictor crashes on about the second newspaper.
Trish: I am inclined to think that religion is a flawed by-product of some sort of social function - a sort of price-we-pay for the ability to pass info quickly with language, emotions or facial expression. I also think it is entirely possible to have an ethical, religion-free society.
Andy: I share your inclination. Have you read "The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind" (1976) by Julian Jaynes? He argues that up to about 2-3 thousand years ago, people were by modern standards schizoid, with their right cerebral hemispheres "the home of the gods" (infested by god memes) and only the left hemisphere available for practical reasoning. He argues that modern integrated personal consciousness only emerged slowly, with the then-radical figures of Socrates, Buddha, Lao-Ze and Jesus, and is still doing battle with the schizoids. Modern neuroscience has left the details of his psychology behind, but his historical argument is still somehow fascinating. Just a tip.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 3, 2007 6:47 AM
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The anonymous post from 6:22 am was Bruce Burleson. I don't know why it posted as anonymous.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 3, 2007 6:24 AM
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To Timmy, RB, Skeptic, Andy, Ted, Duckphup, Philip,Dirk, Pam and other unbelievers: If I tell you that on a recent trip to India I met a man X in a remote village, and you ask me to prove it, I will probably fail. I can give you all the information I can about the encounter, but whether or not you can reproduce or validate the experience depends 1) upon your desire to find X yourself and 2) X making himself available. Proving the existence of a person is simply not the same as proving the existence of a proposition.
Jesus has made himself available in his book and in the lives of his people. You have read his book, and much of it (perhaps all of it) you find abhorrent or unsubstantiated. You have met his people, and many (perhaps all) of them you find silly. You have convinced yourselves that either Jesus never existed, or if he did once he is now dead and irrelevant, and you don't want to explore an encounter with him any further. Maybe Timmy is right, and my line of argument has come to an end. I only ask you not to close off your minds to Jesus, so that if you do happen to meet him in a remote village, you will not misinterpret the experience. I will also refer you to a site, since some of you have also been kind enough to refer me to other sources. Reasons To Believe - www.reasons.org. - These are scientists (not young-earth creationists) who believe.
Jason: I think you have painted yourself into a corner, and are just arguing for the sake of argument. I think you would do better if you just analyze what you really believe and why you believe it, and try to express that. Attacking science is simply going to marginalize you.
Victoria: Thank you for your comments. While my experience is with Jesus, not Allah, and with Christianity, not Islam, I understand where you are coming from. It is difficult to explain spiritual experiences to others - they are very personal. It is easy for others to write such experiences off as simply functions of the brain. Each individual must decide.
John M.: If you are still around, thanks for your encouragement.
Peace.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 3, 2007 6:22 AM
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Bruce (Jan. 2, 8:50 PM) deserves a serious response. I cite some of his words (B1-B4) and add my own replies (A1-A4).
B1. The issue of Christian faith is, I believe, an epistemological issue. A revelation comes to the believer, and it creates the phenomenon of faith. This appears irrational to the non-believer, because he does [not] have any epistemological frame of reference for such things.
A1. Agreed in part. The problem is that revelation is not an epistemologically sufficient means for acquiring knowledge. At best, revelation provides raw material for a reasoning process that may result in knowledge. Sensory experience is revelation at its most trivial. The senses reveal phenomena that I may choose to accept at face value. More usually, they reveal raw data that require some serious cortical processing before any substantial or useful knowledge emerges. In the meantime, between the revelation of the senses and acknowledge, faith can help. Faith is a strategy for holding out until mere belief has been refined into knowledge. Accepting inner revelation as knowledge can work too, as when a thinker finally "gets it" and sees the answer to a difficult problem. Here the normal prerequisite is a lot of preparatory thinking in order to know that the answer is indeed correct. Sadly, too many cases of Christian revelation short-circuit this process.
B2. It is not arrogant of the believer to say that he "knows" something in this sense that the non-believer does not know, just as it is not arrogant for a biologist to say he knows more about biology than an accountant.
A2. Agreed too, in part. But apparent knowledge can be illusory, if later testing reveals deficiencies. Mystical knowledge is often illusory, precisely because testing it is so difficult. Your own testing of your faith in a "lion's den" of confessed atheists is impressive, but this only demonstrates your will-power, not the quality of your claimed knowledge. Faith is merely a way to maintain belief until it can be refined into knowledge. If the refining process leaves nothing of value, too bad. Bad things can happen to good people. As it happens, a refining process that has lasted for centuries is leaving precious little from the core assertions of Christianity.
B3. It is impossible to convince someone who has not experienced faith as a response to revelation, that it is valid.
A3. This may be true by definition. Faith is never valid, though it may be a reasonable strategy for a while. Sorry to play the logician, but "valid" means "true under all admissible intepretations" or similar, therefore it had better be impossible to convince anyone that faith is valid! For me, the example of string theorists in physics is helpful. Over two decades ago, some string theorists had a revelation of the possible power of strings. Since then, hundreds of brilliant theorists have kept the faith in the hope that string theory will become knowledge and finally give a cash value to the revelation. No luck yet. Soon the believers will start to drift away.
B4. Hopefully these discussions that we are having will make us all more genuine people, regardless of our position with respect to faith.
A4. This is either overly pious or disingenuous. We are all genuine people, all the time, even when some of us lie and talk trash, indeed especially when we do so. No human can maintain a high-minded facade forever, since the mind is rooted in the brain and the body and has to reboot from time to time to clear its own garbage. I would hope that these discussions enable more of us to share the benefits both of the strange attractor of true religious faith and of the reductive power of biting criticism. Only then can we avoid the defeat that you seem to accept above that believers and non-believers fail to understand each other.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 3, 2007 6:10 AM
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And check this out, Hot off the presses!
Pat Robertson makes his year end prediction.
None of his year end predictions have ever come true, so no need to be too concerned, but this year, Pat Robertson, a christian leader respected by millions, predicts that
"A major terrorist attack in the United States will affect large cities and possibly kill millions."
I'll bet Pat is really rooting for this to be his first ever prediction success. He would know that such an event would surely set off world war three.
First armageddon. Then the rapture.
Then Jason and Bruce get to watch us all descend into Hell.
Ah ha ha ha ha.
Yikes!
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 2:53 AM
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Well said as usual Trish.
I do have optimism though.
Because it is Jason's children's children who will grow up in a world where the internet has been around for generations.
Available information to the masses has always been religion's greatest enemy. The ultimate help has arrived in the information highway. We just need to wait a couple of generations for the effect to kick in.
We just have to survive global warming and nukes in the hands of literal jihadists for a few more decades.
Did I start this by saying that I had optimism?
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 2:49 AM
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I find it interesting that the people who are expressing doubt about the existence of an immortal, all powerful being who demands to be adored, worshipped & obeyed - on pain of eternal punishment - are accused of being afraid.
I don't understand why Jason was upset that there are atheists posting about the Bible, when LT refers to scripture in the 1/2/07 post saying that God can decide to let an axe head float if he wants to. I just have to wonder, if God was responsible for the content of the Bible, and the construction of everything in the world, how come there is so much content in it that seems to be inaccurate?
Of course the Bible will come up in discussions of the faith of Americans, since Christianity is the dominant faith in America right now. There are only a limited number of sources for the idea of the Christian God: 1. reading about it in the Bible, 2. listening to other people who tell you about God &/or the Bible, 3. direct contact with the Big Guy including face to face meeting and residual evidencethat will convince disinterested observers 4. made up fantasy like Frodo Baggins or Anne of Green Gables, 5. brain malfunction or heavy drugs like heroin or LSD causing brain states that appear to be God, evidence for God, or feelings of "oneness" that correspond to some descriptions of what God is or how it feels to be around him.
Considering how many brilliant people have pondered the question, and the number of highly educated people on this message board, I am flattered that Jason would ask humble little me for the definition of truth.
Seriously, I have always been baffled when a perfectly normal train of thought regarding facts, like the census practices of ancient Rome, provoke demands to define nebulous terms.
On a different topic:
I am interested in the views of unbelievers or agnostics [I count myself as an unbeliever] - about the idea that because religion exists in some form in all human cultures, it must be useful somehow. There is crime in every culture - even murder - yet no one argues "ubquitousness equals usefulness" when it comes to crime. I am inclined to think that religion is a flawed by-product of some sort of social function - a sort of price-we-pay for the ability to pass info quickly with language, emotions or facial expression. I also think it is entirely possible to have an ethical, religion-free society.
Posted by: Trish | January 3, 2007 2:12 AM
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Why does Jason take great care to deflect all questions?
He has not answered a single question posed to him.
He know that if he does?
His answer will be subject to his own logic and he will begin to spin and shake, and smoke will puff out of his ears, and he will explode.
This is why Jason Bradfield has not answered a single question posed to him.
Now he will tell us that he doesn't have to answer our questions. That the onus is on us to answer his questions only.
He is crazy.
I observe this.
And I am certain of this.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 1:36 AM
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Anyone who thinks he has THE answer probably cannot be considered intellectually honest, and what I meant by intellectual dishonesty was this: do you really want to know and learn, or just engage in wordplay?
Posted by: Puzzled | January 3, 2007 1:14 AM
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OMG Jason,
When I said I was certain that the paper burns, I am certain enough for me.
You nor anyone else need take my word for it. You decide for yourself what it does.
But if you say anything other than, "It burns"
I will take you for a moron.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 12:49 AM
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Jason,
I'm scared, so scared.... But I am going to tackle your question.
Ready?
Dishonest, reason, truth, is, at, ball, joystick, moron,
We have the same answer to all of these questions.
They mean what the human collective agrees that they mean and this definition is printed in our dictionaries.
These definitions suit us and work for us just fine.
We are not left want for better definitions.
Words constitute the language we created for communication purposes.
But they are also great for playing games with like you are doing.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 12:44 AM
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Puzzled says,
"Who said anything about universal propositions? That is not what science is about. It is beyond what anyone can do. It is puzzling why you ask for something that is not possible to begin with."
Really? Timmy demanded one here! Timmy argues the certainty that if i were to throw a newspaper in fire, it WILL burn. And the "reason" for his conclusion is because it has done it in the past.
Timmy won't do it, so maybe you can give it a try.
Please demonstrate to me in a syllogism how you deduce from Timmy's past experiences the conclusion that if i were to throw a newspaper in fire right now, it WILL burn.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 12:42 AM
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Jason:
Who said anything about universal propositions? That is not what science is about. It is beyond what anyone can do. It is puzzling why you ask for something that is not possible to begin with.
When I ask for honesty, all I'm asking for is to think things through and to try to listen to what the other person is trying to say. But it seems like decent conversation is not possible with you. All you are saying is that everyone else is wrong (perhaps implying you have an "answer"?).
Posted by: Puzzled | January 3, 2007 12:33 AM
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LT
There is nothing dangerous to me about billions of people believing that it is most likely that the God they believe in created the universe and is all knowing.
It becomes very dangerous when they believe with absolute certainty what you and billions of people believe
LT said
"I do not claim to have complete knowledge about all the secrets of the universe"
No you don't. You claim that your God does. This is exponentially more problematic than just you claiming supreme knowledge.
And you claim this with certainty.
And you claim that your God created this universe.
And you claim that anyone who is not living life for your God is going to Hell.
And you think that your God will take you to Heaven soon and send all of us to eternal damnation.
And you think that legal policies and political decisions should take into consideration what your Bible says on the matter.
And if you don't agree with the last one then you support those who do.
Spirituality has never been the problem.
No one ever said it was.
Religion has always been the problem.
One day, everyone will realize that it is.
Posted by: timmy | January 3, 2007 12:26 AM
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Trish,
"Setting aside for the moment the question of whether science can "prove" or "disprove" the existence of God, "
I haven't asked for science to prove or disprove God. Why are you guys so hung up on trying to disprove the Bible...why do you keep bringing Biblical stories, etc., up?
This is a battle of fraweworks, of worldviews and as i have said before, I'm not interested in pitting one worldview against another at this time.
Let's stick to your worldview. You all claim it is reasonable, etc, etc. So please, explain to me how you account for "reason".
What is "logic"? What is "truth"?
Some accuse me for being "dishonest" - well, what is "dishonesty"? What are your epistemological justifications for such concepts?
Simple questions here, yet RB and Timmy are scared to tackle it head on. My contention is that they can't answer it without looking like morons (foolish, irrational) and so they ignore the questions and continually bring up things within my worldview and explain why their's clashes with it.
Well, no kidding it is going to clash...duh? But what is your epistemological justification for your worldview?
Simple questions.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 12:25 AM
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RB still refuses to give us a definition of "truth", even though he parades the word around.
Perhaps it is because "truth" for RB is whatever RB decides it is - the height of arrogance.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 3, 2007 12:16 AM
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Setting aside for the moment the question of whether science can "prove" or "disprove" the existence of God, there is another problem with the alleged miracles in the Bible - many of the purported miracles, and even nonmiraculous events, involved literate non-Hebrews. For example, the Egyptians not only kept written records of their exploits, battles, wars and political intrigues, but also depicted such things in murals in temples and graves and monuments. Exodus claims that the whole Egyptian army was drowned by the closing of the Red Sea, yet the Egyptians are mum on the topic. Ok, even if they decided not to memorialize such an embarrassing incident, what about the definitely non-miraculous claim that the Hebrews built the pyramids? Not only are there no contemporary Egyptian records to support Exodus on this matter, recent excavations of the cemetery of the highly-skilled pyramid builders showed them to be native Egyptians who were buried with honors, and fed well [judging by the enormous amounts of animal bones]. Inscriptions in these tombs indicate that working on the pyramids - far from being a scut job left to slaves - was an honorable form of service to the pharoah. And why is there no mention in any records from the time - Egyptian, Greek, Phoenician, Roman, Persian, etc - of the plagues befalling Egypt?
The Roman Empire is known to have performed censuses, registering free citizens and documenting their families, property and slaves. Two important points: 1. There is no documentation of Rome ever requiring people being counted to return to the city of their birth. 2. The Roman census counted male citizens of Rome - adult, non-slaves, which would not include non-slave adult males in the provinces [those would be subjects, not citizens].
I can't argue with the statement that the Bible is not - nor was it meant to be - a science textbook. But it does claim to tell the history of the Hebrews and their relationships with other peoples in the Mediterranean.
Posted by: Trish | January 3, 2007 12:13 AM
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While I'm at it, let's confront some truths about Americans, who claim to be 80%+ faithful.
Why do you tolerate the enslavement of women in Utah, where polygamy still runs rampant and dirty old men -- who routinely claim to be Jesus lovers -- marry 13-year-old children and then subsequently rape them?
Where are all you Bible-totin' blowhards while those crimes are going on?
For that matter, and all you have to do is walk around any small town in the South and you'll see the evidence in the faces of the people on the street, because a signficant number of American bible-thumpers are thumping their daughters, too, and the faces of inbreeding really aren't hard to spot. But you ignore that too, as long as these inbreeding child molesters show up at the local tax-exempt business, I mean church, and tithe.
You're phony, hypocritical, perverted and just plain wrong about your retarded faith.
Posted by: RB | January 3, 2007 12:00 AM
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LT wrote:
"I submit then, that science, while useful for many things, cannot effectively be used to answer the question of whether there is a God."
The burden of proof (of God) lies not with non-believers. It lies with thee, and you at least tacitly admit you can't provide proof. "Not provable, but reasonable." The latter being an opinion, the former a concession.
I use science, usefully, everyday. We all do (except Jason).
I agree that thinking scientifically a priori rejects all miracle-performing, personal gods. There is no proof whatsoever that God exists and further ventured one day to suspend the laws of nature -- to allow walking on water, resurrection or flights to heaven on winged horses. The assertions of miracles raise so many other questions: What does it mean to suspend the laws of physics in and around the volume of a man's body?
The blasphemy of faith (can't you see this?) is that anything goes.
I hereby proclaim that the God I invented 10 seconds ago commands thee to send your virgin daughters to live with me and pleasure me. In exchange, I promise you eternal life, somebody else's virgin daughters, and your nose will grow smaller if you pray.
I mean, where does it end? Anything goes with that attitude, including a whole lot behavior that is immoral. They stone women to death in Saudi Arabia today for the sin of "dishonoring" the family. It is ultimately about paternal hegemony and money and property. But all these "tolerant" religious "moderates" go about blathering how religions are such bastions of "morality." I'm sick of it.
Prove it, dammit. Quite whining about faith. It's just nonsense.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 11:40 PM
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Before anyone declares victory in this debate, I would like to revisit what I perceive is Timmy's central assertion, that religious belief is problematic because of the certainty it claims, whereas atheistic nonbelief is not problematic because it claims no certainty.
I can not speak of any religious systems, just my own understanding of Christianity. As a Christian, I do not claim to have complete knowledge about all the secrets of the universe. (The Bible is not a science textbook; it's not supposed to.) However, I do claim that some aspects are knowable, not by human effort, but by revelation. It's a judgment call to decide whether to accept the possibility of a revealed truth or a God who reveals it, but I hope Timmy will agree that one should accept or reject God based on the preponderance of evidence and not reject His existence a priori.
It does depend on how one views evidence. A scientific standard for evidence can be dangerous. If one says that for something to have happened, it must be supported by scientific evidence, then God is effectively eliminated. For example, if a miraculous event in the Bible is not supported by science, then it can't have happened. However, if it supportable, then the argument for God is weakened anyway because we don't need to appeal to Him for that event. Scientific attempts to solve the God question are effectively an a priori rejection of Him.
Does an axhead float or sink when it falls into the water? Practically, I would say that of course it will sink. In an absolute sense, however, I could not be sure that a particular axhead would sink. God might break laws of buoyancy to make the axhead float if he had a reason to. He does in 2 Kings 6.1-6. Similarly, I expect newspaper to combust when thrown in fire but would still have to admit that God could prevent it from burning if He wanted to. (Not that I can imagine any reasons, but it depends on context.) These examples suggest that we need not reject all or most of scientific prediction to accept God.
I submit then, that science, while useful for many things, cannot effectively be used to answer the question of whether there is a God. If not science, we must appeal to historical or circumstantial evidence to examine competing religious claims. Such claims about things outside the physical world are unverifiable, but some religions make claims about things that happened in this world. For example, Jesus Christ is claimed to have come alive after he died.
I argue further that not all "religious" claims of this sort are equally supported by the evidence. For example, take the claim that it is Santa Claus who puts out toys. We can no longer negate the claim by saying it's impossible for Santa Claus to give out those toys all in one night. Instead, we can say it's most likely not true by using surveillance cameras to show that it's the parents who do so instead.
I cannot here show that the preponderance of historical evidence supports the claims surrounding Christ rather than of any other religion. However, I find misguided Sam Harris' blanket claim that "the evidence for the most common religious doctrines is terrible or nonexistent—and this subsumes all claims."
There is the issue of whether we can trust evidence from that long ago. Without the problematic scientific standard, it's more appropriate to scrutinize ancient evidence than to reject it out of hand. Otherwise, we are simply being elitists when we claim that we are wiser than the ancients.
I know Timmy won't agree in any religious belief simply because someone claims it's revealed by God. He shouldn't. However, I submit that a look at the evidence that doesn't reject God initially or use a process whose design effectively rules Him out makes religious belief reasonable. Not provable, but reasonable. Christians don't claim that people discovered the true God. They claim that He showed Himself to them so that they could be certain of Him. Thus, religious belief need not be problematic simply because some (not all) things are taken to be certain.
Posted by: LT | January 2, 2007 11:16 PM
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Trish:
Right. And, religious bigots confronted with inconsistencies in their belief systems accuse scientists and doubters of "arrogance."
This is classic projection: On the one hand, they proclaim their holy book to be -- as one poster here who shall go unnamed (Jason) -- to hold "the monopoly on truth."
There is no greater arrogance than such an assertion.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 10:50 PM
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Stan Yoder asks: "How do we persuade them to mind their own damn business? When their religions REQUIRE them to muck about in other people's lives by persuasion or force (e.g., laws, suicide bombers, evangelistic crusades) how can they be convinced to act differently? If we can't de-convert them, could we somehow divert them?"
I can't think of a more powerful response to those who would muck about in other people's lives than *Laughter*! All humans - even the ones who claim to believe that belief and/or faith are superior forms of relating to the world - like to think of themselves as rational beings, and like to assert that there is some rational basis for their own faith [even though faith supposedly demonstrates its strength by remaining intact in the face of evidence to the contrary] - this is what makes people of faith such bores. Arguing points with evangelical believers gives them the chance to spew their flawed little syllogisms back. It also dignifies their position. But if someone says to you, "I believe there is an immortal being that contains 3 personalities, but is a single person, even while one of the personalities inhabited a flesh body on earth, and I expect him back any minute because 2000 years ago, he said he would be right back," and you just crack up in their face, you not only don't give them a chance to exert their arguments, you've probably spared yourself a torturous exchange.
I have two other small points to mention:
1. Religions declariing that charity justifies their existence are claiming a moral high ground they don't deserve. A liberal, atheist, ethical citizen, who prefers to pay higher taxes to fund stable government programs to handle the needs of unfortunate citizens, rather than creating a parallel atheist charity certainly doesn't inhabit the moral low ground. [And to those who think that private organizations are more efficient than government, consider this: democratic government is responsive to, & even restrained by, citizens who don't want to see government succeed, and want private charities to look better by comparison. A parallel claim: that Catholic schools provide better education because their students get marginally better marks on standardized tests than public school students - ignoring the fact that Catholic schools can turn down students who are learning disabled, disinterested, chronically ill or have a history of bad grades. Meanwhile, public schools that can't turn down students, and yet their average test scores aren't huge magnitudes lower. Government programs are portrayed as easily corrupted - as if charities have never been corrupted - as well as encouraging corrupt laziness in their clients, as opposed to creating self-sufficiency by providing services that can be revoked without due process. Any positive end humans can accomplish is not impossible for government to perform. As for the potential for corruption? The best disinfectant for public or private institutions is sunlight.
2. If Christians are correct, and God wants his word spread to all humans, why was the responsibility for the spread was left to humans who for centuries couldn't travel more than 20 miles a day - rather than giving the assignment to angels who can violate the laws of time & space? Also, why does Mary appear, not to some illiterate, young person in an isolated place who couldn't have heard the Gospel and tell him/her about the shepherds & 3 kings & the manger? Why does she only appear in territory already firmly in Christian control, like Fatima? On a related note, if God created the heavens & the earth & the beasts & all of us, why does he need human clerics, martyrs, soldiers & bores to stick up for him? Why can't he just smack me upside the head if I'm wrong? The free will answer seems pretty lmae to me - how free is the decision if info is intentionally withheld?
Posted by: Trish | January 2, 2007 10:39 PM
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This has been an excellent object lesson for how to identify crazy people: they have no sense of humor, or irony, and due to the untenable basis of their beliefs, resort to endless dodges when asked a straightfoward question.
"...still hasn't explained to me what "true" means."
I think the jury can decide the case now.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 10:38 PM
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Jason wrote:
"RB wants to know if 1+1=2 is true, but still hasn't explained to me what "true" means."
Jason, see above re: whether or passed a turd or not. You are crazy, and I don't mean that perjoratively. You pretend not to know what "true" means, but assert that the bible is "true." This is very much about you. You have completely missed the point. The irony is: you've missed the point.
"And, like a good moron, instead of recognizing the failure of inductive reasoning, RB embraces it and has to change his argument mid-stream in attempt to make it work."
Again, you missed the point, loonie-toons. That was called: humor.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 10:29 PM
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"You won't get an answer unitil you give him a definition for what you mean by 1."
I'm not answering because as I have said before, this isn't about me. I've been called an idiot for not forsaking Christianity and embracing "science", "atheism", etc., so I'm looking for "reasons".
Timmy claims that inductive reasoning can produce no certainties, but then turns around and argues the certainty that paper will burn in fire every time. Timmy still hasn't demonstrated for me in logical form that his past observations logically necessitate that the next paper thrown in to the fire will burn. Instead, he merely asserts it and expects people to jump on board with his conclusions because he says it does. And I'm the arrogant one...rrriiiigghhhtttt.
RB wants to know if 1+1=2 is true, but still hasn't explained to me what "true" means.
And, like a good moron, instead of recognizing the failure of inductive reasoning, RB embraces it and has to change his argument mid-stream in attempt to make it work.
The "him" that he said was driving the truck is now possibly a woman or a monkey. Well, i guess if you are an evolutionist, that is a valid statement. Change the data as you go.
whatever morons.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 10:21 PM
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Tim,
How sad is it when a human being can't figure out if 1+1=2 is true or not?
Maybe my optimism about the human species is unrealistic.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 10:15 PM
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Oh my Lord!
It just came to me!
I get it now.
Jason you are right!
You got through to me.
Your superior debating skills have made me get it.
Jason is right.
You guys are all wrong.
Nobody knows anything. No one can never be certain at all and truth has no meaning but God.
It is the most obvious thing when you think about it.
Why do you fight it?
Why do you fight the notion God so hard you have to ask yourself that RB and Anonymous.
I get it now, Jason has converted me.
Not Bruce with his spiritual conversation that we can not understand, but Jason with his superior logic and debating skills has converted me fully.
I mean it. I'm not Kidding.
You have to admit as Jason has shown that there is no absolute certainty but God.
It is proven!
This life has no meaning.
I'm going to sit in a dark room now and wait for the rapture...................
Oh wait a minute.
Hold the phone.
All that Jason has shown is that there is no certainty.
I have always known that.
I have always lived a happy peacefull life with the knowledge that nothing is certain.
No one ever said there was.
Not even scientists.
Just the meany absolute certain scientist monster that lives inside little Jason Bradfield's head.
Yay, I get to live my happy life like a normal intelligent person again.
Yay
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 10:07 PM
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Well, 25 minutes and counting as Jason struggles to determine the answer to whether or 1+1=2 is ture or not.
Can you imagine this guy taking a dump? Actually, yes I can:
"Was that a turd, or an illusion?"
"I don't know, why are you asking me?"
"Because you ARE me, I'm talking to myself. I need to know whether or not to wipe myself."
"Well, it is a metaphysical question. We can't possibly know the answer, unless we consult the bible, which has a monopoly on truth."
"Ok, it's sitting right there next to the john. What does it say?"
"In John 3:16, it says: "For God So Loved the World, He gave his only begotten turd to it."
"Right. So I'll wipe now."
From the distance: "Jason, this is your mother, take a dump or get off the pot. And be sure to spray some Lysol when you're done."
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 10:02 PM
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While Jason ran out to buy a calculator to test the proposition that 1+1=2 is true or not (by running the experiment an infinite number of times on his new calculator, providing he can purchase an infinite number of batteries to power it), we can get back to a real discussion.
His silence is golden.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 9:55 PM
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Timmy:
Of course you are correct.
Jason, pull your right finger out of your butt and hold it in front of your face. No! Don't smell it, just hold it out there.
Now pull your left finger out of your nose and hold it next to your right finger. Yes, you can lick the stuff off it first.
Ok, ready now? Count the two fingers. Is the result two? No?
My God, man, you've just destroyed all of mathematics and science with your discovery!! Congratulations, dude.
Now re-insert fingers to previous positions.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 9:49 PM
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Well, it's been 22 minutes so far, and Jason is unable to answer the question:
Is 1+1=2 true?
So much for having a serious discussion with this loon.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 9:44 PM
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RB
You won't get an answer unitil you give him a definition for what you mean by 1.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 9:44 PM
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Still waiting, Jason. Did you need to change your diaper first?
It can't be THAT hard? You can get assistance, if you're UNSURE.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 9:40 PM
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C'mon Jason. You call people morons (mental age 8-12). Unless you are projecting, and are yourself sub-moronic, you should be able to answer the question:
Is 1+1=2 true?
Anyone with the mental age of a moron can answer this question. Can you?
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 9:37 PM
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Jason,
Go to a bar tonight.
Ask people at random "what happens to paper when thrown into a fire?"
When they tell you that it burns, (and they will tell you this) Ask them to prove it.
And when they give you an answer to that, throw at them all of the arguments for their answers that you have thrown at us.
And calculate the amount of time that it takes for you to get punched in the head.
And did you reallly get punced in the head?
I hope the police make you prove it.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 9:36 PM
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Timmy,
First, you say, "Will you explain how a man who refuses to allow anyone to make any statemments of truth or certainty..."
I never made that claim. I believe that SOME can make statements of truth and certainty and have an epistemological justification for it, but I'm not here to talk about Christianity.
I want to know yours and yet you just can't seem to give me an answer...what is 'truth'?
Secondly, please demonstrate for me in logical form that your past observations logically necessitate that the next paper thrown in to the fire will burn. Until you logically demonstrate this, you are merely asserting and i have no "reason" to take you serious.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 9:35 PM
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Jason,
In order to answer your question, I will require definitions from you for the following words.
The
So
What
Is
On
Truth
Are
In
And
What
Do
You
Mean
By
If
etc...........................
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 9:27 PM
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RB,
"it might be a woman driver"
ummm..no, you originally said, "him".
I produced another possible conclusion based on your premises.
And once again, instead of admitting your error, you have to resort to changing information - him to her.
That's what morons do to keep their system afloat.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 9:24 PM
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Ok, Jason, I'll stop poking you like the slug you appear to want to be, but only if you'll answer one simple question:
Is 1+1=2 a true statement?
Can you manage an answer?
We'll be waiting.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 9:20 PM
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Timmy says, "I can claim for certain that a newspaper burns in the fire based on what I have seen in my life."
In other words, the next crow will be black.
Here we are again, full circle. Timmy now is not only claiming "certainties" but says it is "certain" based on what he has seen in the past.
what arrogance and stupidity.
Timmy, on what basis can you say it is "certain"? Have you tested this...have you thrown all newspapers into fires to conclude then that it is a certainty that the next time i do it, it will burn?
Since you boast in logic, please demonstrate for me in logical form that your past observations logically necessitate that the next paper thrown in to the fire will burn. Until you logically demonstrate this, you are merely asserting and i have no "reason" to take you serious.
"If I am wrong about that observation, no big deal."
Wrong, as in "not true". So what is Truth? And what do you mean by "if"?
Which is it? Are you "certain" or not?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 9:19 PM
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"Since morons like you reject absolute truth, thereby making ethics and morality subject to whatever people "feel" like doing, the truck driver may be a fag and actually enjoy me flashing my butt at him."
Please, please, go out and test the proposition. Nothing is certain, Jason, it might be a woman driver, or since nothing is certain, it might be a monkey, or a booger, or a fruit fly, or it might be the HOLY GHOST!!!!!
mo ron: a stupid person. ORGIN: a medical term indicating a person with a mental age of 8 to 12.
Looking in the mirror, Jason?
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 9:14 PM
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There it is!
The true crazy comes out.
I'll bet smoke is coming out of his ears and he's doing backflips right now.
lol
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 9:12 PM
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So Jason we hve admitted over and over again that science has no absolute answers. We have shown that your argument is with no one but the absolute meany science man in your head.
Will you explain how a man who refuses to allow anyone to make any statemments of truth or certainty about anything makes the following statement?
"But science is never to be seen as a means of learning truth. Truth is found in the Scriptures alone; the Bible has a monopoly on truth. It is God’s Word that must be believed, not the experiments of men. As Robbins has said: "Science is false, and must always be false. Scripture is true and must always be true. The issue is as clear, and as simple, as that."
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 9:10 PM
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Timmy and RB:
I KNOW I have PROVEN you to be WRONG. I am SUPERIOR in my debating skills to all here. Because I talk to GOD THE ALMIGHTY.
Bow to me, oh slaves of science, or I will CRUSH you with my FAT ASS. (If I could only get my head out of it first)
Posted by: JASON | January 2, 2007 9:06 PM
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Jason,
I said that science claims no certainties.
I am not science.
I am me.
I can claim for certain that a newspaper burns in the fire based on what I have seen in my life.
If I am wrong about that observation, no big deal.
Science only postulates theories.
And I am so glad that they do.
So is my grandmother who is in remission from cancer thanks to treatment by doctors who learn things from imperfect science.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 9:05 PM
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RB says, "Jason, we live in the real world. Here is a (yet another) Universal Proposition for you to test:
Stand in the middle of the fast lane of I-75. As the next semi-tractor-trailer approaches, turn your back, drop your pants and moon the truck driver.
I postulate that that will REALLY piss him off.
Let us know if I'm wrong."
Really RB? Is that a certainty? Is that a universal proposition?
Actually, I can think of at least one other possible conclusion. You know, just expressing "doubt" here like a good skeptic would with inductive reasoning.
Since morons like you reject absolute truth, thereby making ethics and morality subject to whatever people "feel" like doing, the truck driver may be a fag and actually enjoy me flashing my butt at him.
Heck, thanks to your fallacious reasoning and lack of epistemological justification for absolutes, ethics, and the like, I might even make the next episode of "Truckers Gone Wild".
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 8:58 PM
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Yes yes Bruce,
We get it now. You've had an experience that none of us can understand yada yada yada.
You end your line of discussion with this final statement.
You really have nothing left to offer.
The rest of us have moved on to the continuation of intellectual thoughs.
No room here for people who have secret conversations with the master of the universe. No insights can you give to intelllegencia.
Peace be with you.
And on the arrogance issue. The biologist in your example does not tell the accountant that he is going to burn in hell for not understanding biology. If he did, it would be the very hight of arrogance.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 8:58 PM
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Timmy,
"You're eyes are clear, so you must be a ******* idiot." ( ;
uh...you're the one that said that science can produce no certainties and now you are telling me that you are "certain" that if i throw a newspaper into a fire, it will burn.
Which is it moron?
Secondly, you're definition does me no good. Wrong is "not true". Well, wooptie do...what is "truth" then?
Is truth "certainties"?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 8:51 PM
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Jason by admitting that no scientist can state that all crows are black without exception, you are correct. We have proven your arguement it correct.
The question is: Your argument with who?
You are argueing with an imaginary person and pretending that it is us.
We have proven that your statement of the obviouus is true.
Now, is therre a point to it?
Science can state nothing with certainty.
So what's your point?
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 8:51 PM
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The issue of Christian faith is, I believe, an epistemological issue. The non-believer sees Christian faith as a belief that is not based upon any evidence at all (or insufficient evidence, as Skeptic writes) because it does not fit into any of his categories of knowledge. Those categories are generally rational, based upon the perceptions of the senses, scientific evidence, logic, etc. The believer simply has a different experience that allows him to experience the knowledge of God (in the sense of knowing a person and knowing certain things about that person, not in the sense of knowing everything). A revelation comes to the believer, and it creates the phenomenon of faith. This appears irrational to the non-believer, because he does have any epistemological frame of reference for such things.
It is not arrogant of the believer to say that he "knows" something in this sense that the non-believer does not know, just as it is not arrogant for a biologist to say he knows more about biology than an accountant. Faith is an experience in a realm of knowledge that those without faith simply do not have. When Hebrews 11:1 describes faith as "the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen," it is describing this experience. The non-believer sees this as "wishful thinking" (things hoped for) and "without evidence" (things not seen). But the believer is very comfortable in this realm of knowledge, and does not think it to be illogical at all. It is simply his or her experience.
It is impossible to convince someone who has not experienced faith as a response to revelation, that it is valid. Mathematicians, artists, musicians and others with specialized talents all experience something when operating in their area of expertise that those without those talents cannot experience. If the logical non-believer critiques a superficial believer (one who simply believes something because that is what he was taught), then he can destroy his position fairly easily, because he can show that, on the level in which the critique is given, the superficial believer actually knows nothing at all. He may pretend not to be defeated, but in his heart he knows that he has been ripped apart. On the surface, this also seems to work with the true believer as well. But the true believer's experience is deeper than that, and goes to the core of his being. You cannot dislodge him from his position with logic, because that is not what his position is based upon. It is based upon an inward response to an inward revelation. The non-believer walks away unimpressed because he does not experience what the believer experiences, and thinks that faith is foolishness. The believer walks away frustrated because he is unable to even get the non-believer to take him seriously. They are speaking different languages, experiencing knowledge on different planes.
The believer can only attempt to relate what he is experiencing, to continue to communicate. He cannot rationally prove what he believes. He cannot carry the burden of proof in the realm of logic and reason. In Christian understanding, only revelation from God brings true faith. But occasionally non-believers see the revelation the believer is describing, and become believers. Occasionally superficial believers see the logic that non-believers are employing, and become non-believers, realizing that their "faith" is, in reality, based on nothing at all. Hopefully these discussions that we are having will make us all more genuine people, regardless of our position with respect to faith.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 2, 2007 8:50 PM
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Jason, we live in the real world.
Here is a (yet another) Universal Proposition for you to test:
Stand in the middle of the fast lane of I-75. As the next semi-tractor-trailer approaches, turn your back, drop your pants and moon the truck driver.
I postulate that that will REALLY piss him off.
Let us know if I'm wrong.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 8:48 PM
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can you see that you are done here Jason?
Can you see that you are bankrupt of argument?
We all collectively flick at you as one flicks at a mosquito, although any one of us could handle the task alone with a railroad spike lodged in our brain.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 8:43 PM
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Puzzled,
First, i find it hypocritical of you to assert that I don't understand the issue just because I've pasted quotes from others and then you turn around and ask for "honest dialogue".
Secondly, what does "honest" mean? How do you account for "honesty"? What is your epistemological justification for ethics?
Thirdly, the problem is very easy to understand. Your posts even reveal it:
"The scientist would not be able to say that ALL the crows are black even if he/she observed a million. But,...."
You just admitted what my point has been all along: Universal propositions can never be validly obtained by observation.
Yet, people are throwing a hissy fit over my post...so which is it?
Puzzled, do you not see any problems with the fact that you can produce no universal proposition?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 8:42 PM
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Yes Jason, it burns.
Yes I am certain of this.
Everyone on this post other than you is certain of this.
You are the only one who questions this.
because you are an idiot.
Now, when I call Jason an idiot. It is not a crude mindless insult.
When he calls us morons, that is a crude mindless insult. Because morons are dumb and we are clearly not dumb.
But when I call Jason an idiot, I mean it clinically.
Idiots are savants.
Jason is clearly intellectually book smart.
But logically, rationally and emotionally retarded.
Hence,
Idiot.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 8:39 PM
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Jason, yet another contradictory statement. How many can you issue? Can you set the record?
ONE SHOULD AVOID THE POSTULATION OF FINAL TRUTHS.
Truth is found in the Scriptures alone; the Bible has a monopoly on truth.
Really, Jason? Are you "certain" of this?
Have you peed in your diaper yet?
Posted by: Anonymous | January 2, 2007 8:36 PM
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Jason,
When you ask me for a deffinition of a word I go to Webster's and cut and paste it into my post for you.
The collective population of the english speaking world decides what the meaning of a word is they print the most popular view in Webster's.
Who am I to come up with my own definition of a word, Jason Bradfield?
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 8:34 PM
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"It burns."
No, Jason, God you're dense. That's not newspaper, it's your hair in the oven. Hang on, it gets better.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 8:32 PM
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Jason:
Jesus was born of an immaculate conception
Human zygotes require 23 matched pairs of chromosomes to develop, therefore
Jesus was a stillborn lump of poop.
Damn, this inductive logic stuff works well.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 8:28 PM
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Timmy says, "It burns"
Really Timmy? And are you "certain" of this?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 8:25 PM
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Dirk,
You specifically said, "It is from a Greek verb 'skeptomai' which means to think rationally."
Again, please provide a source for your definition that it necessarily means to think "rationally".
Just because you go "looking around" for other answers does not necessarily mean you are thinking rationally.
Furthermore, it's interesting that your answer somewhat resembles Wiki's page - if so, did you read the rest?
"In classical philosophy, skepticism refers to the teachings and the traits of the Skeptikoi, a school of philosophers of whom it was said that they "asserted nothing but only opined" (Liddell and Scott). In this sense, philosophical skepticism, or pyrrhonism, is the philosophical position that one should avoid the postulation of final truths."
Again, ONE SHOULD AVOID THE POSTULATION OF FINAL TRUTHS.
Now, ole's Timmy here and jump in and give us a definition of Truth.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 8:23 PM
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The gist of the argument stays the same. The scientist would not be able to say that ALL the crows are black even if he/she observed a million. But, the scientist would say that the data are consistent with the hypothesis that crows are black. Finding an "albino crow" would not lead the scientist to reject that hypothesis. I fail to see what this line of argument (or any others you propose) really contribute to the discussion (or to whatever point you seek to make). It might help the conversation if you can write more plainly and (most important) in your own words, as YOU understand it, not retelling someone else's ideas that (I suspect) you might not fully grasp.
Once again, I would like to suggest more civility. I don't need to "try again," but I do hope to engage in honest dialogue where hopefully you are able to break through some misconceptions about the scientific method. I have been able to learn new things about Catholicism from this blog; not that I've converted, but still I think it is good to understand those of different worldviews better.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 2, 2007 8:22 PM
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Jason's frame of reference is worth repeating, so as to know the cave from which he shouts:
"Science has its place in a Christian philosophy, an important place. But science is never to be seen as a means of learning truth. Truth is found in the Scriptures alone; the Bible has a monopoly on truth. It is God’s Word that must be believed, not the experiments of men. As Robbins has said: "Science is false, and must always be false. Scripture is true and must always be true. The issue is as clear, and as simple, as that."
Notice the use of absolutes. He is sure: "Science is never to be seen as a means of learning truth."
Ok, Jason. Please go place your head in your oven. Turn the heat onto EXTREME HIGH. Stay in that position for the next hour, two if needed. Include any extremities you no longer need.
Now, when you're done, let us know if the science of heat transfer is false. What a loser.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 8:20 PM
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yup,
Jason what makes you think my newspaper question has anything to do with religion.
Did I say it did?
No.
It's just a general question.
It has nothing to do with religion.
You brought that up for no reason.
I'm just pointing out that you can't answer that question without destroying your entire argument against science that you have made thus far.
I can answer the question.
It burns, silly.
Combustion happens.
A solid turns into light, gas and ash.
Andy could probably write two pages about what happens to that newspaper.
Even Victoria could answer that question.
The only person on this thread who can not answer that question is you Jason.
So again I ask, who are you to engage in a conversation with intellectuals when you are someone who can not answer the simple question:
What happens to a piece of newspaper when it is thrown into a fire?
I flick at you as one flicks at a mosquito.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 8:13 PM
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"I think this is an inductive conclusion everyone here agrees is true."
Anony,
thanks for demonstrating exactly the problem.
1. The conclusion does not logically follow from the premises. I could be part of the some that are not idiots.
2. Your comment afterward demonstrates what you have to resort to, supposedly handling the problem of induction:
"Truth is what everyone agrees is true."
With a post like that, I would sign in as anonymous too.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 8:11 PM
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Don't like that one?
Brain damage exists in humans
Jason has brain damage, therefore
He is a Republican.
Better?
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 8:09 PM
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TIMMY ntowithstanding our ability to kill creatively- if that is what makes humans superior- fine- actually i was NOT starting out with the assumption that humans are superior-
if you dont have an answer it is fine by be- but this is the third time someone has told me i cant ask a question the way i want-
i dont consider attacking the question an answer-
asking a questin of someone is giving them respect that you will consider their answer
all for reasonable discourse i guess
Posted by: VICTORIA | January 2, 2007 8:07 PM
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Jason
You asked
'Please provide a source for your definition of skepticism.'
The Greek language, as I already said: 'skeptomai': to look around, to consider, to think. As opposed to the word 'nomizo' (from which we get the suffix -nomy) which means to think in the sense of arranging or regulating what has already been acknowledged.
The philosophical school of skeptics ('skeptioi') used the word 'skeptomai' in a more narrow sense to mean doubting anything that could not be conclusively proved.
Hope that helps.
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | January 2, 2007 8:05 PM
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Jason:
Jason is an idiot
Some Christians are idiots, therefore
Jason is a Christian
I think this is an inductive conclusion everyone here agrees is true.
Posted by: Anonymous | January 2, 2007 8:04 PM
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Timmy,
Is that it? Wrong is what is not true? oookkkk...so what is true? Care to elaborate anymore?
Furthermore, why are you asking me about the newspaper? I've said this a million times - this has nothing to do with me or Christianity...
You're the one that claims that science "CLAIMS NO CERTAINTIES", so you tell me what happens when newspaper is thrown into the fire...
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 7:56 PM
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The answer is no Jason.
The question to you is:
Who ever asserted that all crows are black.
You have to make up people to argue with.
Why don't you try to argue with us instead of the man you made up who asserted that all crows are black.
And what happens to that newspaper?
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 7:56 PM
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Puzzled asks, "So, does that change the answer to the question "What color is the crow?"
Actually Puzzled, that wasn't the question. The question was:
"But is he ever able to assert that all crows are black?"
Try again.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 7:50 PM
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I forgot to check for keystroke errors in my last post and wouldn't you know it, I made one in the word "intellectuals."
The irony is hilarious to me as well I assure you.
Have fun with it Jason.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 7:50 PM
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Puzzled said, "Just to respond to one of the items listed in your post, yes, 999 crows we see might be "black," and the 1000th one we see may be an "albino." So, does that change the answer to the question "What color is the crow?"?? Yes and no. "Yes" to the extent that we'd need qualifiers. But "no" to the extent that the question is assumed to have omitted the qualifer "generally speaking." And the term "albino" already implies an anomaly, doesn't it? Let's use some common sense."
Who said the question was, "What color is the crow?"
The question asked was, "But is he ever able to assert that all crows are black?"
Try again.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 7:48 PM
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And Jason,
Will you answer one question for me?
It's a very simple question.
What happens to a piece of newspaper when it is thrown into a fire?
Based on everything that you have said so far in this thread, it seems to me that you would have to reply "I can not conclusively answer that question"
In which case, why would you try to engage in a conversation with intelectuals when you are someone who can not even answer the question:
What happens to a piece of newspaper when it is thrown into a fire?
Be careful now Jason. You either have to admit that you can not answer that question, or you have to answer it.
either way
your argument is shot.
because you are an idiot.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 6:28 PM
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Andy,
Well put, as all of your posts are.
I question one statement though. You said:
"To deny a worldview you need a better worldview"
I feel like a statement like this asserts that to deny the Christian view of creation I need to come up with a better one. Christians rely on this kind of argument when engaging atheists.
"Well what's your answer then, if not creation" They often say.
Not only don't I have a better explanation for the creation of the universe, I don't have an explanation for it at all.
And yet I still feel well within my rights to deny God as an answer.
I don't need a better world view to deny the world view put forth by religion. I just need for their world view to be completely ridiculous and incredible.
It is only at the point that we feel the need to replace the world view of religion with something better, that atheism becomes something every bit a creepy as religion.
It is not. And we should never let it become that.
As I said before, if all of the religions of the world were part of a big science experiment, atheism would be the control.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 6:05 PM
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Timmy
(1) Marxism is closely analogous to a religion - agreed, thank you. But it was an attempt at atheism ("religion is the opiate of the people" and so on) and therefore deserves close study as an example of how even the best intentions can go wrong. Marx based his efforts on Hegelian philosophy. Hegel created a supposedly definitive dialectical critique of all religion, and set religion beside art but beneath philosophy in the culminating triad of his "absolute" synthesis of everything.
(2) Atheism does not imply science - again true, thank you. But atheism without science is a leap into the abyss. To deny a worldview you need a better worldview. Scientists do their level best to stop scientific doctrines from becoming dogma (except the molecular biologists, who were probably just joking), so it is misleading to see science as significantly like religion. Science is descriptive but should not be prescriptive, whereas religion is prescriptive and should not be descriptive.
As you say, scientists are not necessarily the best executioners for the Abrahamic God.
To all who love a good joke, another induction:
If X has 0 hairs on his head then X is bald
For all N, if X has N hairs on his head and X is bald then if X has N+1 hairs on his head then X is bald
Therefore, for all N, if X has N hairs on his head then X is bald
The ancient Greeks called this a sorites paradox. It shows that induced baldness is a deep philosophical problem. But do we have problems with baldness? Not me!
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 2, 2007 5:32 PM
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Jason:
Websters deffinition of wrong: Not correct or true.
this is the definition I use as well.
You said:
"Please address the problem of induction and arriving at certainties."
Then I said:
Science claims no certainties. Only religion does.
Then you said:
"I already know that"
Then why are you asking for science to prove it's certainties.
You have your definition of wrong now.
Anything else?
Posted January 2, 2007 3:34 PM
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 5:30 PM
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RB says, "that is inductive" and then later, "and it works all the time." and then "Frankly, I don't understand your objection."
One more time RB - the problem of induction. What is your answer to the problem?
Look it up - try google or wiki if you have to.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 5:03 PM
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It seems Jason Bradfield needs to do some reading on the philosophy of science. Representative authors such as Popper and Kuhn would help you get some understanding of the concepts so that you can converse with the others here more coherently.
If people were to follow up on all your notions of science (in your initial posting), then nothing would ever get done, no new knoweldge advanced.
Most simply put, scientists make assumptions about the phenomenon of interest, and then build predictive models. If those models fail to predict accurately (and no, no model is 100% accurate, and that does not invalidate the model), we tweak or even go back to the drawing board.
Your response to Andy's posting (using derogatory comments) do not serve you well in trying to make your point, if you have one. I thought it was well written and explained well what you seem to have a hard time understanding.
Just to respond to one of the items listed in your post, yes, 999 crows we see might be "black," and the 1000th one we see may be an "albino." So, does that change the answer to the question "What color is the crow?"?? Yes and no. "Yes" to the extent that we'd need qualifiers. But "no" to the extent that the question is assumed to have omitted the qualifer "generally speaking." And the term "albino" already implies an anomaly, doesn't it? Let's use some common sense.
Lastly, it might serve you well to explain in your own words what you are trying to say instead of trying to repeat things from readings that you don't seem to have a very good grasp of.
Posted by: Puzzled | January 2, 2007 4:43 PM
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Henceforth, I will refer to myself more simply as “Skeptic” rather than “Skeptic from Tallahassee”. For clarity, please use the same label.
Bruce said “The point is that you cannot so neatly and summarily dismiss faith as being culturally determined.” In this context the point was not to dismiss faith (it can be dismissed because it doesn’t work) but to explain its development in individuals. In the vast majority of cases, people retain as adults the worldviews they were brought up with. Furthermore, when they change worldviews as adults they most often change to another worldview that is prominent in the societies in which they live. This is not to deny that there are cases which don’t conform to these generalizations; there are. But they are the exceptions, not the rule. The culture into which people are born is the single best predictor of the worldview they will hold as adults.
Conversions occur. Changes in worldviews occur. So what? What does this have to do with the truth that Jesus rose from the dead? Nothing that I can see. The belief that he did rise from the dead is extremely unlikely to be true no matter whether one moves towards or away from its endorsement. One should not believe that Jesus rose from the dead; it is UNETHICAL to do so. The only relevant point here is that wishful thinking is almost always the engine which moves people to an endorsement of that belief.
Bruce said “They [scientists who have experiences of conversion to Christianity] don't start believing the world is 6000 years old, but they do start believing that Jesus rose from the dead. They cannot prove that the resurrection occurred, but their inward experience convinces them that the resurrection is true. These are people who are used to having things confirmed objectively, and yet something happens in them to cause them to accept another reality. I don't think they have abandoned rational thinking, as Skeptic suggests.” Scientists are people too! Their training in rational thinking provides them with some immunity against conversion experiences and irrational thinking, but the protection is not complete. What apparently happened to the Paul of the Bible and to Bruce happens much less frequently with scientists than with nonscientists. But the important point is that an inward experience or a subjective feeling is NOT the proper foundation for assessing the truth value of a claim. You can’t feel your way to truth; you must think your way to truth, and you must do this thinking in a particular way in order to be regularly successful. Unfortunately, Bruce has just not adopted the proper way yet in all areas of his life. The scientists which do come to believe that Jesus rose from the dead as a result of some odd psychological experience have not totally abandoned rational thinking, but they have disregarded it in at least one area of their lives, just as Bruce has done. This is the phenomenon of COMPARTMENTALIZATION which I talked about earlier. Bruce is probably quite rational in most areas of his life, but sadly, when he considers the major questions about the universe, life, and ethics, he resorts to wishful thinking to reach his conclusions.
Bruce said “In the Christian understanding, God has chosen ‘faith’ as the basis for a relationship with people. He did not chose knowledge, reason, science or logic, although there are elements of all of these in faith. This is not belief with no evidence, as there is ‘some evidence.’" People use at least three different definitions of “faith” on a regular basis and sometimes they improperly use them interchangeably, which creates much confusion. There is the definition which refers to a worldview or set of beliefs. (“In the Middle East, the most common faith is Islam.”) There is the definition which refers to confidence or trust. (“He had faith in the doctors who were treating him.”) And then there is the meaning of “faith” which refers to a form of irrational thinking. Here is my definition which captures this meaning. “Faith is the process of believing propositions on the basis of little or no evidence, or out of proportion to the quantity and quality of evidence, or believing propositions largely by substituting wishful thinking for the application of rational principles.” Bruce and most religious people operate on faith in this sense. Bruce says that there is “some evidence”, and in relation to the hypothesis that Jesus rose from the dead, he is correct. But that is not the important point. Some evidence does not necessarily constitute enough evidence. It certainly does not in this case. Bruce holds his belief in the resurrection of Jesus not on the basis of no evidence, but on the basis of a little evidence, poor in quantity and quality, and completely overwhelmed by contrary evidence, great in quantity and quality. Bruce chooses to believe in the resurrection of Jesus because it fulfills his WISH that he too will one day be able to defeat death. His WISH is powerful, but it does not make his CLAIM true. But I don’t know that we need to discuss much further why the resurrection of Jesus does not make sense from a rational perspective. After all, Bruce has already clearly acknowledged that he can not maintain this particular belief through a rational process. Like a turtle pulling its head back into its shell, Bruce has resorted to feeling, subjective experience, and personal conversion as the basis for his claims about facts in the real world. Jesus was raised from the dead simply because Bruce (and others) feel in their hearts that it must be true! That is their mistaken contention.
Bruce said “I will accept whatever consequences come with identifying myself as a Christian, including having to deal with the Old Testament and the crimes of other believers. Jesus, for me, is the ultimate interpreter of the OT, and His teachings and example are non-violent, forgiving, loving, and life-affirming.” By agreeing to accept whatever consequences come with having to deal with the OT, Bruce has taken a huge burden on himself. Although in many places the NT shows the character of Jesus to be somewhat rebellious against OT theology and ethics, in other places (of which Bruce must surely be aware and which Sam Harris references in his first book), the NT shows Jesus to be supportive of or endorsing of OT theology and ethics. One wonders whether Bruce (or Jesus for that matter) would support the practices of the stoning of homosexuals or of misbehaving children, as is prescribed in the OT. Bruce is partly correct in his claim that Jesus is depicted as non-violent, forgiving, loving, and life-affirming in the NT, but he is also partly incorrect about this, as a careful and critical reading of the NT reveals. (I’ll just give you one example to counter Bruce’s generalization. Jesus clearly believed and preached that some people would suffer SEVERELY in Hell FOREVER! I don’t see that as non-violent, forgiving, loving, or life-affirming. To the contrary I see it as violent, unforgiving, hateful, and life-demeaning.)
In his recent post, Timmy posed one of the most important questions of this entire discussion. Addressing himself to Bruce, he said “I believe that scepticism is a biological necessity and part of our survival instinct. Why would an all knowing all loving god make it a sin for people, with a natural built in scepticism, to not believe in something fantastical, based on hearsay. Not only is it a sin. It is the only unforgivable sin.” Wow! Now that is a good question. How did Bruce answer it? In response, after a profession of humility, Bruce said “I think that faith is a virtue because it is the one quality that we can possess that attributes absolutely no sufficiency or "glory" to ourselves - all the honor goes to the object of the faith, which in my case is Jesus.” In my opinion, Bruce gives a very poor answer to a very good question. My contention is that Bruce has it all backwards. Faith is a VICE partly because it attributes sufficiency and glory to the person who exhibits it! All the honor goes to a flawed process! The faith holder tells himself “I am right because my subjective feeling tells me so! Something is true because I want or wish it to be true. I have no need for the accumulated scientific knowledge of mankind or the best method ever invented for pursuing truth. I am sufficient, glorious, and honored unto myself.” Not only does Bruce’s speculation here make little sense, it only tangentially addresses Timmy’s question.
Bruce believes that life is a test of faith, and this is what most Christians believe. Timmy asks Bruce why God would make life a test of faith when faith seems to go contrary to our natural skepticism. I think the correct answer to Timmy’s question is that if he did exist, God would not have made life a test of faith at all, but would instead have made it partly a test of rationality! If he did exist, God would have been the Creator. What were we “created” with that is so special? It is our big brains and our intelligence. With this “gift” we have discovered over the millennia that there is a way of thinking which increases our chances of survival and prosperity. This mode of thinking is called “RATIONALITY”. God would not punish us in an afterlife for engaging in a mode of thinking in this life which brings us great rewards. Conversely, he would not reward us in an afterlife for engaging in a mode of thinking in this life which brings us great punishments. Most people believe that if he exists at all, God is an eternal, all-knowing, all-wise, all-powerful, perfectly good, personal being who created all things. If this is the case, then it would be incompatible with his basic nature to require people to operate on faith! If he existed at all, God would be inclined to punish people in a afterlife because they believed in the resurrection of Jesus in this life! Why? Because God would want our thinking to be based on rationality, not on faith. Just imagine life to be a test of rationality and you can’t go wrong. BEING RATIONAL will pay you big dividends in this life, and if God just happens to exist (which is not likely), then it will likely pay you big dividends in the life to come.
Bruce said “To refuse to have faith in God cuts you off from him, as that is the only path by which he allows access to himself. That leads to its own end, the "eternal damnation" that you describe.” I think just the opposite is true. If God exists, to REFUSE to have faith (see my previous definition) and to EMBRACE rationality would bring you closer to God. Rationality would be the main path by which God allows access to himself. Faith would be one of the paths which God cuts off from access to himself. The idea of “eternal damnation” in which Bruce, Jesus, and most Christians believe is CONTRADICTORY to the basic nature of God (if he does exist) and is quite possibly the most evil idea ever invented by man. But that is a discussion for another day.
A few years ago a mantra commonly used by Christians was “What would Jesus do?” An interesting question, but the wrong one. They needed to step it up a notch. They needed to ask, and they and Bruce still need to ask “What would God do and not do, if he existed?” In my humble opinion, God would NEVER confine some people to everlasting torment or even punish people at all for forming their beliefs on a rational foundation (rather than a faith foundation). God would ALWAYS reward rationality and punish having faith. It is not so bad that Bruce and others think that life is a test. The problem is that their conception of what the test is, is wrong.
Finally Bruce said “One reason I came to this site is that I wanted to subject my belief to criticism.” Well that is one WANT which we can help Bruce satisfy, and I think we have done a pretty good job of it. However, one WANT which we can’t satisfy is his want for the alleged resurrection of Jesus to be true. That is one WANT that not even God would satisfy, if he were to exist.
Posted by: Skeptic | January 2, 2007 4:41 PM
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Jason, you said thank you "again", well I've never engaged you until now because your argument is spurious.
But if I gather some facts -- that the spectrum of a star reveals its chemical composition -- and then hypothesize -- stars turn hydrogen into helium, that is inductive.
Now I can go about affirming, or trying to find examples of stars that do not adhere to the hypthesis.
This happens all the time, and it works all the time. Frankly, I don't understand your objection. That's why I let others wash away your clay feet. You really aren't worth the effort.
But I do understand why you don't want to subject the bible to objective analysis. And why don't you answer a straightforward question: why did the bible -- the "perfect" book -- get the value of pi wrong?
Because it was written by illiterate twits, that's why.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 4:20 PM
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Timmy,
I already know that...again, I just want a definition of "wrong".
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 4:10 PM
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Jason,
Please read carefully because you keep missing it.
SCIENCE CLAIMS NO CERTAINTIES. ONLY THEORIES.
ONLY RELIGION CLAIMS CERTAINTIES.
You keep trying to put claims of certainty in our mouths to argue with but it is you who puts those claims there, not us who makes them, so go argue with yourself.
I understand why you so badly need to make the false assertion that science claims certainty.
Because that would makes us seem as crazy as you.
If the point you are trying to make is that science is far from perfect, congratulations on stating the obvious that no one on this thread argues with.
If there is some other point you are trying to make, please clarify.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 4:08 PM
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Andy
Again this issue gets confused by two false premises.
1) Atheism is something that would exist on it's own without religion.
There is no atheist dogma and there never could be. Atheism exists ony as a reaction to a belief.
The russian revolution was not an atheist revolution . Marxist communism is much closer to the dogma of Christ's teachings than to anything an atheist mind would dream up.
Communism doesn't fail because it is godless or atheist.
It fails because people are biologically greedy and the only way to get them to share everything is to point a gun at them. This is why any forced socialism leads to totalitarianism.
2) Atheism somehow prohibits spirituality. This comes from the false premise that the debate is between science and religion. Thus science is atheism is science.
Science is one small aspect of atheism.
Atheism is not: to believe in science over religion.
It is simply to not believe in religion. One need not accept the cold hard truth that science offers to be an atheist.
The hubris of science is thinking that they are best equipped to debunk religion. Science is helpful in this debate, but the god we are all concerned about is the Abrahamic god, not the harmless spiritual god.
And historians are far better equipped to debunk the Abrahamic god than are scientists.
I suggest that historians be invited to the next "Beyond Belief" conference.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 3:58 PM
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Pecos (NM) Skeptic,
Still rambling on about the Bible, eh? Care to address the problem of induction?
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 3:57 PM
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And please define the word "wrong" Timmy.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 3:55 PM
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Could -- and would -- one of you sagacious posters please explain the meaning of the phrases, "God bless you," "May God bless you," and "Bless you." The operative word is "bless." I really, truly don't know what this means. Is "Bless you" or "God bless you" a command, a suggestion, or what? And what does it mean to be "blessed?" Is it a form of magic, such as a reverse curse? Does it mean a person, having been blessed, is then in a "state of grace?" And further, what does that signify? Should there be an aura, a halo, or somesuch hovering above or about that lucky person? Perhaps being blessed means that the blessed one is thereafter -- or for how ever long a blessing lasts -- protected from evil and pianos falling from upper stories? No? Yes? Help!
Posted by: Pecos (NM) Skeptic | January 2, 2007 3:54 PM
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Timmy,
still waiting...what does any of this have to do with me or the Bible?
Please address the problem of induction and arriving at certainties.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 3:34 PM
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RB,
Thanks again for demonstrating that you have no answer. You instead create arguments for me about the Bible.
We haven't got to the Bible yet. I'm asking you to deal with the problem of induction as a first principle.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 3:30 PM
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Tonio: "I wouldn't describe the French and Russian revolutions as harsh rationalism rebelling against religion. If anything, I would describe them as the replacement of one type of state religion with another."
Sadly, the French revolution led first to chaos and then to Napoleon. But the American revolution was a similar attempt to replace a manifestly irrational arrangement (rule by the British crown) with something more reasonable (the constitutional republic). As we all know, it was by accommodating religion ("In God we trust") that the American revolution achieved a smooth transition. Even more sadly (to go by the body count), the Russian revolution was explicitly atheist. It was state-of-the-art atheism, as of 1917. And intellectuals like George Bernard Shaw even admired it (before the gulag stories got out).
Tonio again: "I don't see atheism as inherently denying the spiritual, although Dawkins specifically suggests so. The problem, as Dawkins said, is that dogmas don't limit themselves to the purpose of life, but instead make claims about the world."
What is conventionally known as the central dogma of molecular biology is that DNA contains the code for making proteins, which make up organisms. The "purpose" of DNA life is to replicate its genes - Dawkins. And the central dogma makes claims about the world, namely that if we study DNA transcription and proteosynthesis, it will all work out nicely. OK, this is the one and only good piece of dogma in the world of Dawkins, but the problem of principle remains. Modern big science is analogous to a religion, indeed a bigger and more powerful one than has ever stalked the Earth before. If big science repudiates spiritualism, it will generate opposition. So I hope that, perhaps via the science of consciousness, room will be made for the sort of harmless spiritualism of people who seek enlightenment - so long as their personal Jesus does not ask them to blow up medical facilities and the like, of course.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 2, 2007 3:24 PM
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Jason, here's some inductive logic for you:
The Bible is the Word of God.
God is all powerful, all knowing, perfect.
Therefore the Bible is perfect.
Too bad it got the number pi wrong, even though its precision had been calculated to more than five decimals places 1,000 years before Christ did Mary.
Uh, must have been a typo. Not His fault, right?
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 2:53 PM
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Inductive reasoning in mathematics:
X is true of 0
For all N, if X is true of N then X is true of N+1
Therefore, X is true for all N
Analogously in empirical science:
X is true at time T
For all times, if X is true at time T then X is true at time T+1
Therefore, X is true for all times
[alternatively, write "case" and cases" for "time" and "times"]
In mathematics, such induction is valid.
In empirical science, it is valid ONLY to the extent that the step from T to T+1 is valid.
Generally this is a matter of probability or hypothesis.
So we make a model in which the step from T to T+1 is valid, and see whether the model AS A WHOLE survives sufficiently rigorous testing.
Science works. Any logician who "proves" otherwise has shot himself in the foot.
QED*
*QED = Quantum electrodynamics, refined and refined until the match of theory and experiment works out to 13 decimal places (as of last year), works ... although no-one really understands it (says Feynman, who should know), so the logicians are as baffled as the rest of us!
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 2, 2007 2:48 PM
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Hey Jason,
You are so out of it you don't even realize that you are not actually here at all. Neither is this post. Your existence is an unconfirmable obserrvation. You aren't even reading this post right now and you know it. Or if you are.
PROVE IT!
No doubt you will now make some more observations than can not be verified and therefore have no point at all.
Everything is nothing and nothing is everything and blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah.
Oh yeah, and the only verifyable thing is the Bible. Cause it says so in the Bible.
Ladies and gentlemen we have the very deffinition of crazy here in our thread.
Certainly can't call you a moron Jason. You need to be sane to be a moron.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 2:40 PM
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Dirk,
Please provide a source for your definition of skepticism.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 2:29 PM
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Andy,
You posted all of that crap to basically demonstrate once again that you folks can’t answer the problem with induction.
I’ll repeat – inductive reasoning is ALWAYS fallacious. So, to keep your presuppositions alive you resort to insanity and make absolute statements that you can not epistemologically justify.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 2:26 PM
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Dirk says, "Jason, you are doing a grand job for the atheist cause. Your post is so incoherent that I couldn't respond to it if I tried. Keep it up!"
Hmmm...great answer Dirk. Mere assertions as usual. Thanks for displaying once again that you have no answer.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 2:18 PM
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Timmy,
thanks again for demonstrating that you cannot address the induction problem without sounding like a moron.
Once again, my criticism of 'science' has nothing to do with the Bible.
You say: "The entire system (and by the way, it is system, not a politicized group of people) is based on continual re-examination of itself. And a willingness to be proven wrong."
Timmy, you still don't get it. Define the word "wrong" for me. And after you define it, please explain how you account for it.
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 2:15 PM
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Dirk, I agreed with most of Andy's excellent post, although I should mention the following.
"Many times in history, revolutionaries have rebelled against religion only to founder on the rocky shores of an excessively harsh rationalism. Think of the French revolution, where heads were chopped off like cabbages in the name of reason, or the Russian revolution, where reactionaries of all kinds were rounded up and shot in the name of the proletariat."
I wouldn't describe the French and Russian revolutions as harsh rationalism rebelling against religion. If anything, I would describe them as the replacement of one type of state religion with another. The fallen monarchs claimed divine sanction to rule. The secular tyrants had personality cults that strongly resembled religions. (As an aside, that's why it's misleading to characterize the Soviet regime as atheist.) I would argue that rationalism had little to do with either revolution, except maybe to question the monarch's claims of divine sanction.
I see the "personal Jesus" as the individual creating his or her own purpose for life. I don't see atheism as inherently denying the spiritual, although Dawkins specifically suggests so. The problem, as Dawkins said, is that dogmas don't limit themselves to the purpose of life, but instead make claims about the world. I would argue that if rationalism belittles the spiritual, than dogmatism belittles it even more by denying the individual's right to create his or her own purpose for life.
Posted by: Tonio | January 2, 2007 2:12 PM
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Thanks, Dirk.
Now to Jason:
Your "critique" of science is entirely external, not internal. Evidently you have never done any real science. Your attempt in your post of December 29, 12:04 AM, to apply Gordon Clark's obsolete methodology to scientific reasoning is embarrassing.
(1) Observations are unreliable but the are the best way we have to get started in science. If we repeat observations under systematically varying circumstances, we can build up a foundation on which to build a theoretical edifice. Without observations, there is no science, just empty dogma.
(2) Propositional logic is not a major tool in experimental science, but a propositional formalization of how scientists sometimes reason is better characterized, as several posters stated, either as "p if and only if q, and q, therefore p" or "if p then q, and not q, therefore not p." Bertrand Russell, in the passage you quote, is pointing out a weakness not in science but in the logicist methodology of science, which was rectified in the improved philosophy of science developed by Karl Popper.
(3) As Popper said, scientists proceed by proposing and testing hypotheses. This is a trial and error process that generates better and better theories for describing reality. It is an evolutionary process in which errors are selected out and improved variant theories tested in experimental confrontations. When all goes well, dominant paradigms emerge to guide and shape future work.
(4) Equations are distilled hypotheses based on volumes of experimental results. Only a beginner would regard all the possible curves through a set of points on a graph as equally valid. Some mathematical relationships are fruitful, others are not, and an expert sees this and selects the right curve, the one that fits with other related results and the surroundng theory and so on.
(5) All scientific laws are derived from models that simplify reality. They represent the features that interest us and abstract away irrelevant detail, just as your visual cortex abstracts away most of the detail your retinas send back along the optic nerves. Scientists first build a basic model for the salient facts and then build more detailed models for more exact work.
Organized science is the most powerful and effective machine we have for augmenting our human faculties in order to achieve an understanding of nature. Nothing else comes close. The equations of Maxwell, Einstein, Schrödinger, and Dirac, the laws of heredity and DNA chemistry, all the proofs of mathematics, and so on - these are the new scriptures. These are the deeper truths that make the world make sense. Individually, they are fallible, but collectively they have a weight exceeding that of all our previous scriptures put together.
To relate to your post of January 2, 12:29 PM, the validity of science does not depend on inductive reasoning, and skepticism, far from shaking the foundations, strengthens science by exposing the weaker parts for ongoing revision. Science gets stronger as it reveals successive layers of truth - from atoms to nuclei to quarks, from heliocentrism to galaxies to inflationary cosmology, from cells to DNA to genomes, and so on.
Forget the Bible and the Koran - these are fossils for a museum.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 2, 2007 2:12 PM
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Victoria,
When you ask, what makes humans superior?
And then you say, "I'm not assuming that they are"
Then what the hell does your question mean?
It's like asking, Why is snow black? I'm not saying that it is black, I'm just asking why?
So please don't ask questions based on premises that you don't even think are true.
But I will try none the less to answer the question bssed on what you meant as opposed to what you said.
Whether or not humans are superior depends of course by what criteria you consider superior.
Are we at the top of the food chain?
Yes.
Why?
Imagination.
Unlike animals we can have thoughts like, "Hey, if I step on a sharp rock, it cuts my flesh. I wonder if I could fashion a sharp rock into some kind of tool for cutting my meat?"
And on the soul question.
As scientists try and try to gain knowledge about conciousness and what might constitute something like a soul, they do so at their lesure. There is no imanent reason why they need to come to a definitive answer right now.
But for believers, waiting for this answer does not suffice.
You are not okay with this remaining a question. You need someone to give you definitive answer now.
Do I have a soul and what happens to it after I die?
Science does not have an answer for you yet because we don't know the answer. If you'd rather we just make one up so that you can be assured of what you want ot hear, I suggest some kind of religion. They'll tell you everything you want to hear.
They'll never tell you they don't have an answer for you. Because they always do.
But, God's enemies are more honest than his friends.
Couldn't have said it better myself Sam.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 2:02 PM
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Can we agree on a definition of skepticism? It is from a Greek verb 'skeptomai' which means to think rationally. A skeptic is therefore one who considers and weighs the evidence properly, not somebody who rejects things out of hand.
Jason, you are doing a grand job for the atheist cause. Your post is so incoherent that I couldn't respond to it if I tried. Keep it up!
Bruce, a word of advice: don't keep telling us how humble you are, you're beginning to sound unctuous.
Andy, great posts, and don't worry that no-one has replied to your grandest. The silence is probably out of respect.
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | January 2, 2007 1:48 PM
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Jason,
And surely of course, if science can be proven to be falible, then the Bible must be right. It's so clear now. Thank you.
Your whole premise for speaking in such a debate is so incredibly flawed you deserve the rank you have receiced on this thread.
Which is that of a joke.
You want so badly for the logic and science side of the argument to be: We are right and you (the believer) are wrong. That is the only way that you can argue with us. You need to first put the words into our mouth that "we know the truth about everything. Then you can bash us.
The very first conclusion of science is that science is falible.
The entire system (and by the way, it is system, not a politicized group of people) is based on continual re-examination of itself. And a willingness to be proven wrong.
You misunderstand as so many believers do, that this debate is not between one certainty and another.
It is between certainty and uncertainty with science, atheists, agnostics, and secular humanists all falling on the righteous side of uncertainty.
There is of course hubris in the science community. But science itself can not contain this human quality. Science is neutral. Flawed as it may be.
But rest assured, the hubris displayed by even the most egocentric scientist would not even be visible on the same scale as the hubris of religion and their meaningless claims to supremem knowledge.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 1:28 PM
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BRUCE- i came to my own spiritual path through prayer and an extraordinary experience in deep meditation- i prayed consciously and with a despair torn heart for a long time- i asked that god lead me to worship him the way that he wants to be worshipped and not the way that i am comfortable worshipping him-
it was an experience totally conscious- awake and with preternatural awareness and super real- so real that i can remeber it better right now than what i did 5 minutes ago.
i will probably share it on the atheist question for the public.
i appreciate your honesty- and sharing- it requires solid faith to uphold in the face of skepticism.
since you have shared here i will not try to impose on the tremendous impct you have made here-
peace
Posted by: victoria | January 2, 2007 12:50 PM
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Quentin,
As i have explained to one person who has emailed me, i do not have time to address 200+ posts and all the contradictions and ad hominens i see.
Furthermore, i never said my post was comprehensive. I briefly posted just a couple of reasons why I can not take "science" seriously.
Also, i did not provide any comments about Christianity at "length" because that was not my purpose. The fact of the matter is...i'm not interested in comparing conclusions reached by science with the Bible and then battling from there. I'm not interested in battling over the existence of Jesus and whether or not He could have rose from the dead with you - nothing i say would be convincing to you because you are operating within an entirely different set of presuppositions.
My critique of science in entirely INTERNAL. Forget Christianity for the moment...my charge to you is that YOUR framework CAN NOT even get off the starting blocks without contradicting itself. It cannot account for something as simple and as fundamental as "logic" itself.
And what is sad is that many "scientists" recognize the problems with induction and empiricism; so instead of forsaking the framework, as any "rational" person would do, they instead embrace skepticism (another self-contradiction) and/or redefine logic to make their system work.
Now we are told, by men like David Zarefsky, that inductive reasoning is ok. That we are to focus on "experience rather than form".
An inductive argument (science)yields conclusions that are supposedly but not necessarily implied by the premises. For this reason, induction is always a formal fallacy; that is, the conclusion is never certain, never rationally established. In fact, since the conclusion is not necessarily implied by the premises, there is no way to logically show that there is any necessary relationship at all between the conclusion and the premises.
When are you going to address this issue? Again, I don't give a rats behind what you think about the Apostle Paul...i want to see you defend your own presuppositions. My contention is that you cannot.
Interestingly enough, some have tried.
On another thread, Catuskoti's remarks:
"A life of faith could be more assuring than a life that honestly (and I'd say courageously) faces the fertile womb of uncertainty….. They are not "world views" but ways of relating, systematically, and skeptically to claims derived from always contingent, revisable, and empirically falsifiable assumptions. Instead of grounds for facts, modern, contemporary science has, for the past 60+ years, searched for questions, for grounds to doubt."
And there you have it - the admission that empiricism leads to skepticism. However, skepticism is not a valid route to take either, for skepticism contradicts itself. Saying, "one can not know anything" is self-contradictory.
So again Quentin, let me know how you solve this problem without resorting to skepticism and without contradicting yourself.
You can't. And so, instead of forsaking such nonsense, you fight for it.
Thus, the Bible rightly calls you a "moron".
Posted by: Jason Bradfield | January 2, 2007 12:29 PM
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JASON BRADFIELD'S comment is unbelievably selective in at least one respect.
Jason, you comment at length upon science; about which one can indeed make comments of indefinite length; but you make no comments of comparable length about Christianity.
Is this possibly because there is so little one can say in detail about myths and legends written 2,000 or more years ago by illiterate religious fundamentalists, especially as one doesn't have the "sourcecode"?
Actually I sympathise with you: what can one really say about a host of superstitious, word-of-mouth and largely mythical tales?
Posted by: Quentin Feduchin | January 2, 2007 10:16 AM
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I am a honduran theatre actor/director/playwrite. I am working now on a project about faith. More than the financial needs (there is hardly any for cultural work in this country), we need some feed back on the theme. I´m constructing a dramatic line (which is not the drama/play) starting from the primitive apearenece of words (the word) and the simbolic sence of universe (miths), and the theme is very rich in images, but I am having problems findimg a chord, a drama (an action) in daily life, that can express the forms of faith a man/woman goes through to survive today. Faith for me is a sandal (or a boot), that prevents men/women from stepping on hardish reality. For faith we love, for faith we hate... etc. If anybody is interested in colaborating with this clown, please do. (telah.hn@gmail.com)
Posted by: TITO ESTRADA A | January 2, 2007 10:08 AM
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Andy, gotcha. Some of these findings were also reported at the Beyond Belief conference in November. I'm guessing you've watched? If not, Dan wrote a letter from his hospital bed that was read to the conference, very good stuff. I can get the link if you need it.
Meanwhile, a very interesting site devoted to oxytocin:
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 9:12 AM
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RB, thanks for the link. NYT reporter Dennis Overbye has done a good job with the story, tho most of what he reports is the same work by Dennett, Libet and Wegner that I reported 4 years ago. Also, he mangles the Gödel-Turing story and fails to mention Wolfram as the inspiration for Silberstein's "poetic waxings." Still a nice, fun overview.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 2, 2007 8:57 AM
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HI ANDY- thanks for responding
OF COURSE it was me that mentioned superiority-
its MY question!
well you said "i think" but you didnt say why-
the why is the question-
why are humans superior? i am not operating on the assumption that they are- i guess i was looking for deep answers with proof behind them-
these are all why questions- not what-
i thought someone might have some interesting "stream of consciousness"
so natural selection is favoring muslims?
does by this line of logic make them superior?
devil robots?
souls are thought to be the same as selves?
by who?
well thanks for your time
Posted by: victoria | January 2, 2007 8:54 AM
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Andy:
Dennett is quoted at length today in the NYT:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/02/science/02free.html?pagewanted=2&8dpc&_r=1
My apologies for posting twice above. Nervous mouse twitching.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 8:25 AM
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Some musings in response to my own question:
We have a saying: "It was love at first sight" which is possibly a clue. We have five primary senses, but I've never heard anyone say: "It was love at first smell."
The theory I'm considering is that there is a DNA-driven selection process going on, a multiple-choice test being administered, in which some limited number of checkmarks must be ticked off before a threshold for stimulating oxytocin is reached?
Does the simple saying above reveal that the first clue(s) come from visual trigger(s). (I realize this might seem absurdly obvious to some. Feel free to tell me this, but I'm trying to take this step by step.)
There was a fairly recent study done in which men from all cultures and races were shown photos of women of all races, sizes and shapes. The results were striking: women with a 0.7 ratio of waist to hips were deemed the most "beautiful."
We seem hardwired to respond to this visual cue because it seems to indicate fertility, the researchers concluded. Another study involved symmetry of facial features.
But that can't be it alone. I've visually seen, I don't know, countless women with those attributes and have not fallen in love with them.
I suspect these cues might set the stage of interest perhaps, but many other "checkmarks" have to be ticked off. The sheer volume of literature, poems, songs devoted to describing the eyes, I think, is probably evidence that some sort of trigger resides there also.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 8:14 AM
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Some musings in response to my own question:
We have a saying: "It was love at first sight" which is possibly a clue. We have five primary senses, but I've never heard anyone say: "It was love at first smell."
The theory I'm considering is that there is a DNA-driven selection process going on, a multiple-choice test being administered, in which some limited number of checkmarks must be ticked off before a threshold for stimulating oxytocin is reached?
Does the simple saying above reveal that the first clue(s) come from visual trigger(s). (I realize this might seem absurdly obvious to some.)
There was a fairly recent study done in which men from all cultures and races were shown photos of women of all races, sizes and shapes. The results were striking: women with a 0.7 ratio of waist to hips were deemed the most "beautiful."
We seem hardwired to respond to this visual cue because it seems to indicate fertility, the researchers concluded. Another study involved symmetry of facial features.
But that can't be it alone. I've visually seen, I don't know, countless women with those attributes and have not fallen in love with them.
I suspect these cues might set the stage of interest perhaps, but many other "checkmarks" have to be ticked off. The sheer volume of literature, poems, songs devoted to describing the eyes, I think, is probably evidence that some sort of trigger resides there also.
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 8:12 AM
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Victoria, I think you'll find it was you who mentioned superiority.
I said humans are naturally better adapted to run the world, and I mean this in the evolutionary sense (which has often been said to be tautological) that the fittest survive. Who are the fittest? Those best adapted to their environment. What counts as best adapted? That which tends to promote survival in those conditions. Natural selection selects those who reproduce most succesfully. Hence our angst about the Koran-waving millions!
Souls are often thought to be the same thing as selves, and to a first approximation that may be good enough.
A self, as Dan Dennett sees it, is a construction of the brain. We make selves for ourselves (so to speak) to put our thoughts into better order. Each of us builds our own autobiography to sort out our memories, as an ongoing drama starring our own self. That is, Dan thinks we create ourselves as something like fictional characters within our own stories, and we do this for deeply rooted biological reasons. In our inner pictures of the world, our own self is the locus of agency and control, like the cursor on a computer screen.
Another part of Dan's picture is that when we look inside the biological robot we see in the mirror, we find not a little homunculus at the control panel in the brain but a pandemonium, with a lot of little demons slugging it out for control. These little demons literally fight for resources to grow their synapses and so on. Logically, the demons are cognitive robots. What are the robots made of? More robots! It's robots all the way down. They just get simpler the deeper you go, until finally you reach the electrochemistry of neurons.
Dan thinks the self is like a virtual machine, which is to say an emulation, like a virtual Windows machine running on a Mac. The parallelism of the brain supports a serial virtual machine, which he calls a Joycean virtual machine because it generates a stream of consciousness using words, like the fictional character Nora Bloom in James Joyce's novel Ulysses. For Dan, a human self is spun from words like a spider's web is spun from silk.
For more, read Dan. And to put his work in context, you might like to read my 19-page report on a really nice 2002 conference in New York called "The Self: From Soul to Brain" where Dan was a keynote speaker - http://www.andyross.net/nyas.pdf - also published in the Journal of Consciousness Studies 10(2), 2003.
What about the eternity of souls?
Here I give my own view. The self is an information structure, like a program, a huge collection of bits. If someone were to run this program on new hardware in the deep future, that self would emerge anew into physical life. If it were me, my guess is that I would remember my previous life as if it were yesterday, and feel rather puzzled about what happened in the meantime.
So if the Islamists get too much, we can all upload our minds and rapture to the deep future!
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 2, 2007 8:05 AM
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Thanks everyone for the responses about love/monogamy, all very thoughtful. Andy, I researched the oxytocin tip, and that was quite illuminating. Thank you.
To summarize, oxytocin is released during orgasm, is present in higher levels in plasma among those who say they are falling in love and, among other effects, causes increased feelings of trust. It appears to have multiple functions, including a stimulant to help breast-feeding.
However well the mechanism is understood, this does not explain, unless I'm missing something, why Joe falls in love with Jane, but not Susan, or vice versa. Some thing(s) trigger oxytocin release.
What is/are the trigger(s)?
Posted by: RB | January 2, 2007 7:48 AM
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being able to build machines is hardly proof of superiority- and we dont seem to be doing even an inferior job of running the ecosystem- rather we are destroying it.
if youve read daniel dennet and have an answer, fine- give it- telling me to find an answer myslef isnt- obviously - an answer-
athesist are afraid of muslims and jews procreating?
this is so alarmist and strange-
well- big brains? how does even one thing you said "prove" any superiority whatsoever?
Posted by: victoria | January 2, 2007 6:55 AM
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Tim
The monogamy mechanism works mostly via oxytocin, which is released in both sexes during copulation and results in pair bonding, so the relative promiscuity of men and women probably has more to do with their relative investments in offspring. Social and religious arrangements most also play a role, but in various ways. For example, Mormons are genetically indistinguishable from average Protestants, but they tend to have bigger families for explicitly doctrinal reasons. Agreed, Mormon doctrine evolved to adapt the flock to populate a practically virgin continent (ignoring Native Americans for the usual deplorable reasons), so we cannot claim that the doctrine floats free of all natural constraint, but it is clear that doctrine is a separate variable here. As another example, Muslims and Hindus in India are genetically the same but treat women very differently.
The modern liberation of women has two aspects: the contraceptive separation of sex from reproduction and the increasing economic importance of intelligence relative to muscle power. Modern sexual politics are only possible where sexual freedom does not have reproductive consequences. And intelligence is about equally distributed between the sexes, unlike muscle power. The downside here is that Western fertility has slumped as a result of women's liberation. Understandably, free women don't want to spend all their time having babies, and we have in effect chosen quality over quantity: we prefer fewer kids, with more investment in education and so on per kid, than more kids and lower standards.
The disaster waiting to happen here is that the Islamic world is still in fertile mode - pop out more kids and economize on their education. So we have a demographic nightmare looming, which the relative fertility of Jews and Arabs in Israel illustrates as urgently as any other example. This, I believe, is the big horror behind the fear of terrorism that Sam Harris documents. A few hotheads we can maybe live with, but tens of millions of angry youths whose only education is the Koran may make some of us want to reach for the nukes.
Victoria
Humans are learning to live in harmony with the planet. As a social species with big brains, we are better adapted in a quite natural sense to "run" the planetary ecosystem than any other species. And our technology is part of our extended phenotype (recalling Richard Dawkins' first - and for me still best - book). We deploy machines to improve our lives in the same way birds deploy twigs to make nests. We're not better in any metaphysical sense than dolphins, just smarter at building machines.
As for souls, read Dan Dennett. He's America's best living philosopher, in my humble opinion.
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 2, 2007 5:55 AM
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that raises an interesting question for me-
in evolution do we assume that homo sapiens are at the top of the heiarchy?
if we go from a purely logical standpoint we are ill-suited to our environment- must construct all sorts of resource depleting and earth destoying
contrivances just to survive- like george carlin says-maybe god created us because he wanted plastic-
as stated animals act with compassion and self sacrifice to care for each other- what is te superiority of man as a species over others?
im just wondering from what i imagine is an atheist viewpoint-
without a soul and a connection to god- what makes humans better than dolphins which live in complete harmony with the planet?
do atheists believe in a soul?
what is the function of a soul without god?
just wondering
peace
Posted by: victoria | January 2, 2007 4:58 AM
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Andy
On the monogamy thing.
Given that it is quite obvious that men are generaly less monogamy minded than our female counterparts, and given that men rule the world, (not fair just a reality) without religion dictating morals, would the norm still be to live in arrangements that are more suited to the female nesting instinct? Or would men choose the arrangements that they bloody well want damn it.
Posted by: timmy | January 2, 2007 4:48 AM
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Since my big statement of 2:49 PM went unanswered I'll stick to small statements ...
Bruce: "you cannot so neatly and summarily dismiss faith as being culturally determined."
Well, I think you can, but that only shows the issue to be a red herring. Any expression of faith occurs in a language community and against a set of shared beliefs and defaults about life and the universe. The faith itself may be a human universal, hard-wired by genes like the basic emotions, but if so it remains so protean that without a culturally determined expression it would remain unrecognizable. I am sure that this kind of protean faith lies behind the belief in science of people like Dick Feynman or Carl Sagan, who were smart enough not only to see the epistemological problems at the leading edge of science but also to see that only clear thinking based on honest appraisal of natural phenomena can help us in the long term. In other words, science done right is a faith too, but one shorn of embarrassingly idiotic entanglement with old issues about whether Jesus walked on water or Mohammed took dictation from an angel.
Bruce again: "Conversion to Christ is a worldwide phenomenon."
Well, conversion to a state of enlightenment is a worldwide phenomenon, and prevailing cultural memes cause this to be described as conversion to Christ, which I like to think of as finding one's own personal Jesus. But why should this kind of enlightenment, which may not be quite the same as Buddhist enlightenment, be thought of as related to the Biblical Jesus? Our contact with the Biblical Jesus is more remote and indirect than that with most other historical (or fictional) personages, yet people are convinced they have made contact. This is surely psychologically remarkable. They achieve a kind of resonance in their mental state and imagine it transcends the normal rules of physics (excluding quantum nonlocality, which is only well defined for microscopic systems, despite what they say in the movie "What the Bleep?!"). My personal take on this is that it reflects a weakness in the standard physical "explanation" of time, but let that go for now.
Timmy: "Would monogamy be the norm if not for religion?"
Probably, yes. Biologists have studied several pairs of species that are very similar except that one is monogamous and the other is polygamous, and it seems to reflect the working of a simple hormonal mechanism controlled by a small number of genes. So we probably have that mechanism to thank for the fact that we're not (quite) like bonobos. The fact that human males are on average slightly bigger than females reflects a tendency for polygamy or harems, like gorillas, and the size of human testicles correlates with a level of promiscuity that puts us halfway between gorillas and bonobos. As you see, none of this has any obvious relation to religion.
Duckphup: "The Jesus character is entirely fictional."
If so, the author was a genius! Seriously, this is not a big issue for the choice between religious faith and atheism. A millennial movement can get started on the basis of a well planted fiction as well as on fact. Think of how twentieth-century demagogues powered genocidal campaigns with the ludicrously fictional "Protocols of the Elders of Zion." But the possibility that Jesus was fictional does at least open up the debate on the historicity of the New Testament. If even the historicity of Jesus is in doubt, the resurrection and so on are not even worth talking about. Such issues are also irrelevant to any faith that depends merely on resonance with an image of Jesus, which is a psychological phenomenon familiar to students of consciousness.
Enough for now. Replies, anyone?
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 2, 2007 3:44 AM
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Bruce,
You wrote "To refuse to have faith in God cuts you off from him, as that is the only path by which he allows access to himself"
Why?
Why is that the only path by which he alows access?
What purpose could this possibly serve?
Doeas it not sound even a little fishy to you that this would be the kind of thing that you would make up if you were trying to subjugate men through religion and they kept asking for proof of God?
Posted by: timmy | January 1, 2007 10:54 PM
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Duckphup: I guess we have a battle of the experts regarding our respective sources. Not much room for movement on the battlefield. What do you think about Timmy's question about monogamy?
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 1, 2007 10:35 PM
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Timmy: I approach your question with a great deal of humility, because whatever response I make to it will probably not be entirely correct or sufficient. I think that faith is a virtue because it is the one quality that we can possess that attributes absolutely no sufficiency or "glory" to ourselves - all the honor goes to the object of the faith, which in my case is Jesus. I do not see my faith as "blind", although I understand from all the previous posts that this is how most unbelievers see it. That was my whole point in the "some evidence" argument. But be that as it may, in a faith relationship we become completely dependent upon God, and this is why most people shy away from or reject it. We in essence "die" to our own sense of sufficiency and trust in God. We walk by faith, which basically means that we let God be God.
To refuse to have faith in God cuts you off from him, as that is the only path by which he allows access to himself. That leads to its own end, the "eternal damnation" that you describe. I honestly do not like that concept, and the only reason I believe in it is because Jesus seems to teach it so clearly. I am not God, and do not see things the way he does all the time.
On the other hand, if one does take the leap of faith, the promise of Jesus is that you are accepted, and eternal damnation is no longer an issue. In that faith relationship, our questions begin to be answered. The questions raised by our natural scepticism begin to be dealt with, but on God's terms. I have my own questions, as my feelings on eternal judgment indicate. But at this time I sense that I know Jesus. I don't always understand or agree with my wife, and I certainly did not always understand or agree with my parents, or with anyone else that I have known and loved. It's the same with God - that is what makes it a relationship. He can handle the skeptic's questions.
You said previously that you felt that you were being tested. I'm sorry if my response to that was rude. I also feel that I am being tested, and I am looking for genuineness in my faith and worldview. One reason I came to this site is that I wanted to subject my belief to criticism. Modern Christianity is so messed up that it is hard to get down to the core truth. You guys are stripping away my veneer, so I am profiting from that. There may yet still be things to talk about. The "tester" is at work in all of us.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 1, 2007 10:27 PM
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Bruce thanks for you thoughts on the love question. It's an interesting question. I think your points are valid.
Here's a question I don't think you've been asked yet.
I believe that scepticism is a biological necessity and part of our survival instinct.
Why would an all knowing all loving god make it a sin for people, with a natural built in scepticism, to not believe in something fantastical, based on hearsay.
Not only is it a sin. It is the only unforgivable sin.
Stealing, murder, cheating, child pornography, all forgivable sins. But to not have absolute faith in the holy spirit? To doubt that Jesus is the holy spirit? This is punnishable by the most horrible of punnishments. Eternal damnation.
Why?
Why isn't being good to our fellow man in the way that Jesus taught good enough?
Why is it important to God that we have blind faith in something we can not verify.
Why is faith a virtue?
Why?
Posted by: timmy | January 1, 2007 10:01 PM
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Bruce Burleson wrote:
"You would be on more solid ground if you admitted Jesus existed as a human and that he died by crucifixion, but that he stayed dead, in accordance with the laws of nature. Trying to go back and eliminate him from history makes you look like the fanatic -you have become an evangelist."
Up until a few years ago, I WOULD have 'admitted' (or, at least, 'conceded') that Jesus existed as a human and that he died by crucifixion, etc. But then, I began to look deeply into biblical scholarship... and came to the conclusion that the biblical scholarship of Christian apologists is not honest... and that modern, intellectually honest biblical scholarship shines an entirely different, and much more compelling light on the subject... and succeeded in convincing me that the Jesus character is entirely fictional. If you were to honestly investigate in the same fashion, with an open mind, you would become convinced of the same thing.
I am not "... trying to go back and eliminate him from history...". Modern biblical scholarship makes it quite clear that he never was IN history.
Posted by: DuckPhup | January 1, 2007 9:58 PM
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Timmy: I'm disappointed that there aren't any takers on your monogamy question. I thought it was interesting. One refinement in my post - in an advanced society, such as the one you posit, I suppose that finances and raising children will not be a problem, so will not feed a drive for monogamy. I still believe monogamy would exist, as if two people find that they are compatable at every level, there may be no reason for them to go outside that relationship to find fulfillment. So even in a religionless advanced society, I think you would still find it. However, given our tendency to explore outside the confinements of any structure, I don't believe it would be the norm.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 1, 2007 9:25 PM
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Duckphup: There are also hundreds of scholarly references that take exactly the position that I have taken. I guess it depends on what authority you choose to have faith in. Your site is a "skeptic" site, so it is predisposed against the Bible. But I'll start with your position: I am assuming that Romans is one of five epistles that you consider authentic. In Romans 1:3, Paul writes that Jesus Christ "tou genomenou ek spermatos David kata sarka" - "was born from the seed of David according to the flesh." "Born" and "according to the flesh" are clear references to an historical person, not just a spiritual Christ - a Jew of the tribe of Judah, clan of David. Romans 5:6-9 states the fundamental atonement concept, that is based upon Christ dying for the ungodly, shedding his blood, and showing by that death the love of God for us. A spiritual Christ does not die or shed blood. I know that I will not convince you, as your atheist filter requires you to deny the very existence of the physical Jesus. You would be on more solid ground if you admitted Jesus existed as a human and that he died by crucifixion, but that he stayed dead, in accordance with the laws of nature. Trying to go back and eliminate him from history makes you look like the fanatic -you have become an evangelist.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 1, 2007 9:02 PM
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Well Bruce,
That truly is it I guess.
If you are so completely certain that your spiritual experience was a conversation with the son of the man they call God in the old testament, and you are willing to live with all of the horror that support for this theory has caused, and will continue to cause, I guess I really have nothing else to say.
I really didn't think that one of your posts would ever leave me with nothing left to say to you, but you did it.
Peace be with you
and all of us
Posted by: timmy | January 1, 2007 8:53 PM
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Bruce... the 'savior' that is described in the authentic Pauline epistles is NOT a person who existed in the recent past, as described in the Gospels... it is a 'spiritual' Jesus, who resided only in the spiritual realms of 'heaven'... not a human one, who resided on earth. The idea of a 'human' Jesus did not surface (was not invented) until around the beginning of the 2nd century.
Saul/Paul is the author of Christianity... not Jesus... and the Christianity that emerged in the 2nd century would not even have been recognizable to Paul.
Only 5 of the 13 epistles that were are attributed to Paul are widely regarded to be genuine... 3 are of dubious attribution... and the rest are obvious forgeries. The "Luke' that you identify as a companion of Paul, and infer was the Luke who was responsible for the Gospel that bears his name, and a witness to the events that the Gospel of Luke describes, was nothing of the sort. That is an absurdity. The Gospel of Luke was not written until the 2nd century. NONE of the gospels were written by eyewitnesses to the events that they depict. The gospels are ALL fictional accounts. Mark was the first gospel written... PERHAPS before the dawn of the 2nd century. Matthew and Luke were written later, using Mark as a template and incorporating the 'sayings of Jesus' from the 'Q-document'... actually Judeaized versions of tenets of the Greek cynic and stoic philosophies. John was written still later.
There are hundreds of scholarly references that enumrate the problems with the pauline epistles... just Google for 'pauline epistles forgeries'. This site will provide you with a good summary, though: http://www.inu.net/skeptic/epistles.html
Posted by: DuckPhup | January 1, 2007 8:33 PM
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Timmy: Monogamy might not be the norm without religion, in my opinion, but it would still exist. Studies seems to indicate that most people have multiple sexual partners, so we are not inherently monogamous. But at some point many want to settle down with one partner for their own psychological (having an emotionally intimate relationship) and practical (raising children, finances) reasons. Monogamy exists among atheists, so it must not be solely a religious construct.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 1, 2007 8:18 PM
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And with that I have a question for the panel.
Would monogamy be the norm if not for religion?
I don't have an answer for this myself.
I'm looking for postulations.
I'm writign a screenplay that takes place in a universe with no religion and I'm trying to figure out how the sexes would make their living arrangements and deal with the raising of children.
In an advanced society. Science fiction.
Posted by: timmy | January 1, 2007 8:05 PM
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Yes RB yes,
One thought on the handfull of times we fall in love in our life.
I think that is because once we fal in love, we stop looking for, or trying to fall in love for an extended period of time. Until we are single again.
So the number of people one might fall in love with over the course of a lifetime is affected by monogamy.
If we were'nt monogamous, we might fall in love two or three times a week.
Just a thought on your investigation.
Posted by: timmy | January 1, 2007 7:57 PM
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I can't convert anyone either. I can discuss my experiences, listen to yours, and in the process refine my understanding of life and truth. Because I was born in a Christian environment, anything I relate about my experience is subject to the objection that it is culturally determined, and you can dismiss it with the "accident of birth" argument. This does not work when we consider the phenomenon of Arab- Muslim converts to Christianity, who are subject to being put to death, as Ted Swart pointed out in a previous post. They have experienced something that has caused them to go completely against their upbringing, and to potentially lose everything. There are also examples of atheist conversion (C. S. Lewis), and also with communists, Hindus, Buddhists, Jews and every other background. Conversion to Christ is a worldwide phenomenon. Obviously, there are also examples of conversion away from Christianity to these other worldviews. The point is that you cannot so neatly and summarily dismiss faith as being culturally determined.
Take the conversion of Paul of Tarsus, for example. Unlike the situation with the gospel accounts, there is very little actual doubt that a guy named Paul existed, and that he authored at least the first nine epistles that are attributed to him in the New Testament. His conversion experience is described three times in Acts, which was written by his travel companion Luke, and which experience Paul confirms in several places in his epistles. Sure, I suppose Luke could just be flat-out lying, but the combination of the Acts accounts and the Pauline epistles are generally considered to give a reliable account of Paul's life. Paul was not raised a Christian, and hated Christianity. He participated in killing and imprisoning Christians, and was in the process of carrying out this objective at the time of his conversion.
After his conversion, he was rejected by his faith and cultural community (Pharisees/Jews), lost his status in that community, and ultimately lost his life for his Christian faith. Either he was hallucinating, or he made the whole thing up, or he saw a fireball and thought it spoke to him, or he had an encounter with Jesus. We have enough of his writings to evaluate him as a person, and he doesn't sound like a lunatic, a liar or an idiot. He had a "conversion experience" in which he believed that he encountered Jesus, something which his worldview told him was simply not possible. While the vast majority of Christian conversions are not this dramatic, the same basic phenomenon happens all over the world every day. A person has an inward experience of Jesus that radically changes his or her life, sometimes causing that person to be completely rejected by family, faith and culture.
I can point to many scientists today who have had conversion experiences. They do not abandon their scientific worldview, but they acknowledge a reality beyond this one. This often subjects them to ridicule in the scientific community. They don't start believing the world is 6000 years old, but they do start believing that Jesus rose from the dead. They cannot prove that the resurrection occurred, but their inward experience convinces them that the resurrection is true. These are people who are used to having things confirmed objectively, and yet something happens in them to cause them to accept another reality. I don't think they have abandoned rational thinking, as Skeptic suggests.
In the Christian understanding, God has chosen "faith" as the basis for a relationship with people. He did not chose knowledge, reason, science or logic, although there are elements of all of these in faith. This is not belief with no evidence, as there is "some evidence." This faith experience occurs when God communicates in some way (through the Bible, through an event) to a person. Internally, that person begins to believe when before they did not (or their previous belief was superficial, something they were taught). Like looking at a three-dimensional picture, you look at something that seems two dimensional, and then suddenly another dimension appears, so is the conversion experience.
I will accept whatever consequences come with identifying myself as a Christian, including having to deal with the Old Testament and the crimes of other believers. Jesus, for me, is the ultimate interpreter of the OT, and His teachings and example are non-violent, forgiving, loving, and life-affirming. If other believers have missed the point, I'm sorry.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 1, 2007 7:50 PM
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Yes, Linda, yes.
"Non-belief in a deity or a religious system gives one the freedom to do just that."
Many believers I've encountered seem fearful of what they would do, what they would think about, how they might behave if they de-couple themselves from a supernatural control.
Others who have done this, and I'm one, find it liberating. One's thinking about problems, big and small, becomes clearer without always needed to conform to the scribblings of some book of gibberish.
For example, I've been thinking a great deal about love, I'm trying to develop ideas about its biological and evolutionary roots -- it must serve some survival function, beyond the obvious protective urge, or perhaps that is all there is to it.
But why, for example, did I fall in love with -- let's keep it anon -- Betsy all those years ago, but not Jane? Why did Jane, over the course of the years, love Jack, Dan and then Jose? But not dozens or hundreds of others.
We seem to fall in love perhaps only once (maybe never), but certainly only a handful of times in the course of a life (I'm not talking about love of parents, siblings or others familar to you from birth). From an evolutionary POV, our DNA are selective, in my opinion, and send out signals -- at least through our five primary senses, and perhaps in a programmed way through communication -- to each other.
Anyway, I'm still toying with the ideas, but de-coupled from any supernatural persuasion, the "mystery" of love becomes more transparent, and frankly, interesting.
And that's just one example.
Posted by: RB | January 1, 2007 6:46 PM
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Timmy wrote: "I know that I will never convert Bruce."
Convert Bruce to what? Atheism?
I tend to think of 'conversion' as the process of supplanting one set of beliefs with another. Atheism is, by definition, NOT belief... so I cannot see how that concept might be applied to the process of teaching someone how to abandon wishful, magical thinking and apply reason and critical thought. I think that 'deprogramming', or 'awakening' are more apt terms.
Posted by: DuckPhup | January 1, 2007 5:58 PM
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Doug- I know how you feel about wanting to think that your consciousness or the "I" of you somehow survives death, but such a system has strong flaws in it. Like what happens to people who are severely retarded or brain damaged all their lives? What kind of consciousness would they carry into the afterlife? Or newborn infants that die early? Every time I try to think of a possible system of afterlife, it always has holes in it that blow it away. I don't get comfort from the evidence that is mounting that the brain is the only seat of our conciousness and that when it is damaged or dies, so does conciousness, but that is the most logical scenario. There is some comfort in knowing that if my conciousness doesn't survive, I'll have no ability to be aware of that. Anyway, it is what it is and no one knows what it is, so maybe it's best to put our thoughts toward what we are able to do now. Non-belief in a deity or a religious system gives one the freedom to do just that.
Posted by: Linda Joy | January 1, 2007 5:51 PM
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Doug wrote: "I doubt that many people are very concerned with the re-cycling of the atoms of their corporal form. It is the consciousness we think of as "I" or the "soul" that is of concern."
RB wrote: "While I understand this, the concept of a "soul" separate from your body is religious dogma. There is no evidence of a "soul," and plenty of evidence contradicting this concept."
******************
Christians have a totally whacky idea of what the 'soul' is supposed to be... and this whacky concept has been passed on to popular culture. For the Jews of biblical times... including Jesus (if he actually existed)... the 'soul' was an enveloping emanation from the godhead that resulted from the community's relationship with god. The soul as a component of a human being (Christian view) is an artifact of Greek thinking on 'dualism'... which was incorporated into Christian dogma and lore by Gentile theologians, who were ignorant of the Jewish concept of 'soul'.
So... apart from the fact that all of this stuff is mythological nonsense, anyway... everyone's worries about what happens to their personal 'soul' are of no consequence... it does not exist.
Posted by: DuckPhup | January 1, 2007 5:50 PM
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Yes RB,
Well put.
And if you do choose to believe that yourt soul will live on, attaching that thought to any one of the monotheistic religions supports them in their entirety.
Posted by: timmy | January 1, 2007 5:48 PM
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Doug:
"I would like to be able to believe that there is some way that "I" might survive the death of my body."
While I understand this, the concept of a "soul" separate from your body is religious dogma. There is no evidence of a "soul," and plenty of evidence contradicting this concept.
What we know is that all communication -- be it at the neural level, one neuron talking to another -- or at higher levels, thoughts, spoken words, radio waves, lasar pulses, all require energy.
What source of energy "powers" your "soul?" Presumably you'll think: well, the energy of my body. Once the mitchodria in your cells stop processing ATP, the ability of your neurons to communicate ceases. Unless your "soul" is powered by something not yet detected, then it dies when your body does.
So savor every moment, now, while you have them, rather than wishfully thinking for a perpetually-charged Energizer bunny soul that will keep on ticking for eternity. (As an aside: what if you got stuck next to George Bush for eternity?)
If everyone had greater reverence for the here and now, and the preciousness of life on earth -- maybe there would be fewer wars in the name of dieties who are promising "eternal life for your soul."
Posted by: RB | January 1, 2007 5:32 PM
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We alll seem to agree that belief in God in the hands of somebody like Osama Bin Laden is a bad thing.
But some of the posters in this thread feel that belief in God by somebody like Bruce is harmless. I do not feel this way for the following reason.
Bruce will not, and can not seperate himself from all of the very bad things that religion has brought into the world so long as he calls himself a Christian, and defends the literalness of the Bible, which he does.
He will not admit that the abhorent and repulsive sections of the old testament are false or clearly not the word of God. He uses the old, "I have a different interperatation of those passages" excuse to avoid the confrontation with the obvious.
By refusing to denounce these passages as the word of God, Bruce is supporting two milenia of slavery, misogony and crusading slaughter of billions.
I understand why he can not deny these to be the word of God. How can the rapture prove that Jesus was the son of God if the credibility of those who told you who God was in the first place comes into question.
No matter how much Bruce tries to internalize his relationship with Jesus, if he maintains that Jesus is the resurected son of the creator of the universe as layed out in the Old Testament, then he supports all of the evils of the church.
It is because of the sheer number of people in America who believe as Bruce does, that words of slaughter, slavery, misogony and gay bashing lie under the right hand of every elected official in this country as they are sworn into office.
I know that I will never convert Bruce.
But must never stop pointing out the detremental lunacy of his all too popular view of the world.
And I will never stop.
As Sam points out. It is not a job that I choose. It is a job that has been thrust upon me and all rational people.
Once again, this is not a revolution.
This is an eviolution that we have been missing.
Sam and Richard and Dan (Dan gets left out too much) are raising our conciousness to it.
Posted by: timmy | January 1, 2007 4:31 PM
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Response to RB
I doubt that many people are very concerned with the re-cycling of the atoms of their corporal form. It is the consciousness we think of as "I" or the "soul" that is of concern.
I would be happy to have a pine tree planted over my grave, or be burned and scattered if that wasn't such a waste of energy. I personally have no concern about what happens to my body after death.
I am not so blaise about what happens to "me" - the collection of memories, thoughts, desires, hopes, dreams, and loving feelings that I consider to be my unique "self". Even though I believe that there is nothing knowable about what happens after death, I would like to be able to believe that there is some way that "I" might survive the death of my body.
I find nothing satisfying in the scientific fact of the immortality of the atoms and energy that happen to be part of my body at the time that I die. I doubt there are many people who would find this anywhere nearly as comforting as the thought of being re-united in some way with loved ones. The promise of life after death is a powerfully persuasive reward offered by religion. To deny its attractiveness is to fail to fully understand the hold religion has on the believer.
Posted by: Doug | January 1, 2007 4:29 PM
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Early in his post on this first day of 2007, Bruce said “I cannot conclusively prove to you the extraordinary claim that Jesus rose from the dead. My belief in that extraordinary event comes from an inner response to the new testament story that you cannot test objectively.” Let’s give Bruce some credit for his acknowledgment that he cannot “conclusively prove” the alleged resurrection of Jesus. But the case isn’t even close to conclusive proof. The case doesn’t even warrant a conclusion that the alleged resurrection of Jesus was more likely to have occurred than not to have occurred. The problem is that Bruce continues to make a claim about objective facts (the alleged resurrection) based on a subjective feeling (“inner response”). This makes about as much sense as Bruce claiming that George Washington flew over the Delaware river because he (Bruce) has a stomach ache. Belief in objective events can not rest on subjective feelings. It is unethical to suggest that they can.
Bruce said “The ones that believe can only point to an inward revelation that basically cannot be explained to others. Faith comes to them inwardly - it just comes, and they believe.” Bruce’s “inward revelation” starts with wishful thinking, then makes a leap of faith, and finally ends up with a dogmatic certainty about objective reality, all wrapped up in a nifty psychological package called “a visit by the Holy Spirit”. In the world today there are millions of people who have subjective experiences similar to Bruce’s but who have formulated and maintained beliefs very different and even contradictory to his. I am sure that the men who flew planes into the Twin Towers relied on the same kind of “inward revelation”. They abandoned rational thinking just as Bruce has in his claim about a resurrection.
Bruce then said “I cannot convince you rationally of something that is essentially a spiritual phenomenon.” The problem here is that Bruce has been strongly conditioned by others, and by himself, to associate genuine peak emotional states (awe, serenity, love, beauty, unity, peace, etc.) with specific unfounded hypotheses about the objective world. The association is primarily an accident of birth; he picked up the association because of the country, neighborhood, family, school, and church in which he grew up. Although he will probably never accomplish it, salvation for Bruce lies in the decoupling of his peak emotional states from his unfounded hypotheses and then either enjoying those states for their own sake or recoupling them with conclusions derived from rational thinking. Truth does not come from feeling, no matter how valuable feelings can be, it comes from thinking straight.
Bruce has no explanation for Timmy as to why some people experience an “inner revelation of Christ”, and some do not. The groundwork for such subjective feelings is laid during the person’s childhood and is culturally specific. The “inner revelation” is neither an accident nor a supernatural event; it is part of a specific psychological development. If we knew the details of Bruce’s growing up, we could probably see clearly how the seeds were sown.
Bruce said “It is my obligation to continue to subject my faith to objective analysis to determine whether it is genuine, or whether it is the product of wishful thinking or psychosis.” Amen! Bruce does not talk in a way that indicates psychosis, but his thinking is full of wishful thinking. Unfortunately, he is not processing evidence with rational principles. We can only hope that Bruce will keep seeking the truth and will not infringe on the rights of others as he finds his way to a better place.
Posted by: Skeptic in Tallahassee | January 1, 2007 4:24 PM
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Doug:
"The powerful attraction at the core of religion is providing a comforting answer to the completely unanswerable question of what does or does not come after death. Aethiesm, agnosticism and science provide no answers to this question, other than it is unknown and appears unknowable."
Sagan and others have written about the simple fact that the atoms in our bodies originated in the furnaces of stars. And that eventually, we will return to the space as star dust, to be re-made again as part of a planet in some newly-birthed solar system.
This is not wishful thinking. This is the scientific conclusion reached by cosmologists and astro-physicists over a period of less than a century as the processes of nuclear fusion and the observations of ever-more-powerful telescopes allowed greater understanding of how the cosmos evolves and has formed and will continue to form.
So in a very real sense, our atoms will all be re-cycled and -- if the evolution of life is a universal phenomena, and there is growing evidence of that -- be re-born again as part of some other creature, time and again. Thus science can offer a person the concept that you are indeed part of an enormous and perhaps infinite cycle of birth and re-birth. For some this might be as satisfying as any notion about death controlled by supernatural beings, but without the need to seize onto an irrational belief system.
Thus I must disagree that our increasing knowledge of the universe (science) has not offered ANY answers to this question.
Posted by: RB | January 1, 2007 3:54 PM
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Bruce, your willingness to be honest and vulnerable should be acknowledged as the fine example that it is. We are all trying to be honest here and I suspect that many of us have gone through the same turmoil around loyalty to ideas that seem right because we have grown up with them. We are all happy if someone can prove something by means of reasoned discussion; we are devotees of truth, after all.
I think when talking about St. Paul's conversion of Greeks you have to bear in mind that the idea of a slain and resurrected god was familiar to the Greeks from many different belief systems at the time, so it's not so far-fetched that some of them were prepared to believe what he said.
As for the evidence of Jesus' resurrection: well, nobody knows if it really happened or not, it's just infinitesimally unlikely and we have to base our reality on the greatest likelihood. (To say that God is capable of anything doesn't work because it starts off a circular argument.) The fact that a lot of stuff in the gospel accounts HAS been subsequently disproved, such as contemporary historical references, old testament prophecies etc., just lends weight to the dismissal verdict.
Best wishes
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | January 1, 2007 3:30 PM
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Quoting Bruce Burleson: "I cannot conclusively prove to you the extraordinary claim that Jesus rose from the dead. My belief in that extraordinary event comes from an inner response to the new testament story that you cannot test objectively. Therefore, I am in the position of advocating a faith that I cannot objectively prove, except to report to you my subjective experience, which you cannot objectively test. I can see why many of you believe that my faith is based upon wishful thinking, at best, or is psychotic, at worst."
Bruce, you show no evidence of psychosis that I can observe. Thank you for your honesty in stating that your belief is subjective and untestable. In response I will admit that my disbelief is also subjective and untestable. We stand in the same relation to the issue.
But has this lengthy discussion actually been about the CORE ISSUE? It seems to me that for most believers it is not the question of whether Christ rose from the dead after three days that matters, but whether he subsequently ascended to Heaven and most specifically whether they themselves can expect to ascend to an afterlife. The powerful attraction at the core of religion is providing a comforting answer to the completely unanswerable question of what does or does not come after death. Aethiesm, agnosticism and science provide no answers to this question, other than it is unknown and appears unknowable.
Religion has thousands of years of history developing versions of what the afterlife will be like and what you have to do in this life to attain the postive rewards and avoid the negative. Organized religion has developed the stories surrounding this into a complicated self-supporting dogma that also support large powerful organizations with historical track records that lead me to mistrust them.
Modern psychological theory supports the notion that most people make most decisions on emotional grounds and only subsequently engage the intellect to justify them. An issue so central and so frightening (at least after you hear about Hell) as death is going to inevitably lead to emotional decisions. This is at the root of the sway religion has over its believers.
To free oneself of religious faith requires freeing oneself of the need to have an answer to life after death. This is not easy and is made much more difficult by the tantalizing promises (and terrible threats) of religion.
The immediate future of this World would be well served by the appearance of a completely new Messiah who preaches a message that requires no obedience to dogma or Church, but promises each believer a comfortable afterlife. Needless to say, he would be in danger of crucifixion at the hands of existing religions and stoning by their believers.
Posted by: Doug | January 1, 2007 3:27 PM
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Thanks RB I am reading The God Delusion right now and tons of information Ted Swart has sent me I in time get to Beyond Belief.
So much to learn so little time. :-)
Posted by: Pam Meloy | January 1, 2007 3:26 PM
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Pam:
Not sure who you're referring to as "intellectuals" but I either consider everyone who shows up here in that category, or no one, including myself.
Harris, Dawkins et al have performed a public service by attempting to remove some of the Scarlet Letter "A" that has existed, and been propogated actively by the religious right. Both argue reasonably (as in calmly) and with reason, leaving both religious extremists and their "partners-in-crime" gasping for breath, as did Russell a couple of generations ago.
There was a wonderful video series held in November, available for your viewing pleasure, entitled Beyond Belief, at:
If that mish-mash doesn't work, let me know.
Posted by: RB | January 1, 2007 2:56 PM
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Congratulations to all: reading this thread has kept me busy for hours, and thinking productively too.
Bruce Burleson, the wily Christian fox, led the hounds on a merry chase to the dead end of belief or disbelief in resurrection, but also opened a new theme: identification with your own personal Jesus. This may be seen as achievement of a new state of mind analogous to the enlightened states targeted in the Eastern meditative traditions, with the difference that the born-again person remains a regular member of his or her community.
Is this enlightened state the goal (or end) of faith? Is this kind of personal fulfillment the destination of a psychotrip that justifies a detour through religion? And does it exalt the Christian religion above all others, as a more efficient transport of ordinary dullards from the banality of everyday life to perfection in the fellowship of enlightenment?
Atheism can seem a dismal doctrine, a mere denial of the charms of traditional paths to subjective transcendence of our carnal limits. But it speaks to a real impatience with the tunnel vision that those traditional paths impose. Sam Harris sees the issue: As a society we can no longer safely tolerate the intolerance that is so often a corollary of the tunnel vision of organized religion, not to mention its crazy irrationalism in face of modern science. We are better off with a dismal truth than absurd hubris masquerading as revelation.
Yet there is a risk of throwing out the baby with the bathwater, as Burleson seems to have sensed. Many times in history, revolutionaries have rebelled against religion only to founder on the rocky shores of an excessively harsh rationalism. Think of the French revolution, where heads were chopped off like cabbages in the name of reason, or the Russian revolution, where reactionaries of all kinds were rounded up and shot in the name of the proletariat. Militant atheists need to ensure that the struggle against religious tolerance does not spill over into denial of the deeper needs of humans in an age characterized by the scientific revaluation of all values.
The deeper need that the personal Jesus meets is the need for one's own direct and intimate contact with eternal glory. Scientists like Richard Dawkins tell us that our bodies are no more than survival machines for our genes and that our brains are no more than battlegrounds for competing memes, and philosophers like Dan Dennett tell us that free will is an illusion. The average person is not bright enough to see the glory of these ideas and merely feels belittled. But if I can unite with Jesus, I become immortal and transcend all that scientific mumbo-jumbo.
The deepest problem with the Abrahamic tradition, as I see it, is that it politicizes God. The undeniable immanence of being (to use a meme from existentialist philosophy) is conflated with the unfathomable transcendence of a supreme being. This supreme being is conceived by analogy with a person but rules over us, like a monstrously inflated father figure. The timeless luminosity of mere being is seen as the stage of an eternal being, God, who is enthroned above me and offers a narrow path or a tunnel to salvation. When my salvation is made conditional upon my following the shining path, the political risk of punishment for straying is obvious.
The solution to reconciling both the problem of the Abrahamic God and the need for a personal Jesus with the atheist demands of Harris, Dennett and Dawkins is to see that the scientific vision of the atheists always includes transcendence, understood as liftoff from immanence to infinity. We are stuck in the immanence of normal life, where genes and neurons and so on rule our days, but the sheer complexity of all the feedback loops, molecular interactions, field interference and so on ensures that infinities pop up everywhere and the scientific story goes gaga. In fact, the scientists need faith to believe that it will all make sense in the end. This gives room for each and every one of us to shape our selves to suit our psychological needs. If that need takes the form of ecstatic union with an imaginary Jesus, so be it. This need not involve any political complications that should concern us here. Such an inner path to transcendence and reconcilation with eternity has no implications for public policy except that people should be free to experience it, as and when they see fit.
If this is what Burleson has brought to our thread, good for him. Atheism with this freedom is not dismal, and faith thus interiorized is not intolerable.
You are welcome to disagree ...
Posted by: ANDY ROSS | January 1, 2007 2:49 PM
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Mr. Harris,
Please, Soviet Union has spent 70 years for tryng to eliminate religion from people's life by applying to all sorts of mud dropping technics, and these all were done in the name of atheism.
Posted by: OGTAY | January 1, 2007 2:44 PM
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Tonio
As with anything there seems to be many A/A (atheist/agnostics) out there that are ugly with people who believe. Just the same I have found just as many A/A's on this website that are simply speaking to their non-beliefs.
I for one had been afraid to come out of the closet because I thought that the majority of people that were non-believers were much more educated and analytical than myself.
I have found a great circle of people posting on this site alone that have taught me so much. I am now reading Dawkins/Harris and other related information and am learning a great deal. It is my hope that by being brave enough to post along with all of you intellectuals that more people like myself will be brave enough to come out of the closet as I did. I started by reading and feeling very intimidated in the beginning. By posting I have found some wonderful on-line friends. The majority of us are not trying to convert you. I would hope we do give you something to think about.
Posted by: Pam Meloy | January 1, 2007 1:41 PM
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Timmy, please read my post above where I refer to myself as an "atheist sympathizer." The people telling me what to believe are not atheists but evangelists from various religions. My posts objecting to being told what to believe are directed at the evangelists on this board and not at Harris or Dawkins or any other atheist.
"Again the misperception that atheism is a belief comes through in your comments."
I don't intend to equate atheism with a belief. I'm trying to defend the idea of freedom of conscience, and that idea affects atheism just as much as it does any religion. An evangelist sees atheists and adherents of other religions as the same, as simply targets for conversion, and atheists and other believers both face that kind of intrusion into their personal boundaries. If freedom of conscience were banned by some government, it would affect both atheists and believers.
Posted by: Tonio | January 1, 2007 1:39 PM
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Hey Tonio, you raise good points:
"Because I don't like the idea of any person or doctrine telling me what I should believe."
Understood, and empathatic with the sentiment. Note carefully that Dawkins and Harris specifically distinguish between belief in a non-personal "god" and the personal god of the three religions of abraham. It is the latter they're concerned with because those belief systems call for followers to act -- violently against non-believers. Harris sees these religions as a sub-set of dogmatic beliefs systems as a whole, which he condemns in a similar manner.
If you said you see "god" in the stars at night, they wouldn't spend time confronting that belief. If you said you hear god while praying and he tells you to stone women who show their ankles in public, you would be a target of their ire.
"I believe that it is possible for someone to hold a religious belief and not act on that belief in a way that harms others. If someone else's beliefs do not affect me, do I have the right to demand that he or she change those beliefs?"
Those types of belief systems aren't a threat, so no, why waste time on it.
Posted by: RB | January 1, 2007 1:31 PM
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Tonio,
Again the misperception that atheism is a belief comes through in your comments.
Once again I point out to you that if you remove all of the religions in the world, atheism no longer exists.
It's that simple.
Atheism only exists as a reaction to a belief.
Sam's book, Richard's book, Dan Dennet's book, none of these is telling you or anyone else what to believe.
They are simply pointing out very good reasons to not believe in bronze age myths that harm our intellectual progress as a species.
You are not being preached to.
Nor are Sam and Richard advocating a revolution or conversion of anyone.
They are waking us up to an evolution that has been taking place for centuries. They are just letting all of us evolved persons know that it is okay now to come out of the closet and speak our minds freely without the social stigma that previously forced us to hold our tounges.
No one is telling you what to do Tonio.
We are only telling you what you can do now if you choose.
Posted by: timmy | January 1, 2007 1:18 PM
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"Harris and Dawkins are arguing that moderates with their liberal attitude toward religious tolerance are part of the problem -- they provide cover for the extremists."
I'm familiar with that argument, RB, and I agree with it to a point. I've read "The God Delusion" and I'm a third of the way through "The End of Faith."
But I'm reluctant to go as far as Harris and Dawkins do with that argument. Why? Because I don't like the idea of any person or doctrine telling me what I should believe.
I believe that it is possible for someone to hold a religious belief and not act on that belief in a way that harms others. If someone else's beliefs do not affect me, do I have the right to demand that he or she change those beliefs? Assuming I did, what is to stop the other person from doing the same thing to me? Why types of belief-motivated actions are harmful to others, directly or indirectly?
Posted by: Tonio | January 1, 2007 12:53 PM
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Congratulations to you Bruce for the below statement:
Timmy, I have no answer to your question. I do not know why some people experience an inner revelation of Christ, and some do not.
I have been on this website from the first day and have read and posted on the previous thread of Sam Harris. You said the magic words "I don't know".
I can respect your beliefs because you have at least acknowledged that you do not know why you believe and others do not. This is a great credit to you.
Thanks P.S. I must say that I have tried in the past to have the experience you have had and it is just not possible for reasons I have no way of knowing. I may have had too many Jason Bradfield experiences in my life.
Happy New Year
Posted by: Pam Meloy | January 1, 2007 12:36 PM
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"You have just described most Americans as passive victims of bullies, so weak intellectually that they will give up basic tenants of democracy because Rush yells at them. It may be the case (I'm not so sure) but if so it's pathetic."
RB, that is not quite what I had in mind. I think it is more accurate to say that humans have a tendency to fear change. That fear makes people vulnerable to the demagoguery of the Limbaughs and Coulters. Specifically, the religious right points to Engel vs. Vitale as the beginning of America's alleged decline, as if restoring forced prayer in school would magically make people understand right from wrong. It's a despicable tactic, and it works partly because it is natural to romanticize the era in which one grew up. It's all about the famous Ben Franklin quote about trading liberty for security. The only way to prevent that is to defeat fear with reason.
Posted by: Tonio | January 1, 2007 12:28 PM
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Jason Bradfield:
Please desist from carrying out irreproducible experiments in semiconductor physics, fiber optics, etc. and simply pray for your next post to appear. I suppose it would be asking too much of God for it to make any sense.
Posted by: Tim Hughbanks | January 1, 2007 12:07 PM
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I have read all your comments, and I have to say that is has been one of the most rewarding experiences for me in recent memory. It has been beneficial for me in that it has forced me to remove the religious veil that I normally wear and come face to face with the actual basis for my faith. I cannot conclusively prove to you the extraordinary claim that Jesus rose from the dead. My belief in that extraordinary event comes from an inner response to the new testament story that you cannot test objectively. Therefore, I am in the position of advocating a faith that I cannot objectively prove, except to report to you my subjective experience, which you cannot objectively test. I can see why many of you believe that my faith is based upon wishful thinking, at best, or is psychotic, at worst.
In Acts 17 the apostle Paul told the Athenian council at the Areopagus about the resurrection of Jesus. He was speaking to the intellectual elites of his day. There were three responses: 1) some mocked; 2) some wanted to learn more; and 3) some believed. To some it seems absolutely ridiculous, and they will not change their stance because believers cannot deliver the extraordinary evidence they require. That is even more true today, as we are now in a scientific age, and the purported eyewitnesses of the resurrection are long dead. The ones that believe can only point to an inward revelation that basically cannot be explained to others. Faith comes to them inwardly - it just comes, and they believe.
If there are any out there in the 2nd category, who want to learn more, I can only point you back to the original story and ask you not to let our failures as believers prejudice you against that story. Ultimately, if Jesus is the truth, it is up to Him to reveal Himself to you. I cannot convince you rationally of something that is essentially a spiritual phenomenon.
Timmy, I have no answer to your question. I do not know why some people experience an inner revelation of Christ, and some do not.
For the rest of you who have pointed out the weaknesses in the New Testament accounts, I again acknowledge that you are good cross-examiners. It is my obligation to continue to subject my faith to objective analysis to determine whether it is genuine, or whether it is the product of wishful thinking or psychosis. (If it is the latter, I guess my own self-examination won't do much good). Thank you for giving me some tools to do that. At this time, my faith remains - I believe that I experience the resurrected Christ.
For what it's worth, I do respect you, and I do acknowledge that you may be right and I may be wrong. I have actually grown to like you. Sam Harris has done the world a favor by at least jump-starting the dialogue between non-believers and believers. Who knows where it will end?
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | January 1, 2007 11:47 AM
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Waked you are right on. All one has to do is read the posts on this website and will be reinforced in the fact that we non-believers have it all over the believers.
Isn't it freeing to not have to argue about details of how this and that and that are? It goes on and on for pages and pages of what questions and answers and more questions and more debate and in the end nothing is gained by all of the educated people with their facts, books, quotes, and opinions.
I for one am not trying to convince anyone of anything but just to say how I feel and why. I think it is fruitless to argue with the people that believe. They are not here to learn. They are here to sway others to their side.
Peace and happy new year to all.
Posted by: Pam Meloy | January 1, 2007 11:46 AM
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Waked:
Welcome aboard the peace train.
Posted by: RB | January 1, 2007 11:13 AM
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RB wrote:
"I do not believe that the word ignorant is a perjorative -- it is descriptive of a state of knowledge. But I accept that you think it sounds harsh."
***********
"The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance... it is the illusion of knowledge." ~ Daniel Boorstin
Posted by: duckPhup | January 1, 2007 11:08 AM
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Tonio:
"Do atheists want to alienate the moderates who support freedom of conscience? "
No. But Harris and Dawkins are arguing that moderates with their liberal attitude toward religious tolerance are part of the problem -- they provide cover for the extremists. By breaking this taboo -- deliberately -- rationalists are attempting openly to isolate the extremists.
"Most Christians in America don't want forced prayer or creationism in schools, but they might go along with those punitive measures if the extremists convince them that their right to be Christian is under attack."
Then they deserve their fate. You have just described most Americans as passive victims of bullies, so weak intellectually that they will give up basic tenants of democracy because Rush yells at them. It may be the case (I'm not so sure) but if so it's pathetic.
Mosts Americans don't read the bible and what little they know of it is cherry-picked to conform with modern notions of morality.
I'm in agreement with you that the use of perjoratives is not a sound debating tactic.
Nevertheless, if a friend said he had encountered a preacher who wants him to handle poisonous snakes to show his belief in jesus, I would tell him unhesitantly that he's stupid. No I would shout it at him.
If he tells me the world is 6,000 years old, I would tell him that his ignorance is so complete that it is breath-taking.
I do not believe that the word ignorant is a perjorative -- it is descriptive of a state of knowledge. But I accept that you think it sounds harsh.
Posted by: RB | January 1, 2007 10:47 AM
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reading Sam was for me a journy in a world of reality it is not only an light opening experince but you discover that it is high time to join forces against spreading this dangerous phenomena called religion .
Posted by: waked | January 1, 2007 10:44 AM
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"The use of these words may stop conversation with the stupid or the ignorant, but they pose no problem for the rest of us."
RB, I disagree. Those words pose a huge PR problem for not just atheists but for everyone who believes in freedom of conscience. As I see it, most Americans are moderate believers. They are uncomfortable with the religious right's agenda, but they are also uncomfortable with the "threat" posed by atheism and humanism. There is no such threat - these moderates have been listening to the propaganda put out by the Coulters and Robertsons. If you listen to these demagogues' anti-ACLU rhetoric, you would believe that atheists oppose freedom of conscience, that atheists want to outlaw all religion. But as we have seen with Kansas schools, the Air Force Academy and the Office of Faith-Based Initiatives, many on the religious right are working to turn government into a recruiting tool for their faith.
Given this dangerous environment, I believe it's very risky for atheists to use words like ignorant in describing believers. Freedom of conscience needs all the allies it can get. Do atheists want to alienate the moderates who support freedom of conscience? Most Christians in America don't want forced prayer or creationism in schools, but they might go along with those punitive measures if the extremists convince them that their right to be Christian is under attack. In my view, the best way for atheists to appeal to the moderates is through reason, not through name-calling.
Posted by: Tonio | January 1, 2007 9:10 AM
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Thank you Timmy and Duckphup, you guys are as clear-thinking as Sam.
Doug:
"Since there is no objective way to verify the truth or falseness of the reported event the debate is doomed to end in a draw - you either believe, or you don't. Thank you, Bruce for demonstrating the futility of applying rational logic to debates of this nature."
Frankly, history contradicts this assertion.
History is replete with examples where a shared notion of morality has led to the abandoment of irrationally-based beliefs. Slavery was justified by the bible, but it is now viewed with disgust (although not completely, yet, see Eithiopia).
The gods of the Romans, Greeks, Scandanavians, et al., lie on the dustheap.
Humans abandon supernatural explanations and justifications as their knowledge and consciousness expand. Folks like Bruce are just lagging behind.
Posted by: RB | January 1, 2007 8:13 AM
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For those who persist in perceiving and/or insisting that atheism is a 'belief':
Atheism can be categorized as a 'belief' ONLY in that same sense that -- NOT collecting stamps -- might be construed to be a 'hobby'.
Posted by: DuckPhup | January 1, 2007 5:40 AM
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I would like to thank Bruce Burleson for being either an excellent case in point or a truely talented devil's advocate. He has politely and intelligently engaged in extended dialog on the issue of faith and evidence and thereby given all of us an excellent excercise in thought, logic and debate. I care not what his actual motivations may be.
There is one observation that I would like to make about the debate: Bruce has made the statement that his belief in God is based upon the miracle of Christ rising from the dead. Many religious people use the miracles reported in the Bible as proof of the existance of God and the validity of the scriptures. If these were ordinary events, within the range of common everyday experience they would not be miracles and they would not have value as "proof".
As the debate with Bruce has shown - attacking the nature of the evidence and questioning the liklihood of the event is not effective in shaking belief. For the believer the miracle itself is proof of the power of God and the truth of the scripture that reports the miracle. For the non-believer the preposterous nature of the asserted event is proof of the non-truth of the scripture and the non-existance of proof of God.
Since there is no objective way to verify the truth or falseness of the reported event the debate is doomed to end in a draw - you either believe, or you don't. Thank you, Bruce for demonstrating the futility of applying rational logic to debates of this nature.
Posted by: Doug | January 1, 2007 3:42 AM
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If all of the religions in the world were part of a big science experiment, atheism would be the control.
Posted by: timmy | December 31, 2006 11:41 PM
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Dear Fascinated,
First of all that wasn't a response by Sam Harris.
That was RB posting a Harris quote.
But either way, You missed the point.
The sumation of atheism was not in Sam's grim scenario nor did he say that it was.
The entirety of atheism he was referring to was in in the answer.
No.
And he was not speaking to believers. He is talking to atheists when he says this.
He is stating truthfully that an atheist's answer to the two questions at the end of that scenario
"Are they right to believe this? Is it good that they believe this?"
is no.
Atheists do not believe that it is either truthfull, or a good thing that they believe this. And that does kind of sum up atheism.
And the reason he uses a scenario like this to illustrate, is because the most common misperception of atheism is that it is a belief.
Atheism is not a belief, as much as you would like to make it one.
It is a reaction to a belief.
Take away all of the religions in the world, and there is no such thing as atheism.
It is a reaction, not a belief.
And rest assured, nobody needs to supress the idea that god created the fascinating awe inspiring things that we see in nature.
Unless of course they were predisposed to such a notion by some kind of childhood brainwashing.
Or as Dawkins correctly calls it. Child abuse.
Your misperception of atheism is pretty clear when you accuse us of being mad at someone we don't believe in.
We don't believe that god is standing by doing nothing while that little girls gets murdered.
We don't believe god exists.
Posted by: timmy | December 31, 2006 11:24 PM
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Lynne:
Your compliments I believe deservedly go to FERN. Not myself.
Thanks,
Jeff
Posted by: Jeff Reed | December 31, 2006 10:58 PM
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To SAM HARRIS:
I was fascinated by your recent response to RB. You may not fully realize what you have written.
Your first paragraph was revealing. You state that the "entirety of atheism" is summed up in that scenario. WOW! Do you see what you're saying? You are not rejecting God because of science or logic or reason...you reject Him because you could never worship the god you have conceived in your mind. The god you refuse to believe is a cruel absentee slumlord. I wouldn't believe in that guy, either. You are angry at him, and you refuse to acknowledge that He exists.
You say that atheism is "a refusal to deny the obvious". I could not disagree more. You are, in fact, denying the Obvious. When you watch a sunset, stare at cloud formations, ponder the intricacies of the human body, or whatever in nature fascinates you, you have to suppress the thought that a Supreme Being created it, because you think he would have to be insensitive and vicious. I won’t be surprised if you deny this, because you may not be doing it consciously.
You can write as many books as you want. You can talk about science and logic, but the truth is that you are making an emotional choice not to believe. You probably don't realize it, but it's so clear to me. You see, I've already been there.
Posted by: fascinated | December 31, 2006 10:56 PM
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Amen
Posted by: timmy | December 31, 2006 8:56 PM
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Somewhere in the world a man has abducted a little girl. Soon he will rape, torture and kill her. If an atrocity of this kind is not occurring at precisely this moment, it will happen in a few hours, or days at most. Such is the confidence we can draw from the statistical laws that govern the lives of 6 billion human beings. The same statistics also suggest that this girl s parents believe at this very moment that an all-powerful and all-loving God is watching over them and their family. Are they right to believe this? Is it good that they believe this?
No.
The entirety of atheism is contained in this response. Atheism is not a philosophy; it is not even a view of the world; it is simply a refusal to deny the obvious. Unfortunately, we live in a world in which the obvious is overlooked as a matter of principle. The obvious must be observed and re-observed and argued for. This is a thankless job. It carries with it an aura of petulance and insensitivity. It is, moreover, a job that the atheist does not want.
Sam Harris
Posted by: RB | December 31, 2006 8:12 PM
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1. I do call to witness the Resurrection Day;
2. And I do call to witness the self-reproaching spirit: (Eschew Evil).
3. Does man think that We cannot assemble his bones?
4. Nay, We are able to put together in perfect order the very tips of his fingers.
5. But man wishes to do wrong (even) in the time in front of him.
6. He questions: "When is the Day of Resurrection?"
7. At length, when the sight is dazed,
8. And the moon is buried in darkness.
9. And the sun and moon are joined together,-
10. That Day will Man say: "Where is the refuge?"
11. By no means! No place of safety!
12. Before thy Lord (alone), that Day will be the place of rest.
13. That Day will Man be told (all) that he put forward, and all that he put back.
14. Nay, man will be evidence against himself,
15. Even though he were to put up his excuses.
16. Move not thy tongue concerning the (Qur'an) to make haste therewith.
17. It is for Us to collect it and to promulgate it:
18. But when We have promulgated it, follow thou its recital (as promulgated):
19. Nay more, it is for Us to explain it (and make it clear):
20. Nay, (ye men!) but ye love the fleeting life,
21. And leave alone the Hereafter.
22. Some faces, that Day, will beam (in brightness and beauty);-
23. Looking towards their Lord;
24. And some faces, that Day, will be sad and dismal,
25. In the thought that some back-breaking calamity was about to be inflicted on them;
26. Yea, when (the soul) reaches to the collar-bone (in its exit),
27. And there will be a cry, "Who is a magician (to restore him)?"
28. And he will conclude that it was (the Time) of Parting;
29. And one leg will be joined with another:
30. That Day the Drive will be (all) to thy Lord!
31. So he gave nothing in charity, nor did he pray!-
32. But on the contrary, he rejected Truth and turned away!
33. Then did he stalk to his family in full conceit!
34. Woe to thee, (O men!), yea, woe!
35. Again, Woe to thee, (O men!), yea, woe!
36. Does man think that he will be left uncontrolled, (without purpose)?
37. Was he not a drop of sperm emitted (in lowly form)?
38. Then did he become a leech-like clot; then did ((Allah)) make and fashion (him) in due proportion.
39. And of him He made two sexes, male and female.
40. Has not He, (the same), the power to give life to the dead?
Quran Chapter: 75
Posted by: Anonymous | December 31, 2006 8:01 PM
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PHILLIP actually if you look again you'll see that it was islamaphobic websites- not the entire western civilization that i referred to-
i really believe that just as i read these opinions expressed here with an open and understanding mind- i will come away with a deeper understanding of the fellow humans i share the planet with-
i am not here to convert anyway or justify my faith or existence-
i think its indelicate to make statements that are critical at best - prejudiced at worst- but ive noticed that atheists and christians seem to have found a level of agreement on their distaste of islam- my humble advice is to do what i did-
research with an open non judgemental heart and without trying to make preconceived notions garnered from (fox news)?
i try to see the best intentions in what i read here
i would hope for the same respect in return
TIMMY also with respect if you are open to it-
maybe the cries to Jesus(ata) as a child werent answered-
maybe the honest request of an adult to god would be
only ALLAH knows
yours in peace
Posted by: victoria | December 31, 2006 7:54 PM
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To BRUCE BURLESON:
I wish you could know how encouraged I am to see your faith in action. You have been rational, patient, respectful and unwavering in the midst of condescension and ridicule from some posters. They openly discuss with eachother whether they can 'convert' you, but you keep coming back, and you do it calmly and gracefully. You have even earned the respect of many non-believers on this board.
I was initially concerned as I watched one lone believer handle objections from many non-believers, but you have endured.
Even as they put Him to death, Jesus never gave up trying to show His opponents the Light and the Truth. You are behaving in genuine Christ-like fashion. Thank you for modeling His love so clearly!
Posted by: John M. | December 31, 2006 7:25 PM
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Jeff Reed, thank you for the following contribution in your commentary that is listed above. I spent a good amount of time just reading and studying the info on each of these links: It was fascinating to me especially the links at the very bottom which linked me up with two important elements pertaining to these discussions with Sam: 1) a list of negative remarks which have great influence on our behavior and the way we think; and 2) attribution theory showing how important it is in communicating in a way that gives others internal attributions that change their behavior much better than external attributions seem to do. I was very pleased to learn of another source where Marshall Rosenberg has spread his Nonviolent Compassionate Communication to. One of his greatest aids has been making a list of all these negative remarks or statements we have all either used or have been used to hearing. It really helps to be made conscious of these so that we can better focus or channel our thoughts another way. I can't think of a better way to spread more peace, joy, love, and kindness.
http://www.noogenesis.com/pineappleblind_men_elephant.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blind_Men_and_an_Elephant
[This poem story fits this forum so perfectly. It certainly has a deep message here and says almost the same thing I mentioned in my previous commentary, i.e. "Everyone is Right, Nobody is Wrong" so what are we all fussing about. Are we having fun yet? Don't let a day go by where you haven't laughed and loved in your sharing with others! If this Blind Men and an Elephant has lasted so long and reached into so many different philosophies and religions, it shows strong evidence for how mankind down through the ages are all connected, in oneness of that great consciousness of immensity. We are all an expression of that oneness in our own objective individuation of it in this physical plane of existence.]
"So oft in theologic wars,
The disputants, I ween,
Rail on in utter ignorance
Of what each other mean,
And prate about an Elephant
Not one of them has seen!"
"... a spiritual statement of principles that J. Michael Straczynski, an atheist, wrote as part of the Babylon 5 TV series a few years ago. I don't think it very important if an atheist uses the word 'universe' and I use the word 'God'. It's still a true statement."
[Amen or Aum, Om, to this. I totally agree with you, Jeff on this.]
Posted by: Lynne | December 31, 2006 7:25 PM
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Bruce,
One need not try hard to disbelieve an absurd notion.
It is you, who must bend and twist everything we know about reality into a pretzle in order to justify belief in such a tall tale.
If someone tells me there's a flying spagetti monster.
I don't have to try hard to not believe them.
Not believing is as easy as breathing.
Believing is what is truly a momumental task.
And you've done it.
Congratulations!
I ask you again, why would Jesus not talk to me when I was an innocent 11 year old boy looking for him?
Because there's no one there, that's why.
If there ever was such a man, he died 2000 years ago and hasn't been heard from since.
Posted by: timmy | December 31, 2006 6:44 PM
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Linda said this:
" We don't have any evidence that the events described actually happened. We don't have any proof that characters in the stories actually said what they are quoted to have said."
This brings to mind the whole Shroud of Turin drama some years ago. You'll recall the Church resisted and then finally allowed a snippet to be tested.
There was great anticipation among the faithful that finally Proof would be found, and the glory of Jesus would be confirmed. Alas, it turned out to be a forgery dating to, I can't recall exactly, but the 16th century or so.
The point is that IF some scientific proof emerged confirming Jesus' existence (let alone the miracles) believers would be high-fiving and praising science at the top of their lungs. They'd be BIG believers of science.
It's really funny, when you think about it. They have only wishful thinking.
Posted by: RB | December 31, 2006 5:48 PM
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Hi everyone- Look at the effect Sam Harris has had on so many people! This dialogue is great. One of the problems here, however, is the number of arguements using quotations from the Bible. While that is a good way to point out to Christians (and Jews) the many errors of the writings, etc., the basic fact is that the whole book is mythology. We don't have any evidence that the events described actually happened. We don't have any proof that characters in the stories actually said what they are quoted to have said. So we are arguing sometimes about non-existent stories and unrecorded conversations. It is most likely that Jesus is a cobbled together conglomoration of pagan god fables. The claims by the Old Testament writers that the Jews had such major effects on the history of that region just doesn't show up in historical writings. The big danger here is that we have always had and still have those who are willing to kill others over mythologies. That's one of Sam Harris's main points. Oh, and one other thing. If a man named Jesus really existed, walked the earth and did and said the things attributed to him, he wasn't very nice to his mother!
Posted by: Linda Joy | December 31, 2006 4:03 PM
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Bruce:
You sometimes answer my questions at least partly and sometimes you don't. Let me at least try to answer your questions
"I conclude my Sunday sermon with a question for you. Why would you not want the resurrection to be true?"
I suppose the correct riposte is:
Why are you so anxious to believe it is true?
As I have pointed out to you before, if you grew beyond your religious fixations the world would not collapse around you and you would carry on much as you do now without the unnecessary burden of a misplaced faith.
The actual answer to your question for me is that I neither want nor do not want the resurrection story to be true. I used to believe it was true but came to recognize that it could not possibly be true as I have already explained at some length.
It might perhaps be helpful to add that even if the Jesus resurrection story was true what conclusions are we supposed to draw from it?
That we have no hope of being resurrected ourselves? -- given that most of us will be cremated or rotted away in our graves without any transmogrification into a spiritual being of some kind. Let me come right to the point. Surely rising from the dead -- if it is for real -- does not require a vanishing corpse. So why would God the Father engage in unnecessary theatrics which simply confuses rather than clarifies the notion of life after death.
"When you look at the evidence for it that does exist, do you approach it with the sole purpose of deconstructing and destroying it, or do you approach it objectively, with an open mind, seeking to deterimine if the story of Jesus is the truth?"
Once again I find it difficult to grapple with the question as phrased. I never really approached the story (evidence seems too strong for me) with any preconceived ideas and certainly not with a view to "deconstructing and destroying it". I simply came, after the passage of time, to regard the supposed evidence as a chimera.
"If it is true, why would anyone not want to accept it, and the hope it offers for eternal life? I challenge you to go look at it again, with a sympathetic reading of the text, giving it the benefit of the doubt. Momentarily set aside all the crimes and injustices that the church and Christians have committed over the last 2000 years, and just look at the story of Jesus one more time."
I have done what you suggest many times and all it does is confirm my conviction that the story is irredeemably flawed.
I have tried really hard to put myself in your shoes and, in trying to do so, I am reminded that the Christian religion is not just the resurrection story but all the other bits and pieces of the whole story including the ridiculous fabrication about the fall from grace by Adam and Eve -- without which the mythology surrounding Jesus becomes meaningless (as in Adam all die so in Christ shall al be made alive). If you accept the WHOLE story it makes some kind of sense in a mythological world. But once you come to question various of the bits and pieces of the story -- as not belonging to the real world -- the whole structure collapses. So trying valiantly to focus on and salvage the resurrection story is doomed to failure.
Sorry if what I say sounds rough but I really do hope that one day you will not view it as such.
Posted by: Ted Swart | December 31, 2006 2:52 PM
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Should have read Philip's thoughts before offering my own! Having read them, though, I heartily endorse them.
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | December 31, 2006 2:39 PM
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Should have read Philip's thoughts before offering my own! Having read them, though, I heartily endorse them.
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | December 31, 2006 2:39 PM
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Well. Bruce, I think you've proved one thing to us: it's damn hard to influence non-rational commitment by means of rational discourse.
I'd like to ask you this:
If there is an inner spiritual presence that gives your life meaning and you want to call that presence Jesus, fantastic. I have no problem with that at all. It's true for you because you feel it's true, and if that makes you happy, well and good. But could you at least consider the possiblity - the hypothesis, if you like - that the phenomenon is not as dependent on the label (the belief structure attached to it) as you think?
The psychologist Abraham Maslow called what you have talked about 'Peak Experience'. He showed that it is something common to people across all belief systems, including religious and non-religious ones, and that it shares essentially the same features: an increased sense of joy and love, meaning and gratitude, humbleness in the presence of something vastly greater, and so on.
This experience, so personal and so transformative, may be associated with a belief structure but, as Maslow shows, it is not not necessarily contingent on any belief. It is the experience itself which is in fact primary, and beliefs emerge out of it. The monotheistic religions do not accept this. They have adopted the 'chosen people' mindset, which is what makes them, unfortunately, so intolerant, particularly of each other.
The only way adherents of these faiths can co-operate is if they put their beliefs to one side as being of less importance than the need to co-operate. This makes them, to my mind, at best, secondary to the deep human impulses of love, joy and generosity described in Maslow, and, at worst, inimical to the future survival of human beings themselves, as pointed out by Harris.
Please consider the possibility that the label you have attached to your experience is an inherited construct. Because you see it as unquestionable you use your well-equipped brain to argue in favour of it, whereas you could equally well use the same brain to argue that it is valid in any context!
If you say that you have to have Jesus in order to have the experience, it means that what you are really attached to is the label, not the experience. There is plenty of evidence to show that there are numerous ways of accessing your experience without attaching any label at all. A lot more evidence, at any rate, than that afforded for a uniquely incredible event by five writers none of whom even offers any direct personal account.
Best wishes
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | December 31, 2006 2:34 PM
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Bruce, I suspect that like me, you have about thiry or forty years experience on this planet longer than some of the individuals that are engaging you. While you and I are on opposite ends of the spiritual spectrum, as far as what we believe, your comments this morning at 9:06am were wonderful.
Clearly, your words represent someone who has found peace within himself after a long journey. I would guess that anonymous is much younger, and in pursuing his passion, has missed the bigger picture of your comment.
To me, you just put your soul on the table for all of us to see, and you very succinctly summarized a spiritual lifetime journey into 3 or 4 paragraphs. I have friends that are as devout as you and I respect all of them because their belief comes from a very deep internal peace. They talk the talk and walk the walk of Christianity. You are in the same place and I admire your openness, especially in this den of lions.
The message that I want to impart to you is my journey has also been a long one and I have the same peace as you without any God, Son of God or religious scripture.
Most religious people have some how come to the conclusion that atheists are cold, dead inside and/or are lacking in passion. What they should consider is that very few of us were raised in atheist families. Most people grow up with some kind of religious training. By the time we have become atheists we have had a good look at what's out there. We feel all of the same religious passions as you do, we simply reject all organized religion.
I would never try to compare the relative intensity of our experience but I will say that my beliefs answer all of my questions and I feel at peace. That is my religion.
My journey has also been a long one and I have made attempts to discover God and Jesus as well as many other faiths. The problem was that when I called, no one was home. If God wants me, he knows my address. I hope that you can connect with this idea.
I am open to anything, even today. Nothing I have experienced, that is earth based, is acceptable. It would be so easy if there was a God to explain everything. It just doesn't work for me.
It has been said many times before, but atheists are not anti-religious per se. It's just that they recognize the inherent defects in all religions and subsequently reject all of them.
A true atheist however knows that he doesn't know. That may be contradictory, but it is part of why we experience such awe and wonder when contemplating the possibilies that lie at the truth. To me the real truth is indeed far beyond anything that our feeble minds are capable of understanding. We perceive ourselves as such monuments to intelligience but I don't think we really have a clue as to the real truth.
For Victoria, I read an english translation of the Koran about 25 years ago while on a six month tour of Europe and the Middle East. After reading the Koran, I concluded that like the Bible, it was written by a primitive nomadic people who had little understanding of the world as we know it today.
Their attitude towards women, conquered people and those that don't follow their word of God was disturbing compared to the attitudes and knowledge of today. I think the reason that "Islamphobia", as you call it exists, is because a small group of radicals have morphed the words in the Koran into a mission against the infidels which right now happens to be the west. In a decade it might be the Chinese.
Any group, regardless of their political or religious slant, that flies planes into buildings and blow themselves up to annihilate innocent people, is going to create a Phobia in the minds of the all peace loving humans. Remember that Moslems, Jews, Christians, Buddhists and Hindus all died in those attacks. How do they justify their act when they undoubtedly killed devout Muslims? Collateral damage? Where do they draw the line then? You should consider that question and not wonder why the west is "Islamaphobic"
Intellectually, the educated majority on this planet recognizes that the same passion and peace that Bruce Burleson experiences with his relationship with Christ and a Moslem's relationship with Allah, are all the same emotion. They are just different paths to the same place. We recognize that it is only a very small and radical group that call themselves Mulims that are causing all the problems. I assume that you are not one of them.
Since Islam is the religion of the radicals that brought down the World Trade Center and continue to blow themselves up all over the world, it is unlikely that we are going to be afraid of any other religion.
When Buddhist monks start strapping bombs to their selves and blow up shopping centers and kill innocent women and children, then the world will become Buddahphobic. Until that unlikely event happens, it's safe to say that Islam will be the world's primary candidate for a religion that promotes violence against innocent people.
Posted by: Philip Tripp | December 31, 2006 2:30 PM
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Tonio:
"On this site, I have read posts by some atheists who call believers stupid and ignorant. I condemn such language as not only inexcusably rude, but also counterproductive to rational dialogue. "
I haven't used the word stupid, but I have used ignorant, and I meant it.
Stupid means lacking intelligence or common sense; dazed and unable to think clearly.
Based on that, I would not object to someone describing someone else in a metaphysical fog as being stupid. It seems accurate.
Ignorant means lacking knowledge or awareness in general. George Bush was ignorant about the pandora's box that was Iraq, and willfully ignored tens of millions of people who protested, warning him not to pry open the lid.
57 million voters followed his lead. Stupid? Ignorant? Or both?
The use of these words may stop conversation with the stupid or the ignorant, but they pose no problem for the rest of us.
Posted by: RB | December 31, 2006 2:01 PM
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I am always somewhat amused, and perhaps a little amazed at other people's willingness to try to engage around the tenants of a religious belief system. Those kind of beliefs are delusions and as such do not really respond to logical argument. Just try to talk a person with schizophrenia out of her/his delusion. I do think it's important to keep in mind that during the time that Christian ideas were being created, people had little understanding of basic scientific principles. Therefore what people may have thought of as resurrection could just as well have been a person coming out of a coma. And someone walking again after being unable to could just as well have been someone recovering from hysterical paralysis, which has no underlying physical cause. When we want to see a miracle we often will because our minds are made that way. But wishful thinking doesn't make it true, it just reveals something about the person doing the wishing. Those who hold on to the belief that there's a paternal entity watching over us and giving us the chance for immortality are those who are too scared of facing our own limitations and perhaps feeling uncertain of their own abilities to make it in this world. It's kind of pathetic and childlike if you ask me.
Posted by: Anonymous | December 31, 2006 1:49 PM
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Bruce:
"A personal experience of Mohammed riding a horse to heaven is not part of the Islamic experience."
I can't figure out if this statement is simply chauvenistic, condescending or just an expression of a state of denial.
Of course it is part of the Islamic experience! It is what they believe happened to their prophet, and there is no difference at all between that myth about the end of Mohammad's life on earth and the myth you are selling.
I had the fortunate experience of living two years in a Muslim country, Turkey. Not a tourist visit, but daily living among the people of a country that is 96% Islamic. They live and breathe this stuff, Bruce, just as you do. You may feel your religion is superior to theirs, but rest assured they feel exactly the same.
The eyewitness accounts of his ascendancy to heaven on a winged horse is the "proof" used to validate their belief that Allah had chosen Mohammad as his prophet, spokesman, charlatan, whatever, to deliver His word to the world.
There are Muslims who choose a non-literal interpretation of the Koran -- mainly because they are trying to square their faith with modernity -- but far more who take it just as it's written, as you do with selected portions of the NT.
"Christianity is, at its root, a personal faith in Jesus."
Call it what you will, but it sounds delusional, and no different than other supernaturalists' delusions.
One final point: someone like Bruce and a devote Muslim would find it nearly impossible to have a reasonable conversation about anything, if they could even speak to each other.
It is interesting that after nearly four years -- and having vanquished his main enemy, Saddam -- grand ayatollah Sistani still refuses to meet with any U.S. official. He doesn't talk to infidels. He doesn't get his hands dirty. He doesn't sit with swine, which is what devote Muslims think of non-Muslims.
Oh it IS a personal faith, Bruce, very personal.
Posted by: RB | December 31, 2006 1:41 PM
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Heaven is only a state of mind. It is no place,"no where" but
"now here"! Dwell on that thought awhile and be amazed what a powerful thought that can be. Wherever we are, whatever we are, we can be in "heaven" (that heavenly state of mind) now.
Posted by: Lynne | December 31, 2006 1:32 PM
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Victoria,
Unlike most non believers I have read the Koran. It wasn't easy. It's very long and you have to read a lot off the sentences twice because of the ancient language. But I had to do it for research so I did.
But others don't have to read the whole thing. One only needs to read the first chapter of the Koran to understand what this religion is all about and where it is coming from.
It very clearly states that god has a special place for those who fight in his name. A much more special place than he has for those who sit at home and do not put their lives on the line for him. It advocates not just killing but absolute terror in the name of god.
Islam is not currently a religion of peace.
Islam will be a religion of peace when, and only when, everyone on the planet submits to the rule of Islam. Then there wil be peace, beneath the shadow of swords. Beautiful, theocratically enforced peace.
If Hitler had succeeded in taking over the entire world, there would then have been peace and order to our world also.
One big happy, orderly Reich.
I have read the Koran Victoria, and it is the moderate muslims of today who are misreading the Koran, not the extremists.
If you go beyond the Koran and read Mohamad's biography, you will see that Mohamad was indeed a terrorist and every bit the meglomaniac psycopath that Hitler was.
No doubt there are people who calll themselves muslims who are peacefull happy people who would never harm a fly.
These people are as ignorant of the intention of their holy book as are Jews and Christians ignorant of the evil intentions of those who wrote the Old Testament.
Posted by: timmy | December 31, 2006 1:26 PM
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I’m sorry that this post has to be so long, but one Sunday sermon needs detailed attention.
Bruce Burleson wrote: “I conclude my Sunday sermon with a question for you. Why would you not want the resurrection to be true? When you look at the evidence for it that does exist, do you approach it with the sole purpose of deconstructing and destroying it, or do you approach it objectively, with an open mind, seeking to determine if the story of Jesus is the truth? If it is true, why would anyone not want to accept it, and the hope it offers for eternal life? I challenge you to go look at it again, with a sympathetic reading of the text, giving it the benefit of the doubt. Momentarily set aside all the crimes and injustices that the church and Christians have committed over the last 2000 years, and just look at the story of Jesus one more time.” I shall perform a little dissection here.
This quote clearly demonstrates most of the problems with Bruce’s analysis of the alleged resurrection of Jesus, as I will try to lay out. He asks “Why would you not want the resurrection to be true?” Here he assumes that I (and perhaps others who have been disagreeing with him) do not want the resurrection to be true and possibly that my (our) not wanting it to be true is the reason I (we) don’t believe it to be true. (I think I’ll speak only for myself, and not for the other dissenters from Bruce.) If he assumes either of these about me, then he is incorrect on both counts. I want the resurrection to be true! I may be going out on a limb here, but I will speculate that many, if not most, of the people who know about the alleged resurrection of Jesus but disbelieve it nevertheless want it to be true. But that is not the point! Wanting or wishing can not be one’s guide for assessing the truth value of a claim. Neither my moderate wanting to believe that Jesus’ alleged resurrection is true nor Bruce’s strong wanting to believe the same has anything to do, or should have anything to do, with the actual truth of the claim or a rational assessment of the claim. Wanting or not wanting doesn’t make anything true or false! But wishing does have a lot to do with belief. Where Bruce has apparently gone astray is that he has substituted wanting or wishful thinking for rational criteria in formulating or maintaining his beliefs, especially his belief in the alleged resurrection of Jesus.
Bruce asks “When you look at the evidence for it [the resurrection] that does exist, do you approach it with the sole purpose of deconstructing and destroying it, or do you approach it objectively, with an open mind, seeking to determine if the story of Jesus is the truth?” The problem here is that Bruce does not practice what he preaches. He does not approach the alleged resurrection objectively, with an open mind, seeking to determine truth. He approaches it, instead, subjectively, with a closed or nearly closed mind, seeking to believe what he LIKES to believe. He strongly WANTS to believe that he can or will have an afterlife, and thus the alleged resurrection of Jesus is so attractive to him because he thinks “If it can happen to Jesus, then it can happen to me.” This is the foundation of his belief, just as it is the foundation for nearly all Christians.
Bruce says “If it is true, why would anyone not want to accept it, and the hope it offers for eternal life?” On the surface that seems to be a pretty good question, but the question itself once again shows that “the tail is wagging the dog”. It implies that if one wants to believe something strongly enough, he might as well go ahead and believe it. But this is not the way to conduct a search for the truth. Over the course of history humans have developed a set of methods, skills, attitudes, and rules for seeking the truth which actually work, and in fact, work better than anything else yet tried. This is called “Rational Thinking”. I suspect that Bruce is aware of this development, but he seems to have abandoned this mode of investigation because it is more fun or provides more “hope” to believe what he wants to believe.
Bruce says “I challenge you to go look at it again, with a sympathetic reading of the text, giving it the benefit of the doubt.” Instead I challenge Bruce and others to go look at it again, with a careful and critical reading of the text, giving it NO benefit of the doubt. Treat the claims embedded in the Gospels as you would any other extraordinary claims, WITH SKEPTICISM.
Finally, Bruce advises us “Momentarily set aside all the crimes and injustices that the church and Christians have committed over the last 2000 years, and just look at the story of Jesus one more time.” Yes, I agree, we should do this. But, I suggest that Bruce set aside his wants, desires, and wishful thinking, and look at the story of Jesus one more time, actually several more times, and use a dose of rational thinking in examining it, especially the part about the alleged resurrection.
As I have said in my previous posts, we must begin with the fact that “billions and billions” (remember Carl Sagan’s voice when you read that) people have died and remained dead. I dare say that there has not been a single well documented case of an actual resurrection in the history of mankind. Next we must add the accumulated knowledge of human physiology and biology (the way the body works, the way humans live and die) gleaned over the past millenia, especially during the last three hundred years. From these two bodies of evidence, it is proper to conclude that it is extremely unlikely that a resurrection has ever occurred. I won’t use the word “impossible”, but we are quite justified in having a clear-cut presumption that resurrections are (at the least) EXTREMELY UNLIKELY before we even consider any individual’s case such as the case of Jesus.
At this point we must remember Sagan’s wise suggestion “Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.” The claim that Jesus rose from the dead is an extraordinary claim; it basically goes far against all our accumulated knowledge. So, we are justified in requiring extraordinary evidence before we should believe that it is true. Basically, Bruce has only four descriptions of a series of events (from the four Gospels) to offer as his evidence that the alleged resurrection of Jesus is true. So does this constitute extraordinarily good evidence? My answer is “not by a long shot!” It isn’t even close.
It would be wise for Bruce and other Christians who think similarly to him to engage in a little thought experiment similar to this: Suppose someone made the claim to you that 500 years ago a man named “John” flew (unassisted by any device) 50 feet in the air from point A to point B, 100 yards apart. (Wow! That would be something, wouldn’t it?) This, like an alleged resurrection, goes totally against our accumulated scientific knowledge of the world, and we would be warranted from the outset to think that it was highly unlikely. What quantity and quality of evidence about John and his alleged feat would you require or should you require (or should anyone require), in order to set aside the initial warranted presumption and conclude instead that John’s flight actually occurred? Think about that.
What kinds of qualities in an author of a description of events or in the description itself should we regard as valuable in judging whether the description of events is an accurate rendition of something which actually happened? Allow me to list a few of the important ones:
1. Identified author.
2. Author with history of telling the truth.
3. Author available for interview.
4. Publically sworn testimony.
5. Signed testimony.
6. First-hand or eyewitness report.
7. Description written in the first-person mode.
8. Eyewitness in good observational position.
9. Good conditions for observation.
10. Competent or trained eyewitness.
11. Eyewitness not a child.
12. Eyewitness with acute senses and in good health.
13. Use of at least sight and hearing (possibly also touch, smell, or taste) in observation.
14. Eyewitness free of mind altering substances.
15. Eyewitness free of unusual psychological states.
16. Report free of internal contradictions.
17. Report free of jargon or obtuse language.
19. Report clear in distinguishing observation from inference.
20. High incentive to tell truth and low incentive to lie.
21. Low degree of prejudice or bias.
22. Report written very soon after observation.
23. Notes or memory aids used.
24. Supporting physical evidence.
When we have multiple descriptions of the same set of alleged events, what kinds of qualities for the set of descriptions should we regard as valuable in judging whether the descriptions of events are accurate renditions of something which actually happened? Allow me to list a few of the important ones:
1. A large number of reports.
2. Agreement on major details.
3. Disagreement on minor details.
4. No contradictions.
5. Independence or lack of collusion.
When one considers the presence or absence of these qualities in reference to the four descriptions of the series of events involving the crucifixion of Jesus (from the four Gospels), as I and many others have done, one will conclude that almost all of the qualities are missing or can not be determined. Therefore, the low quantity and quality of the evidence for the alleged resurrection of Jesus hardly warrants the belief that a resurrection actually occurred. When one thinks rationally about the question, one will conclude (must conclude) that it is extremely unlikely that Jesus rose from the dead and one ought not believe that he did. (I will go one step further and assert that it is intellectually dishonest to think that Jesus did rise from the dead.) But why do Bruce and others continue to believe that a resurrection of Jesus actually occurred? Bruce clearly implies the reason in his last post– he WANTS to believe it, it gives him HOPE that he can defeat death. It has nothing to do with taking an objective look at the evidence, as he prods us to take, but it has everything to do with what he WISHES TO BE TRUE.
In an earlier post, Bruce said “This does not detract from the fact that the early Christians clearly believed and stated as a fact that Jesus had been resurrected. If they are correct (and no one has proved that they were not), then my internal filter of faith is not a delusion, but an accurate lense through which I can experience a reality beyond this one.” Many people believe things to be true that are not true. Many people state things as fact when they are not fact. Saying that something is true doesn’t make it true. Claims, especially extraordinary ones, must be carefully investigated by rational means. Bruce makes at least three errors: 1) As a default, he assumes that what people say is true. 2) He modulates the strength of his belief in what people say based on how much he WISHES what they say were true. And 3) He assumes that the burden of proof is on others to show that his claims, or those of the Gospel writers, are false, rather than on him to show that those claims are true.
As a final comment I would like to expand on Bruce’s analogy to the O. J. Simpson trial. If he were a juror in the trial, and if he assessed the question of whether Simpson committed murder in the same way that he has assessed whether Jesus rose from the dead, Bruce would disregard the evidence presented by the attorneys or would not look at the evidence with rational criteria, but would instead make up his mind of the basis of his SUBJECTIVE feelings. Bruce might decide Simpson’s guilt on the basis of Simpson’s race, celebrity, or religion. Bruce’s WISHES, WANTS, or DESIRES would rule the day, not the evidence. I certainly hope that in real life Bruce would not make his decision in this way if he were on a jury; indeed I suspect he would not! But, just as most Christians (and other religious people as well) COMPARTMENTALIZE their minds, so does Bruce. In some areas he primarily uses rational thinking, but in other areas he primarily uses wishful thinking.
In conclusion, there are NO GOOD REASONS AT ALL for believing that Jesus rose from the dead and it is intellectually dishonest for people to hold such a belief. But, unfortunately, believing is often motivated by wishful thinking rather than seeking the truth by the best available means.
Posted by: Skeptic in Tallahassee | December 31, 2006 1:21 PM
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Everybody is right, nobody is wrong! Whatever one chooses to believe and really believe is true for them. The following account I posted in another one of Sam's debates is really true for me:
We are all God! One spirit=all minds and bodies together
The evidence for Who We Are is well-documented already by quantum physicists at Harvard University. When one prays, meditates, or asks whatever higher source energy you individually choose to believe in, one is really talking to oneself. It leaves one feeling so powerful, centered and calm.
There are two great movies out in theatres now I highly recommend: Conversations with God (adapted from Neale Donald Walsh's book series and The Secret (a documentary about the power of affirmations).
Whatever one believes or affirms for him/herself, one gets sooner or later. I have been so astounded how true this is as I have been practicing staying positive. My life has changed. I am feeling so wonderful physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually.
It is true for me whatever I feel is right for me. I never want to ever focus on anything of a critical nature that is negative and takes us way out of perspective or out of balance. Trying to use words to describe things you feel deep within one's conscious, subconscious, and superconscious levels always gets things out of proper perspective. Tuning into the feeling of beauty and harmony of everything working together always feels right to me.
"The beauty of everything spreads out before me in my view,
As an awe-inspiring sight!
The feeling of complete serenity flows in my veins,
And soothes every part that feels tight!"
(an excerpt of a poem I wrote this year)
I wrote a collection of poems on pdf format entitled Everyone's Right, Nobody's Wrong! That really says it for me. It makes no sense to keep arguing about who's right and who's wrong for we always have to use words to do so. When it comes to the subject of God and religion, I truly believe we cannot mesh with words. It cannot be expressed verbally. It has to be felt in your own individual way. I believe we are all an individuation of this consciousness called "God". When we "die", ("death" is only what we call a process of change from the physicality to the spiritual realm) we go from that individuation of multiple roles of expression we each are playing out, to the singularity of spirit or Oneness in the core with God-Consciousness. This is only temporary because we are all living eternal and are all complete as we are in Essence. I have come to believe for myself in our eternal life starting now (not waiting to have it in the Afterlife) our purpose is something we freely choose for ourselves and can create our own future by our own thinking. We are always evolving to become greater, life never stays stationary in one place which is why I can see one would never want to stay in "heaven" all the time because there is so much to learn, so many things to explore and keep on expanding. When we choose to exist in the physical, we are not aware of this singularity consciousness because the physical expression is of a different kind of vibrational frequency. We can only create first by thought, then by word and deed. Thoughts or ideas become things. The process is alot slower. We are all in evidence of that. Anything invented or made was by thought first before the physical action took place to make it. We are here to make the most of our life, to be the best that we can be and have experiences in this physical plane that we all have created together by thought. When we live in the spiritual realm, it is different because we find all creations are instantaneous as we think, it is done at the same time. Communities in that spiritual realm are created by everyone's thought-forms together. You attract the environment you want to live in according to your own thoughts. It's the Law of Attraction.
This is all being proven now through quantum physics. Life is so phenomenal. Life is to be enjoyed fully by all people no matter what race, creed or nationality they are. Life does not discriminate against anyone or anything.
It's there and it works whether you are aware of it or not!
Try it out and see!
Posted by: Lynne | December 31, 2006 1:18 PM
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Bruce:
I guess it's over. No one can argue with you if you say you talk to Jesus in your head. You win.
But the concllusion is disturbing to me as it should be to you. The conclusion is that Jesus doesn't love me. Because I tried to talk to him several times myself when I was a young boy and again when I was a young man. I prayed for Jesus to enter my heart and become my personal saviour. When I was 10 I did this with all sincerity and again when I was 14............. Still waiting for an answer, or a sign, or something...... Anything.......................................... nothing.......................................still nothing............ Jesus?..........................Hello?...................................
Jesus doesn't love me. But he clearly loves you Bruce.
Next time you are talking to him, can you ask him why he didn't answer my prayers when I came to him in my time of need?
Posted by: timmy | December 31, 2006 1:08 PM
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Laurel:
You were too polite to mention my name re: the error of fact I posted regarding the witches of Salem. They were indeed placed under heavy stones, or hanged, and not burned as I stated.
The practice of burning witches -- or cutting off their heads and other vile actions -- was a European Christian practice.
Thank you for the correction.
Of course this does not diminish the point that many acts of savagery have been conducted in the name of Jesus, nor that Christianity is a religion with a peaceful benign history and intent, as some believe.
Posted by: RB | December 31, 2006 12:55 PM
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BTW, within the psychological field many people have had a "personal experience" have come to understand that the power of the brain to create illusions and delusions is very strong, to the extreme of hallucinations. This experience can also be induced by a slew of drugs in our society.
As Dawkins has stated, the brain is very powerful and capable of creating much in the way of delusion and making things up. When you think you're looking out at the world, the brain is simulating the scene you're looking at and placing everything in its category for assimilation – pictures, sounds, etc, all easily explained scientifically about how it works, not here in the world of sound bite blogging.
The brain is quite capable of creating much in itself in terms of illusion, both visual and auditory, much has been researched about the brain where a simulated exercise creates the same brain patterns as those experienced when the 'real' example happens before your eyes.
Simple example hopefully is one of crossing the desert. It may appear that water is just on the horizon, the brain may think water is just ahead but upon reaching the spot one realizes it does not exist. Again, science can easily explain this illusion/delusion and has over time.
I can only end this missive by stating as Dawkins has on many occasions, I suggest you pick up a book about Evolution, even perhaps several of Richard’s books and Sam’s books, and learn something about it. If you’re response is for me to read the bible, I have, many times have I studied it during my schooling, there’s no need for it beyond the understanding that it is merely a part of history and nothing more.
Posted by: Anonymous | December 31, 2006 12:52 PM
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Bruce you have not, as you have stated, presented any evidence that supports your theory other than your personal experience of which cannot be considered within the realm of understanding the evidentiary process of proving that something/someone exists within our history. Your foundation of corresponding with people through email is evidenced by the email itself. I suppose if you throw logic and reason out the window, as you do with your jesus factor, you might think it’s coming from another computer that isn’t human. None of the other aspects of arguments matter, as they are mere distractions to the subject at hand: did jesus rise from the dead. The evidence proves that no, he did not.
Your arguments are interesting, but in any other situation you would be considered schizophrenic by proclaiming you are having a personal relationship with someone from within and that this person speaks to you. You are given a pass by society at this time in our evolution (that dreaded word that all religion hates)but my hope is that at some point our societal acceptance of behavior would not indulge in the most trivial of conversations such a notion of that which has no basis for evidence other than it's own claim to evidence.
I am most certain though that science continues to discover the wonders of nature and that is something to hang your hat on again and again. The beauty of science is in the ability to continue to change over the millennia as we discover new aspects to research and science knows its fallibility, which is precisely why it continues to discover and uncover to keep the whole assimilation of it all, moving upward and onward.
Religion has been stuck in a time that no longer exists and when it attempts to change with the times it does at it’s own peril since it does nothing but assert its very own contradictions by denouncing precepts for which it deemed unchangeable and irrefutable, much like your own claim.
No intelligent person would consider your question of jesus and such because it’s a losing argument when you attempt to have intellectual conversation with someone who is of the mind set that they could easily be Santa Claus, in your case, your personal relationship from within. At this point in time if it can’t be seen under a microscope chances are there isn’t much to back up the claims. The supernatural, where you’re placing this jesus fellow, does not exist except within the mind, which of course is reason enough to believe that person is diseased at some level of intellect – when it goes too far we medicate him/her in order for them to function appropriately.
Psychology appears to be based on patterns of behavior that have been defined as this or that, but not all people fall into all categories and this is only one reason for it’s shaky foundation; I’m not even sure I would go as far as saying it’s worth pursuing with the exception of diagnosing those who are exhibiting anti-social behavior to the extreme of schizophrenia and other diseases of the mind – again these things can be seen under the microscope, so to speak, which helps to provide evidence of existence.
I think you’ve made your case that reason, logic and the expertise of science cannot disprove jesus’ resurrection as much as it cannot disprove that Isis and Venus are the goddesses of love. But this is hardly the evidence needed to assert such a bizarre claim.
Posted by: Anonymous | December 31, 2006 12:26 PM
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sorry tonio- i meant the beginning of the other post by sam harris here is overtly islamaphobic- not this one- in this one he only opened by suggesting that gods friends are dishonest...
Posted by: victoria | December 31, 2006 9:34 AM
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well tonio- i doubt that mr harris would especially want- well me for instance or a fundamentalist christian in particular- to define him to the world- i noticed immediately from his first 2 statements that he has a personal emotional perspective that he is operating from- actually one ofmy first posts was
how alarmist i found it- i guess even ntelligentsia atheists like all huans have some agenda- honestly i couldnt think of a less friendly representative of islam than mr harris-
while everyone is speaking about being reasonable- looking at facts- weighing things through evidence-
i am amazed at the amount of outright prejudice that is complicitly foreborne here-
so use your own intelligence and go to the source- dont let others think for you- even one with such a big brain as sam harris-
i guess christians and atheists have found an issue they can agree on- islamophobia-
think for yourself tonio!
but you already know that.
thank you for your respectful response
good manners are universal arent they
on very rare occasions even we dim brained believers have been known to mimic the bright brains and give the appearance of good manners...
Posted by: VCITORIA | December 31, 2006 9:32 AM
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Victoria, I admit that my source for the Koran is Harris' "The End of Faith." While Harris has an agenda, at least it's not a Christian one. I add that because most criticisms I hear from Islam come from fundamentalist Christians, who seem to me to have an obvious partisan agenda.
Harris' book offers a long, long list of Koranic quotes that appear to endorse death for non-Muslims. You're exactly right that most Muslims do not believe in such a "deviant and evil and perverse and corrupt idea." The issue is that such ideas are inherent in the scriptures of the various religions, and that some believers use the scriptures to justify the most heinous of atrocities.
I have no agenda against Islam or any specific religion. My only agenda is to defend not my own beliefs, but my right to have my own beliefs in the face of attempt by others to convert me and in the face of threats by others to condemn me to hell.
Posted by: Tonio | December 31, 2006 9:11 AM
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As irrational as religion is, it will never be eliminated as it serves the needs of many people.
Sam's contribution is to open the dialogue.
Hopefully, some day, Athiests will come out of the closet and demand the same respect of their beliefs that religious people demand of theirs.
The net result will be the separation of church and state which has gradually been eroded in this country.
Let's keep our eye on the most important goal.
Posted by: Jan Mashman | December 31, 2006 9:07 AM
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Good Sunday morning to you all. I have read all your comments, and have decided that it is physically impossible for me to respond to them all without appearing to be attempting to draw attention to myself. I will make one post today, and try to bring a few of my thoughts together.
First, you are all good cross-examiners, and have admirably pointed out many weaknesses with faith in general and Christianity in particular. It is useless for me to try to deny those weaknesses. On behalf of all non-believers who have been personally harmed or offended by Christianity, I apologize. On many occasions, believers have behaved badly.
But I am not defending believers, the church, the Moral Majority, TV evangelists, the pope, George Bush or anyone else. I am defending Jesus. I begin with his resurrection, which Christians celebrate weekly in their Sunday gatherings. Either that event occurred or it did not occur. If there are weaknesses in the testimony (which some of you have ably demonstrated), that may undermine the credibility of the witnesses and may even justify you in not accepting their testimony, if you are looking for a reason not to accept it. It does not, however, decide the ultimate issue of whether the event itself happened. The jury may decide that OJ didn't do it - but that doesn't mean that he didn't.
So why do I believe in it, if even I admit that the evidence is not conclusive? You may believe that OJ did it, because you have seen OJ. You see how he acts, his demeanor, etc. This convinces you that he did it, even though he has been judicially acquited. It is your personal experience with OJ that seals it for you. Maybe the OJ analogy is not good for all of you, because you may sincerely believe that he didn't do it. In any event, you make your decision based upon your personal observation of OJ.
My ultimate decision that Jesus rose from the dead is based upon what I personally perceive to be my encounter with him within myself. I perceive that I am communing with and communicating with him specifically on another level within my "spirit." I have communicated with some of you by e-mail. I have never seen you, and don't even know some of your names. But I perceive that I am dealing with human beings through cyberspace, and I perceive that you are alive and intelligent. I may be mistaken - you may all be computers - but I don't think so. This form of communication was not possible 20 years ago, but now it is. We communicate on another level. It would have been difficult to explain this type of communication 20 years ago, or even to have conceived of it for some of us who are non-technical. Yet, here it is, and here we are communicating.
So it is with my communion with Jesus. I get the distinct impression that I am dealing with a person, and my life makes sense because of it. I commune with him, experience the divine, understand things about my life, and have a hope and peace that I have not been able to achieve elsewhere. Is this wishful thinking, or am I simply filtering a psychological phenomenon through the filter of religious bias? Perhaps, but I don't think so. I am morally obligated to objectively analyze my experience and not to be caught up in emotionalism. I believe I do that, and you have actually helped me in that process - you have given me some additional tools with which to refine my thinking on this subject. Thank you.
I understand Pam's response to God. All I can say is that I begin my journey with Jesus. If he is the son of God, then all my interpretation of the OT has to be filtered through him. He is the perfect revelation and manifestation of my God, and I do love and worship him. Where you end up usually depends on where you start, to paraphrase Everlast. Start with Jesus, and you end up in a different place.
Christianity is, at its root, a personal faith in Jesus. A Muslim cannot say that he has a personal relationship with Mohammed in the same way a Christian has a relationship with Jesus, as Mohammed does not claim to be the son of God. A personal experience of Mohammed riding a horse to heaven is not part of the Islamic experience. A personal experience of the resurrected Christ is an integral part of the Christian experience. This is a fundamental distinction between the two faiths. Judaism does not include such a personal experience, nor does Buddhism, which in most forms does not even include a belief in a god. Hiduism can involve personal devotion to gods, but the historical existence of some of those alleged incarnations is so shrouded in myth (such as the alleged life of Krishna) that they can't even agree on where to fit them historically. While some of you don't believe Jesus existed as a person, at least I can place him at a definite time, geographical location and culturual experience. These are some of the reasons I believe Christianity is superior to other faiths. I will not bore you with other reasons. Suffice it to say that, as I have argued from the beginning, there is some objective evidence of the resurrection, and my subjective experience, which I have and will continue to analyze, confirms that evidence in me personally, creating the phenomenon that is referred to as "faith." That is the foundation of my religious experience.
I conclude my Sunday sermon with a question for you. Why would you not want the resurrection to be true? When you look at the evidence for it that does exist, do you approach it with the sole purpose of deconstructing and destroying it, or do you approach it objectively, with an open mind, seeking to deterimine if the story of Jesus is the truth? If it is true, why would anyone not want to accept it, and the hope it offers for eternal life? I challenge you to go look at it again, with a sympathetic reading of the text, giving it the benefit of the doubt. Momentarily set aside all the crimes and injustices that the church and Christians have committed over the last 2000 years, and just look at the story of Jesus one more time.
Have a Happy New Year. I'll check your comments tomorrow.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 31, 2006 9:06 AM
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tonio- dont listen to others- just read the book and come from a position of knowledge-
dont let others wrongly interpert for you
do it yourself
i really hope you are not suggesting such an abhorrent perception that muslims believe such a deviant and evil and perverse and corrupt idea
i cant speak for everyone- only myself
because this is not true at all - what a disgusting and bizarre idea- then you can find it admirable because it is-
please- i refrain at all times from even the mildest rebukes to anyone regardless of faith or lack thereof-
that is such a deeply insulting and baseless accusation
it is not ok to make statements like that
the frame of your statement on war on unbelievers is an islamophobic term ive learned to recognize
please nderstand that hate and slander and prejudice are ugly from any mouth- i would question my sources that have misled you-
i feel like i spend so much energy on deflecting the hate language that i see on so many pseudo-islamic front sites - sadly so many times when i google something myself i end up unknowingly in these sneaky sites as i watch the reasoning turn ugly and strange then i recognize it is a fake site intended to mislead
just read the quran yourself if youre inclined
dont let the fear ridden alarmists put words in your mouth
peace
Posted by: victoria | December 31, 2006 8:46 AM
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"But I do know of many moderate believers who have been converted, not to atheism, but to a new personal spirituality. One with an allegorical appreciation for the teachings of Jesus."
Timmy, thanks for your praise. The theme behind all my posts on this site is the importance of personal spirituality, as opposed to group dogma. Now, some people may find their own spiritual meanings from particular dogmas, and I fully support that. I'm saying that it should be a bottom-up process, not a top-down process. When an organization tells people what to believe, it has nothing to do with personal spirituality and everything to do with the organization's needs.
Victoria, I would find the Hajj a very admirable endeavor if it weren't for Islam's teachings about war on unbelievers. Similarly, I would find the born-again phenomenon very admirable if it weren't for Christianity's teachings about eternal damnation for unbelievers. Why can't believers "come away stronger in faith" and "more resolved to be better human beings" without regarding others as evil and worthless and deserving of death?
Posted by: Tonio | December 31, 2006 8:19 AM
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PS i wish it was me
insha'alla one day...
Posted by: victoria | December 31, 2006 6:15 AM
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hereis a better one-at this moment in time- the largest gathering of human beings on the planet is in mecca for hajj (the pilgrimage)
all united in purpose and coming away stronger in faith- more humble in demeanor- more resolved to be better human beings- more conscious of their responsibilities toward their fellow humans-and renewed in determination to be more effective stewards of all created beings and this planet-
millions of these beautiful souls will wash back over the planet to all corners better mothers- doctors- leaders-janitors-
where else in this world do we find such a concerted effort? what would drive them to do this? if i see someone who is effective and a winner- i want to follow them
EID MUBARAK
THANK YOU SHEMP- without your careless misrepresentation- i wouldnt have been inspired to share this remarkable and mostly unnoticed by americans event
peace
Posted by: victoria | December 31, 2006 6:14 AM
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Bruce,
I've noticed that there really hasn't been a direct response to the part of your very first comment that said, "If that event actually occurred, everything that I believe about God follows from it."
People have been arguing that the first part of the statement is false, or at the very least has insufficient evidence to warrant any kind of belief.
I am going to quickly run through my beginning argument, but I want to focus on the implication that if the resurrection is true and verifiable, that it helps you out with knowing anything else all that useful.
1. What the "disciples" said and did (and even exactly who they were) in and around the time of Jesus' death is inconclusively verifiable.
2. Assuming we can know what they said and did (which is the only possible thing that historical records could actually provide evidence for along these lines) - what they believed is completely unverifiable.
3. Assuming that we do know what they said and what they did and what they believed (and that they 100% believed that Jesus died and resurrected) - whether Jesus actually died, came back from the dead a few days later is completely unverifiable. (Note that even somehow knowing that the disciples believed 100%, that does nothing to show THAT it is the case that it happened.)
4. Assuming that we know what the disciples said, did, and believed (that Jesus died and resurrected), and that we could somehow KNOW that Jesus actually did die and resurrect - you're really in trouble.
5. Assuming that we know what the disciples said, did, believed, and that we know that Jesus did in fact die and come back to life several days later - we are now, apparently, dealing with an "entirely foreign and alien event/being." This means we're at a dilemma.
The horn of the dilemma becomes the following:
Either
A. Jesus was supernatural and his death/resurrection were something that has never happened before, or since, and that Jesus must have some kind of power/ability that is not accessible to "ordinary humans"
or
B. He wasn't supernatural/special in anyway.
If you think B, then you're not likely a traditional Christian.
If you choose option A, then, by invoking the supernatural, all claims become much more difficult to pin down. By what standard do we judge, trust, compare Jesus to?
How can we make even the most outrageous probabilistic claims about him?
For example, no one could persuasively argue, "Well, clearly, Jesus is a good person/being, that is to be trusted because during his life he didn't sin and he preached a good moral code."
Because you can't continue with, "Because in all my dealings with beings that have this kind of power, and inhabit a human body for this stretch of time, they've treated me well."
With nothing to compare these experiences and events with, one has NO BASIS for choosing:
Jesus is God-incarnate, died and rose on the 3rd day
over
Jesus was the manifestation of the mischevious God that created the universe to see how many people he could fool with a neat trick.
or, over
Jesus was a human body that was possessed by a spirit who is mostly bad, but over this spirit's life-span of 10,000 years, acting good in a human body for 33 years is an easy trick, plus, convincing people that your host body died and resurrected is child's play. Hell, the disciples could have been possessed as well, and they just had to play convinced that Jesus came back.
The supernatural powers that are required to convince a bunch of people that a body has died, and then is alive again are very minute in the grand scheme of things. This is achievable by even a local deity. There's not need or reason to assume or even think you can conclude that this creature has unlimited power and knowledge -- it's only (allegedly) demonstrated its power over a very small distance in a very short span of time.
Even if I let you have it all the way through, sure, the miracle that supposedly happened, happened. And we're certain of that. What is the reasonable course of action once a person KNOWS that Jesus rose from the dead? I bet that most people, - even atheists - would say, "to believe Jesus in every claim that he makes" - but that doesn't follow. There is no reasonable course of action because we're dealing with a completely alien situation.
Posted by: A Thinking BUM | December 31, 2006 5:34 AM
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Here's a good one. Right at this moment thousands of Muslims are celebrating Hajj. They are standing in front of an enormous stone that represents the Devil, and are throwing rocks at it to purge themselves. We, as a species, should find this kind of behavior embarassing, as I'm sure most of those commenting here do.
Posted by: Shemp | December 31, 2006 4:09 AM
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A little historical correction to an earlier post: In the US in MA the alleged witches were hanged and in 1 case the woman was crushed to death by Puritan "good Christians" piling rocks upon her.
Posted by: Laurel | December 31, 2006 2:10 AM
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Theodrivel is good. How about also theces and throctology?
Posted by: Laurel | December 31, 2006 2:02 AM
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Dear Bruce,
The following questions about the NT testamony are intended to throw doubt on the reliability of your experts in court.
Part of their trestamony has Jesus ascending physically into heaven. Of course, in those days they did not know that the atmosphere got thinner as one ascends. Back then, they thought that heaven was somewhere in the sky. They did not know that the body would explode at some give altitude or that the oxygen would become insufficient to sustain life. Some of the obvious scientific questions would be how high did he ascend? How long did it take for him to disappear? Is this just another question of god interfering with the laws of nature and physics?
Some less obvious questions would concern the nature of heaven.
Is it a physical place inhabited by physical beings or a spiritual place where souls are in concert with god?
If it is a physical place, where is it? High flying jets, and balloons have not seen any sign of it; nor have rockets and space probes.
If it is a spiritual place, what is the advantage or purpose of ascending physically?
Was it all for show, if so, when did the show end.
My guess is that this part of the testamony was intended to demonstrate the divinity of Jesus, and not actual fact. If they felt that this sort of embellishment was necessary, how reliable is the rest of their testamony?
The answers to these questions may be as close to proof as you can get that the resurection is a fairy tale meant to convert pagan disbelievers.
Posted by: Simpleman | December 31, 2006 12:29 AM
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Man made God in his image.
Posted by: Anonymous | December 31, 2006 12:14 AM
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Bruce
you should watch this:
http://richarddawkins.net/article,240,Penn-Jillette-Interviews-Richard-Dawkins,Penn-Radio
Posted by: Anonymous | December 31, 2006 12:12 AM
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Well said Tonio,
Very well said.
But I do know of many moderate believers who have been converted, not to atheism, but to a new personal spirituality.
One with an alegorical appreciation for the teachings of Jesus.
And a feeling of god as the wonderment nature, as opposed to an omnipotent deity.
One that is everything that they had before, without the connection to the evil religions that used the idea of god to subjugate mankind.
I have seen these conversions. But they are more like awakenings.
And they are beautiful.
And they were brought on by the conversation that Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins have started.
I don't think that my posts alone will convert Bruce. But I have hope that the collective intelligent debate that Bruce started and stuck with so graciously on this thread will give him good reason to explore his feelings about his place in the universe.
And hopefully he will come to realize that he can have everything he has now, without supporting the conglomerate that is the church.
He does so everytime he calls himself a Christian.
It is not likely.
But I never give up hope when talking to a moderate.
Posted by: timmy | December 31, 2006 12:09 AM
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Fern:
Nothing that is worthwhile for us on Earth has ever been easily accomplished, but yet we seem to persevere. Again, look at those of the next generation. We can value our own lives as little as we wish, but it is not just to give no value to our inheritor's lives as well.
Jeff
Posted by: Jeff Reed | December 30, 2006 11:55 PM
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"I don't think any of the atheists here truly feel compelled to convert Bruce or any other believer (although they certainly have expended enough keystrokes vollying arguments!). I'm convinced we don't want said believers however becoming our President (or school board chairman for that matter) and aligning his/her decisions based primarily on their belief system."
JScan, I agree. Remember Muhammed Ali's famous quote, "No Viet Cong ever called me n*****"? My version is, "No atheist ever called me hell-bound." That is a huge reason that I consider myself an "atheist sympathizer."
On this site, I have read posts by some atheists who call believers stupid and ignorant. I condemn such language as not only inexcusably rude, but also counterproductive to rational dialogue. The important distinction is that those particular atheists are not threatening believers with eternal damnation if they do not recant their beliefs.
Michael Newdow correctly pointed out that "under God" does not belong in the Pledge of Allegiance, although I disagree with his tactic of trying to make the entire Pledge unconstitutional. Newdow did not call for changing the phrase to "under no god." I favor returning to the pre-1954 wording, which did not endorse any particular religious belief.
Posted by: Tonio | December 30, 2006 11:14 PM
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For Bruce B:
You write as follows:
"Ted: Some people's religions are an accident of birth, but that is superficial religion."
I am not in a position -- by and large -- to judge the level of superficiality of other peoples religion. But, from what little I have gleaned on this web site, your own personal religion is very far from being superficial. But, in the days when I was an Anglican and subsequently a Quaker my own involvement was likewise very far form being superficial. That has not stopped me from becoming an agnostic.
The truth is the the vast majority of religious believers stick to the religion they are brought up in. This means that if you are a Hindu or a Muslim you probably don't even realize you have the option to switch. So, what do you say about Hindus or Muslims? Tough luck that you happened to be born into an inferior religion with a phoney view of God, reality and redemption.
"There are Muslims who have converted to Christianity, and vice versa, so it is not universally true."
Certainly that is the case but the Muslim to Christianity switch involves the death penalty so it is very rare in that direction.
"I can give my reasons why I think that Christianity is superior to Islam, and I imagine that an Arab Muslim convert to Christianity could give other reasons."
Pray tell what your reasons are.
"I don't really think that gets us anywhere. I am at a disadvantage because I was born in a Christian environment, so you will not take me seriously when I speak of mystical experiences."
Not at all. I don't for one moment discount the reality of your mystical experiences. I simply doubt the inferences you draw from these experiences. And, if you were a convert from Hinduism or Islam to Christianity I would feel exactly the same.
"I have experienced what I have experienced for the past 35 years, and I feel that I have evaluated it as objectively as possible."
Very interesting indeed. One of the greatest Christian mystics was Meister Eckhart whose mystic experiences led him to adopt unorthodox views -- so much so that he was posthumously excommunicated by the church.
"I will continue to do so, and I am sure you will continue to evaluate your own experience. Maybe someday we will meet and discuss it further."
A face to face meeting might well prove very interesting.
Posted by: Ted Swart | December 30, 2006 11:01 PM
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And Greg:
I was not atacking capitalism. I love it. I am a capitalist.
I know that poor people are mostly responsible for their own situation. But Jesus certainly would not say "So they deserve what they get" He would give them money anyway. He would take them into his home and give them everything he has.
I was correctly pointing out that American Christians aren't Christians at all.
"Have you sold everything you own and given it to the poor?"
"Then you can not be my deciple"
"Easier for a camel...yada yada yada.
If being a Christian meant sharing everything you own with everyone, it wouldn't be as popular as it is today. Because people are way to greedy to do that.
The reason Christianity is so popular today is because along came the church, and said, you don't have to give away and share everything with the poor to get salvation anymore. That's the old Christianity. Now you only need to give ten percent of your money away. And don't give it directly to the poor. Give it to us and we'll look over that. That will get you into heaven. Great posessions and all.
Rich Christian should be an oxymoron, but it's amazing how people can justify scriptures to fit their deffinition when money is involved.
The whole marriage between the Christians and the right wing is perverse.
Posted by: timmy | December 30, 2006 10:40 PM
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Bruce.
So there was a time when these morals in the Old Testiment were the correct morrals for humans to live by?
But not so much today?
Really?
That's you answer.
I have never seen a copy of the New Testament that wasn't bound firmly to the Old Testament.
If Jesus is the son of that God. He should be ashamed of his father and not be telling us to worship him.
Posted by: timmy | December 30, 2006 10:37 PM
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Pam:
You go girl!
Posted by: RB | December 30, 2006 10:08 PM
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"I know you will all have a field day with this one. Have fun."
OK.
So God,... what? Changed his mind?? He's not perfect?
There are other passages that are just as straightforward, like the instructions to Moses in Leviticus. Homosexuals, adulterers, disobedient children, all are to be stoned to death. Aaron's sons offer him incense instead of burnt offerings, and the Lord burns them to death (apparently, while the smell of burnt offerings is sweet, God thinks incense stinks). Women aren't to be allowed to speak in the temple, nor can they enter when menstruating. A man may not "lie with" a betrothed woman, but if she's a slave girl, it's OK, because she belongs to him.
Lot is visited by two (male) angels, come to warn him that Sodom will be destroyed. When the townsmen demand that he bring them out so that they might "know" (i.e., sodomize) them, Lot offers them his two virgin daughters instead. This is the man God considers worth saving.
You can WORSHIP him???
The OT is full of this kind of thing - mysogyny, rape, killing people (including women and children) by stoning, burning, putting them to death "at the edge of the sword" - all at the behest of the Lord. There's even a bit about dashing out the brains of children on rocks. Lovely stuff.
You can keep your God.
Posted by: Pam | December 30, 2006 9:11 PM
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"There are a lot of very rich Christians in this country while homeless hungry people line the streets of the city aren't there Bruce.
Christians keep the more capitalist of the two options for government in this country in power, don't they Bruce"
Please do not speak of subjects where you know nothing of; homeless people are homeless because of their choices in life, regardless of their state of mind. People who hand these people their money on the street are contributing to their mental instability as they should be directing them to the many services our nation has paid for in order that they get the help they need; alcohol abuse, substance abuse, psychological help, medications, and the like.
While there are many Christians who are capitalists, they are not the only ones who create jobs, investments and more. Anyone with a decent retirement benefits from our stock market and the capitalistic society, which we grow from in many ways, too many to mention.
You are being very dishonest to attack our capitalistic society, which created the computer you're typing on; the lights in your house; your house; practically everything you enjoy in life and partake of.
I worked with the homeless population for 3 years, I understand this population and I understand the tree-hugger mentality of thinking they're doing good by giving money; they do more damage then you can imagine. Many times our organization was on the brink of getting someone help and some jerk would give him or her 10 bucks and they're off to the liquor store.
You're examples are irresponsible, distorted and dripping with a diseased mind.
Posted by: Greg | December 30, 2006 8:42 PM
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Geeez.. thanks for the articulate commentary Sam.. I can't help but think that the majority of postings here have neglected the root of the situation; I don't think any of the atheists here truly feel compelled to convert Bruce or any other believer (although they certainly have expended enough keystrokes vollying arguments!). I'm convinced we don't want said believers however becoming our President (or school board chairman for that matter) and aligning his/her decisions based primarily on their belief system. Here lies the crux of the problem - whether you vote in Isreal, Iran or or Dover, Delaware.
This is something that can unite (most) all parties here I think: nonsectarian politics must rule!
Posted by: jscan | December 30, 2006 8:31 PM
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Bruce (hi) said:
"And I do not have an alternative interpretation for the Deuteronomy passage. That is pretty literal and meant what it said. We are not under that covenant anymore, which is why we call the Christian scriptures the New Testament. In the new testament, our command is to tell others about Jesus and love one another as He loved."
Maybe, but why did St. Augustine sanction killing heretics and St. Aquinas -- the great reformer, ha -- say, no, no killing, but it's ok to torture unbelievers until the demons flee their bodies and they repent and receive the lord?
Uh, maybe they were reading the OT and forgot to read the NT.
The reason modern Christians don't kill and torture has not come from within Christianity, but rather has been imposed by morality from outside the religion.
Don't forget the Puritans in this country burned witches, and James Dobson today has called for imposition of the death penalty for blasphemy and apostasy.
So quit pretending that Christianity is just a lovely-dovey little religion. It isn't.
Posted by: RB | December 30, 2006 7:42 PM
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Ted: Some people's religions are an accident of birth, but that is superficial religion. There are Muslims who have converted to Christianity, and vice versa, so it is not universally true. I can give my reasons why I think that Christianity is superior to Islam, and I imagine that an Arab Muslim convert to Christianity could give other reasons. I don't really think that gets us anywhere. I am at a disadvantage because I was born in a Christian environment, so you will not take me seriously when I speak of mystical experiences. I have experienced what I have experienced for the past 35 years, and I feel that I have evaluated it as objectively as possible. I will continue to do so, and I am sure you will continue to evaluate your own experience. Maybe someday we will meet and discuss it further.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 30, 2006 7:25 PM
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And I do not have an alternative interpretation for the Deuteronomy passage. That is pretty literal and meant what it said. We are not under that covenant anymore, which is why we call the Christian scriptures the New Testament. In the new testament, our command is to tell others about Jesus and love one another as He loved. Christians have no mandate to kill or harm anyone. All I can say about the OT passages and killing Canaanites is that that was a different time and God was dealing with a different group of people in a way that seems foreign to us today. It simply does not apply to us today. I know you will all have a field day with this one. Have fun.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 30, 2006 7:18 PM
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Timmy: I really was not avoiding your pertinent question - I thought I had answered it, but apparently I did not post my comment, so I will try to repeat it. I have lived in countries where my faith was not predominant (Communist Yugoslavia in the 1970's, for one). That is simply a consequence of living in a particular place, and it had no effect on my faith. I can understand the consternation of non-believers who feel that Christians are imposing their moral code on them. I think the worst thing that ever happened to Christianity was when Constantine made it the state religion. It does much better when it is the persecuted minority faith, which is where it will soon end up again.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 30, 2006 7:12 PM
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Thanks for the correction on Constantine. I knew that. Brain fart.
And Fern:
Tru Dat.
Posted by: timmy | December 30, 2006 6:57 PM
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>Jeff Reed:
> Very nice indeed. The problem is how do we all come to understand that in the end we all bleed red?
I suspect in the end by all bleeding red. I don't think such a change is easily accomplished.
Posted by: fern | December 30, 2006 6:44 PM
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Timmy
And I'm right with you about 'allegorical' interpretations of the OT.
Anyone who regards the divine commandment to destroy men, women, children and animals as allegorical is capable of inferring anything from anything, including Luther's diatribe against Jews.
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | December 30, 2006 6:38 PM
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Timmy
Constantine, not Augustus. Sorry to be pedantic.
Dirk
Posted by: dirk Campbell | December 30, 2006 6:27 PM
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And Bruce,
Please tell me your alternative interperatation of the following. Please put them into the context of your interperatation so we understand exactly what you mean by different interperatation.
Deut 20:10-18
10 When you draw near to a town to fight against it, offer it terms of peace. 11If it accepts your terms of peace and surrenders to you, then all the people in it shall serve you in forced labour. 12If it does not submit to you peacefully, but makes war against you, then you shall besiege it; 13and when the Lord your God gives it into your hand, you shall put all its males to the sword. 14You may, however, take as your booty the women, the children, livestock, and everything else in the town, all its spoil. You may enjoy the spoil of your enemies, which the Lord your God has given you. 15Thus you shall treat all the towns that are very far from you, which are not towns of the nations here. 16But as for the towns of these peoples that the Lord your God is giving you as an inheritance, you must not let anything that breathes remain alive. 17You shall annihilate them—the Hittites and the Amorites, the Canaanites and the Perizzites, the Hivites and the Jebusites—just as the Lord your God has commanded, 18so that they may not teach you to do all the abhorrent things that they do for their gods, and you thus sin against the Lord your God.
Posted by: timmy | December 30, 2006 6:17 PM
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LT:
You speak in cemantics. I speak in reality.
I have never met an atheist who believes that we exist just cuz.
The only common belief that we share is that no one has the answer to the mystery of the origin of the universe. And that the onus is on those who claim to have such supreme knowledge, to show a shred of credible evidence to verify this supreme knowledge, or stay out of our lives.
Bruce:
You are wrong about me once again.
I most certainly do not reject the teachings of the mythical character of Jesus in the Gospel of John. I have great respect for the phylosophy of the alegorical character of Jesus of Nazareth.
I get shivers when I think about what a wonderful world we would live in everybody could adopt the Jesus phylosophy of sharing all the wold. It's beautiful. It's paradise.
Not even the whole world. If just the people who today call themselves Christians, all 2 billion of them lived their life according to the teachings of Jesus. It would be enough to show the whole world that the teachings of Jesus are the way.
But most Christians aren't living like that are they Bruce?
There are a lot of very rich Christians in this country while homeless hungry people line the streets of the city aren't there Bruce.
Christians keep the more capialist of the two options for government in this country in power, don't they Bruce.
I have far more respect for the teachings of Jesus than do most Christians.
I just have no more reason to believe that this particular hero/mesiah/philosopher is a real deity, than Zeus, Thor, or Neptune.
Your reason for believing in this particular hero story is because it is ingrained in your society as the accepted one. And that is because of the Roman Emperor Agustus, and the council of Nicea.
This is what has allowed you to take a 2000 year old piece of alegorical literature, and use it to interperate a personal spiritual and emotional experience into belief that the character of Jesus.
Bruce, if you grew up in Saudi Arabia, you would have attached your personal spiritual experience to Mohamad. Don't you think?
And you still won't answer the pertinent question
"How would it sit with you...."
Posted by: timmy | December 30, 2006 6:13 PM
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Bruce Wrote:
"Timmy: Roman emperors and church councils and modern politicians have so polluted the stream of Christianity that is it almost unrecognizable today. Forget all that stuff and just read the Gospel of John. The Jesus that you find there is a wonderful person. You reject him with all the fervor of a lapsed Catholic. There is no reason to do that."
Bruce also wrote:
"Pam: I'm not cherry-picking and I haven't abandoned the OT. I just have a different interpretation of parts of it. Jesus was not invisible and out of touch. He was here among us. He doesn't condemn people for scientific inquiry.
His only requirement is faith in him. Pretty simple."
You're not cherry picking??? Read again your response to Timmy above the response to me.
You choose to take some parts of the Bible literally (the gospel of John and the affirmations of the resurrection) and to "interpret" the parts you don't like. You definition of cherry picking is clearly different from mine.
Further, Jesus did not "walk among us" so that *I* could see him. He has been (like God) invisible and out of touch for nearly 2,000 years, as I said.
Posted by: Pam | December 30, 2006 6:07 PM
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Hi Bruce:
You write as follows:
"Ted Swart - I enjoy the exchange. I think believers and non-believers alike profit from honest debate and discussion. None of us know exactly where the road will lead, but honest self-examination and willingness to hear other views are always beneficial experiences."
Given the kind and thoughtful attitude displayed in these words I have to conclude that you are at least half way home.
But in order to get beyond 50% of the way you need to admit that your use of your mystical experience ,as validation of your belief in Jesus and his resurrection, is nothing more than circular reasoning.
In the original Sam Harris thread one of the contributors very succinctly pointed out that:
"Religion is an accident of birth".
You openly admit that you do not know much about the Muslim religion but you presumably know enough to appreciate that Muslims reject the notion that Jesus is the Son of God and that they contend he did not die on the cross -- although they foolishly claim he was lifted straight up to heaven.
Now, if you happened to have been born into the Muslim faith and had a mystical experience you must concede that the experience would almost certainly have involved Allah and/or Muhammad. And this is the nub of the problem for believers like yourself.
You really cannot honestly say that your mystical experience corroborated your conception of Jesus and his life and death. You simply must be able to point to other reasons (extraneous to your mystical experience) as to why your faith is superior to any other faith. That is a mighty task indeed and you have -- up to this point -- come up with no reasons which flow from anything other than the accident of your birth.
Let me assure you, once again, that if you cease to believe in Jesus as God in human form your life will not fall apart. You will still be honest truth seeking Bruce Burleson with your moral and ethical standards intact -- but freed from the burden of having to carry along with you ideas that have have no reality.
My best wishes that you can and will move further along the road. As you rightly say none of us knows in advance "where the road will lead".
Unfortunately, electronic interaction has its limitations and it would be much better for us to have a face to face encounter.
Posted by: Ted Swart | December 30, 2006 6:00 PM
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Coming very late to this thread, I'd like to say that I find Bruce Burleston an interesting and honest mind, as most contributors acknowledge.
There is one question I'd like to ask you, Bruce: If you had been born in Saudi Arabia instead of in the USA, would you have accepted Jesus as your ultimate spiritual authority? Answer: No. You would have been just as zealous a Muslim as you are now a Christian, and you would have regarded the Christian resurrection story as a fabrication just as you now regard it as worthy of belief. Assuming you would have retained your intellectually honesty, how would you deal with the accident of birth, apart from attributing it to the benificence of God? Because all Muslims attribute their religious affiliation to the benificence of God, just as Christians do theirs.
Dirk
Posted by: Dirk Campbell | December 30, 2006 5:59 PM
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Jason Bradfield's comments do deserve a reply from a practicing scientist.
First, unlike orthodox religion, science doesn't claim absolute eternal truth. It constructs models of nature which explain and predict its behavior. Succeeding generations of scientists continue to refine these models so they achieve ever better confidence and accuracy. Occasionally an existing model is found to be wrong and honest scientists are then glad to correct their theories. Bradfield's example of the pendulum is a good illustration of how a theory may be refined.
The "simple pendulum" of Freshman physics does indeed consist of a point mass on the end of an ideal string, and this is admittedly a rather crude approximation of a "real" pendulum. If, however, one stays in school till the sophomore year, the physics text introduces the "physical pendulum" whose bob may have any geometrically calculable mass distribution. It also includes corrections for another non-ideality called "circular error."
As for inductive methods, I again agree that they don't lead to absolute philosophical Truth (with a capital T). There is always the possibility that an exception waits around the next corner, especially with a young theory which has not had a long history of verification. For example some of the newer cosmological such as string theory may very well prove deficient, whereas Maxwell's equations and the laws of thermodynamics are pretty solid. Newtonian mechanics is also solid in its range of applicability. If Mr. Bradfield doubts this, then let someone hurl a bucket of excrement at him (the literal kind, not religious dogma). Will he duck, or stand there confident that since Newtonian mechanics isn't valid, the foul stuff will probably miss?
Mr. Bradfield has a point that some of the applications of science (technology) have been used for ill. It is therefore the duty of conscientious scientists to consider the forseeable consequences of their work and choose employment accordingly. I am an atheist by any practical definition, and I do choose, and refuse, work with ethical standards. And I don't need a god to tell me to do so.
Posted by: Jonathan Allen, Ph.D. | December 30, 2006 5:55 PM
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I certainly owe a great debt of gratitude to Jason Bradfield, his post is one of the first up top.
I now have a much better grasp over why conversations I have with people of faith end up so bizarre. I had no idea people of faith actually had such misconceptions about what science is and how it works.
Jason, to begin with, no truth can make another truth untrue. If you believe this to be the case, one of the truth's was never a truth.
Maybe Jason, someday you will realize that science is nothing more than the organized, verified observations and the attempt to organize those observations to make predictions about future observations. In other words, it is just the sum of what we know and what we think we might know.
Science has no agenda. Science exists as is whether you believe in it or not. Science never recruits nor does it care if you believe it or not. Therefore...
Science is *not* the opposite of religion. Science is man's best tool to understand his surroundings. Science works via probabilities, not truths. Truth is not even an aspect of science. Science says if you know of a better way to understand your surroundings, it will be incorporated and used. Faith has none of these. Science is an open-ended paradigm, faith is a closed system. Nothing knew will ever come from faith.
So who would you be more willing to believe, those who get their understanding of the universe from verbally passed down words of "preliterate" people who tell you to believe something, or a group of people who tell you not to believe anything they tell you, instead they encourage you to investigate for yourself?
Simply put: If you get your understanding of the universe from ancient stories verbatim, you see little predictability in the universe and all the wonder the universe holds is boiled down to those words. If you get your understanding of the universe from observations that have been verified by people who have no connection to each other, you see the world as a somewhat predictable place and the universe becomes far more wonderful and awe inspiring.
Too bad for you.
Posted by: Dave Rader | December 30, 2006 5:51 PM
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As Kenneth asked, why has Sam Harris been "removed" from the panel when the 17 other panelists remain? Surely this discussion has been lively, but it has been exemplified by reasoned discussion with hardly any "low blows" (certainly far fewer than I have seen in online discussions on less contentious topics).
Please provide an explanation for this.
thank you-
Cindy
Posted by: Cindy | December 30, 2006 5:38 PM
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Timmy: Roman emperors and church councils and modern politicians have so polluted the stream of Christianity that is it almost unrecognizable today. Forget all that stuff and just read the Gospel of John. The Jesus that you find there is a wonderful person. You reject him with all the fervor of a lapsed Catholic. There is no reason to do that.
Pam: I'm not cherry-picking and I haven't abandoned the OT. I just have a different interpretation of parts of it. Jesus was not invisible and out of touch. He was here among us. He doesn't condemn people for scientific inquiry.
His only requirement is faith in him. Pretty simple.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 30, 2006 5:35 PM
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As of 5:30, Decmber 30th, Sam Harris has been removed from the panel, I had to link to this discussion by clicking on Mr. Harris' profile.
Why has his column been removed?
Posted by: Kenneth | December 30, 2006 5:32 PM
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Bruce wrote:
To All - No one has ever responded in any way to my statements about Sam Harris' mystical experiences. I believe that you are all ashamed of the apostle and prophet of atheism for having these experiences. You believe that those experiences open the way for an unwanted intrusion of the divine. I challenge you to evaluate your own "Duckphup filters" and see if your own prejudices and biases are not preventing you from experiencing God.
****************************
Bruce:
I wrote a detailed response to your question above, however it did not post but has to be "checked by the blog moderators". I've no idea what blog rule I may have broken, but I certainly hope that my post will show up at some point.
I argue that all of these experiences are IN OUR BRAINS -- they have nothing whatsoever to do with the divine.
Posted by: Cindy | December 30, 2006 5:32 PM
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typo, meant, Wisdom comes with age. Unless less Your a us President.
Posted by: cat | December 30, 2006 4:59 PM
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Myron,
You have a great take on life. Must be true that
wisdom age.
Posted by: cat | December 30, 2006 4:55 PM
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Timmy and some anonymous poster have complained about my examination of atheists' morality and dogmatism.
On Harris' tenth "myth": When I wrote, "It is rational for an atheist to only ever be self-interested, I didn't mean that it's not rational not be self-interested. It's perfectly possible for atheist A to be altruistic, but s/he can't prove that atheist B's being bad to the bone is wrong. Even if s/he appeals to biology like Timmy, how can s/he prove that atheist B should follow his/her biology rather than break free of it? Atheist A may have very strong feelings against atheist B's outlook on life but s/he will always be lacking in proof.
As for atheists being dogmatic, I dispute the distinction between lack of belief in God and belief in no God. Theism can be equally expressed as belief in God or lack of belief in the idea that no God exists. The admittedly un-dogmatic middle ground of not being sure isn't included in the definition I found in the Oxford American Dictionary (a dashboard widget), "the theory or belief that God does not exist." Given this definition, the third "myth" is a correct statement.
Incidentally, I submit that people in the middle ground are as vulnerable as people who firmly believe there is no God to the critiques of Harris' 1st, 8th, and 10th points in my previous post.
The anonymous poster also accused me of having "skirted around [my] entire point. Yes, it's obviously a choice, but what sort of things is that choice based on? You can't choose to believe in a positive (something) simply because it cannot be authoritatively disproved." I agree with the last statement. I didn't choose to believe in God as an adult simply because I couldn't prove His nonexistence.
As for the prior statements, I didn't go into the details of how to decide on a worldview because my post was getting long, and I won't now. I will say that the limited, dual purpose of my previous post was (1) to dispute some of Harris' defense of atheism and (2) to suggest that atheism isn't some natural, neutral, or default position. It is a *chosen* worldview just like any religious one.
Posted by: LT | December 30, 2006 4:52 PM
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Bruce, did you follow the link that Martin sent at 11:27 AM? Does this not make sense to you? You have to realize how profoundly ignorant (by today's standards) and utterly superstitious these people were.
You earlier dismissed the Old Testament as "poetry" and "allegory" (allegorical to what?) as, I find, all but the most hard-core fundamentalists do. To believe it literally is just too horrible, and makes your God someone far too hateful to worship. I think it's an embarrassment to most "enlightened" Christians. But it IS part of the Bible that you're cherry-picking - no Christian religion has abandoned it, and the people of this time believed it absolutely. That alone should tell you something.
As someone who does not accept that magic is possible, I can watch a good stage illusionist, trying not to be fooled or distracted, and still be unable to figure out how a trick is performed (and I'm not stupid). If this can look real to me, can you imagine how easily the people of a far less critical age could be duped?
And, as I pointed out before, the writers of the gospels had an agenda.
As for your mystical experiences, there are good organic explanations for feelings of this kind and they happen, as Ted Swart pointed out, to non-Christians and even non-believers.
Check this out: http://thinkingmeat.com/newsblog/?p=573
Or this:
http://www.cognitiveliberty.org/neuro/neuronewswk.htm
Can you honestly believe in someone that, as you say, has the power to interfere with the laws of nature, but who hasn't done so for some 2,000 years, and who has given his creations, whom he supposedly loves, the intellect to conduct scientific inquiry - yet if they believe in the results of that inquiry rather than in his own invisible, out-of-touch existence, he condemns them to eternal torture? You can love and revere this sort of being? Sounds like a cruel child to me.
Posted by: Pam | December 30, 2006 4:40 PM
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No Bruce
I didn't let my guard down.
You simply perpetuate the common misnomer that atheists are not spiritual. Read Carl Sagan dude!
It is also obvious that you have not read Sam Harris or Richard Dawkins who'm we are certainly not emarrased by.
They both cite a sense of awe and wonderment of the spectatularness of the universe that is a spiritually uplifting and emotional experience.
None of us would ever equate such a personal spiritual experience with any religion, not because we are scared. Are you kidding? You think I'm scared to discover Jesus? Really?
Why would I attach my deep philosophical spiritual thoughts to a religion popularised and legalized by the Roman Emperor Agustus and codified by the Council of Nicea, when billions of other people believe in hundreds of other gods.
Our whole point is not that there is no possibility that a creator exists. But, that without credible evidence, nobody should ever claim to know who God is and more importantly what God wants. To do so is the very hight of hubris and ignorance.
You would love it if our argument was that, we know the answer. Because that would make us as incredible as you.
This debate is not between one certainty vs another as you try to make it.
This debate is between certainty and uncertainty with scientists, atheists, agnostics and secular humanists all falling on the righteous side of uncertainty.
Our spirituality comes from an awe of the unknown.
You still have't answered the pertinent question.
Would it sit welll with you..... (see above)
Posted by: timmy | December 30, 2006 4:29 PM
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Bruce,
When Harris began describing his Eastern meditative experiences, I'll admit I found it less than enlightening or persuasive. But recall that he is currently studying these phenomena scientifically as part of his pHD work in neuro-physiology.
I'll listen when he publishes.
When I jog, I often (but not always) achieve what is called "runner's high" -- characterized chiefly, for me, as a separation from a sense of time. I'll be warming up in the first mile or so, glance at my watch and it'll report, for example 9:28 elapsed running time.
Next time I glance at it: 57:15 or similar. Basically, I feel as if zero time, or scant seconds, have actually passed between the two readings. In addition, looking up at the sky, it appears as if the clounds are receding from sight rapidly.
This is a wonderful, almost mystical physical sensation and it always makes me smile.
It goes away after my cardio-pul system returns to rest. However, what am I thinking during these "lost times?" Often I'm able to figure out a way to solve a design problem (I'm and engineer) in a new and unique way.
I just love it, but in no way sense or form have I ever attributed this to the supernatural. Basically, it think it's oxygen saturation and endorphins...but it sure leads to a meditative-type of state.
Highly recommended.
Posted by: RB | December 30, 2006 4:28 PM
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Duckphup: You said "rational people know that they do not know." Now we are starting to sound like Donald Rumsfeld. I also know that I do not know, but I also know what I have experienced. Except for your a priori assumption that God does not exist, there is no reason why my experience cannot be valid and Sam Harris' deficient. What I believe I know is based on what I personally experience. Certainly, there is always the possibility of error, and I admit that. I may be totally wrong. But my experience to this point leads me to believe that I am right, just as yours has.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 30, 2006 4:21 PM
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Timmy: I have lived in other countries where my faith was not predominant (Communist Yugoslavia in the 1970's, for one). That is simply a consequence of living in a particular place, and it has no bearing on my faith. Right now, Christianity (so-called) is predominant in the USA, and I can understand the consternation of non-believers when "Christian" politicians attempt to impose their moral code on the unwilling. Christianity suffered its most severe defeat when it became the majority religion in the West under Constantine. It did much better as a persecuted minority faith, and that is where it is headed again in the near future.
Jeff B. - Hi, Jeff. No, no other god has appeared to me. Yes, the others have it wrong. What did you expect me to say?
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 30, 2006 4:12 PM
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Bruce Burleson wrote:
"When Sam Harris experiences altered states of consciousness, his internal filter tells him that it is not an experience of God, whom he does not believe exists. If Sam is wrong in his belief, then his internal filter is causing him to be deceived, and he may be missing the experience of the divine."
************
What you fail to take into account is that truly rational people do not HAVE 'belief' filters in the same sense as religious people. I told you about 'paradigms' in a previous post. You might want to search this page for that word, and re-read. In any event, for rational people, this does not involve an internalized certainty that one knows the absolute 'truth' pertaining to some aspect of existence and/or reality, as it does for religious people. Such a sense of certainty is merely a delusion, since NO ONE is privy to such 'truths'. Rational people KNOW that that they do not know. Religious people are unjustifiably certain that they DO know.
Faith-based 'beliefs' are an insidious mind-killer... they cut one off from the open-minded and intellectually honest (willing to question and doubt one's own presumptions) consideration of alternative possibilities.
'Faith' is a vacuous substitute for evidence. 'Belief' is a vacuous substitute for knowledge. Faith + belief = delusion.
Posted by: DuckPhup | December 30, 2006 4:06 PM
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First, I want to thank people like Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins for bringing me into the "light." My skepticism and my agnosticism has been just under the surface. It is now out, never to be placed back in the darkness!
To Bruce: I appreciate your candor and civility.
As a skeptic and an agnostic, I have tried to leave the internal "god filter" off, so as to leave open the possibility of the existence of a god. So far, I am not convinced.
I am wondering, if, as you say, our filters must be set to a belief in god, why you settled on Christianity. During your altered state, did Mohammed or allah ever appear, or maybe Vishnu? Why just Jesus? Have you ever wondered about that? And what about the billions of people who do not believe in Jesus but who can identify with your experience of communing with god. Do they have it wrong? Where do you think they went wrong?
To Phillip: You are right. For those who are thoroughly convinced in god and religion, arguing using science and logic will usually end in failure. To them, god is not bound to any laws of the universe. It's the perfect delusion, insulated from the normal proofs. However, there are millions of people who are not that convinced of god or religion, but who follow both because of societial and family pressures and prejudices. These people would question their beliefs, if given the right time and information. I think the internet will be their turning point. It is up to us to keep up the dialogue.
Tom in Austin has it right. We should be terribly concerned for this current generation of the scientifically ignorant. We must stand up and speak up for knowledge--the teaching of our children about science and critical thinking. What does it say about god and religion that 93% of our most eminent scientists do not believe in god. It says that knowledge is the antithesis of religion and belief in god.
Posted by: Jeff B. | December 30, 2006 4:03 PM
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Whoa Timmy: You let your atheist guard down in your response to Myron. You said that you are an atheist who does not discount the possibility that we were created, that you feel like you are being tested, that "someone" is waiting for us to discover the answer. What is wrong with believing that Jesus is the answer? There is some evidence that he did everything that the new testament says that he did. Why do you reject him? Why do you hate him? Because of other Christians? Don't let them stand in the way. Ask Jesus to reveal himself to you. I have, and I am not a sad soul.
To All - No one has ever responded in any way to my statements about Sam Harris' mystical experiences. I believe that you are all ashamed of the apostle and prophet of atheism for having these experiences. You believe that those experiences open the way for an unwanted intrusion of the divine. I challenge you to evaluate your own "Duckphup filters" and see if your own prejudices and biases are not preventing you from experiencing God.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 30, 2006 3:54 PM
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Nobody has yet commented on the condescending tone of this Active Conversation:
"Why is Atheism Enjoying a Certain Vogue?"
Whoever wrote that reveals two things about him/herself: First is the seemingly incredulous notion that anyone would be an atheist, and second is the put-down implied in the words "certain vogue" as if thinking rationally is a fashion trend.
Here's an answer for the authors: Rational thinking, as opposed to wishful thinking, will always emerge, no matter how dark the current era. Ours of course is dominated by just stupid leaders such as Bush, Obama, Pat Robertson, Ted Haggart and their ilk.
Yes, they've had their day, and it's proven to be absymal at every level -- except for the money and power they've ceased from their subjects -- but us rational folks (atheists) will no go away.
This isn't "a certain vogue" it is a relentless search for what the universe is really about. What's been "in vogue" the past six years is pathetic journalists giving bjs to religious bigots who ceased power.
Well, guess what, that vogue has left the station.
Posted by: RB | December 30, 2006 3:53 PM
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Sorry Bruce,
I see absolutely no difference between the claim that Elvis rose from the dead and Jesus rose from the dead exept the fact that we have absolute proof that Elvis existed in the first place where we do not with Jesus.
It is only your reverence for Jesus and the bible that makes him different from fat rock star. I heard Elvis speak of love and good will towards from many a pulpit.
Your answer to why Elvis is different from Jesus can not be
"Welll because Jesus was the mesiah"
Because that is the question at hand.
Anyway, I agree, let's move on.
Here's another question from yesterday you failed to address.
Would it sit welll with you if a group of people who believed in a completely different god than you had an enormous amount of influence over your government and your life?
Posted by: timmy | December 30, 2006 3:53 PM
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Well put Myron.
The most important point you make that all religious people need to think about is:
"Do you realize that your religion (regardless of what it is) is a minority?"
The unwaivering conviction of most religious people comes from the sheer number of those who believe the same things that they do. They need to be confronted with the information that most people in the world do not believe as they do.
The question they need to answer is what will their God do with the majority of people on this earth who do not subscribe to their faith but in fact believe something completely incompatible with their faith.
If God created all of us. Why do most of us have it wrong?
I am an atheist who does not discount the idea of the possibility that our universe (or multi universe) was created by someone or something. Because if feels like we're being tested. It feels like someone is waiting for us to disccover the answer.
I love trying to imagine what that answer might be.
It would be so very depressing to find out one day that the answer is that we were all supposed to have faith in something that was told to us by a few people thousands of years ago without an ounce of evidence. But we have to make sure that we believe the right people or we're toast!
What a brilliant concept that power motivated men dreamt up so many years ago before the average person had access to the knowledge of collective humanity.
"It's a God who will only love you if you believe in him without evidence. Oh yeah, and he's entrusted me with the rule book you all must follow."
What a sad sad soul, he who believes in such depraved lunacy.
Posted by: timmy | December 30, 2006 3:38 PM
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RB: Yes, I am an atheist as to Allah, Thor, Krishna, Isis, etc. I cannot subtract Yahweh because of my experience. Therefore, a chasm exists between us which will not be bridged from my side, as I cannot deny what I have seen. Unless and until my journey reveals to me that my "Duckphup filter" is deceiving me, then I will continue on this path.
Timmy: My current analysis of the Elvis question is almost grounded in asthetics. Elvis believers are not really serious contenders for the truth. A fat rock star and a miracle-working, righteous, forgiving, loving, death-defeating Messiah are simply not in the same league. Anyone who really, seriously puts Elvis, Santa, and the Easter Bunny in the same category as Jesus, is not truly committed to the truth. I don't think you honestly see Elvis and Jesus in the same light. Don't disappoint me. You choose not to believe in the resurrection, and I respect you. I gave up on the court battle - now you need to give up on the Elvis analogy. It's a loser.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 30, 2006 3:33 PM
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To all the Believers, I pose some questions that I would like you to consider;
Do you believe there is a heaven?
What do you thing it is like?
Why do you think god created heaven?
Do you believe that you will ascend to heaven after your death on earth?
How can you be certain that you have complied with all of gods rules?
How long will you be there – for eternity?
What will you do for an eternity?
Don’t you ever get bored with doing and seeing the same thing?
What will you do if you encounter others that you didn’t like on earth [ex-spouse(s), bad neighbors]?
What will god want you to do in heaven?
Why didn’t god just bring you to heaven immediately, instead of all the wasted time on conception, birth, growing, maturing, etc.?
Realizing that there are several primary religions and hundreds of sub-religions, what will you do after death if you find out that your specific religion is not accepted by god?
Do you realize that your religion (regardless of what it is) is a minority?
Think about the answer to all these questions and you may realize why I am an atheist. My rules are very simple. Do unto others as I want done to me. I follow that rule as closely as humanly possibly. I have no personal enemies. I help my fellow human and animal life to live as comfortably and happy as possible. I am extremely happy with my life; I have worked hard and made a comfortable living for my family. I have no fear of dying as I am getting old and realize that my life must end sometime like all the other inhabitants of this planet. I do feel sorrow for those that live in fear of what will happen to them and their loved ones when they die. I only wish they could enjoy their life on earth as I have done. I also wish they would stop trying to convert me. I like the idea of returning to the earth from which I was created.
Posted by: Myron | December 30, 2006 3:09 PM
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Bruce,
You still haven't answered my question from yesterday.
You are insistant that others admit that there is at least some evidence for the resurection of Jesus.
I'll do it for you now.
Yes. Based on your standard of what constitutes evidence, there is indeed at least some evidence that the resurection took place.
Now. You must return the favor and admit that, by this same standard of evidence, Elvis also rose from the dead and frequents shopping malls throughout the mid west.
So many eye witnesses. Books written on the sightings.
Only these witnesses are still around. They can be questioned and confirm their sightings in person. And unlike your witnesses, they have last names and addresses.
Many of these people claim that they are not simply relying on their senses. They could feel the presence of Elvis and they just knew it was him.
If you believe 2000 year old hearsay twice removed.
Surely you must believe that ELVIS LIVES!
No?
Explain please
Posted by: timmy | December 30, 2006 2:57 PM
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Bruce:
But it obviously moves 1.5 billion people to pray daily -- five times -- and they completely accept a fairy tale that "I have never sensed," as you put it.
In fact, by your own words you are an atheist wrt Islam. You know how it feels to have "never sensed" Islamic faith.
So there is common ground here, twixt you and other atheists. I would make the claim that you have never "sensed" Thor, or Posiden, either, and you feel no need to disprove their existence. Why they're just non-sense gods, right?
The only difference between you and an atheist, Bruce, is that the atheist has subtracted one more god from the equation.
Posted by: RB | December 30, 2006 2:55 PM
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Bruce:
"I have examined the resurrection as Skeptic has suggested, and while I have come to a different conclusion, I am familiar with the problems Skeptic mentions. This does not detract from the fact that the early Christians clearly believed and stated as a fact that Jesus had been resurrected."
This skirts around the entire issue - why did those early Christians, many of whom were evangelized and not eye-witnesses, believe that Jesus had been resurrected? Just because a group of people treats something as fact, regardless of whether they were in close or distant time proximity to the event, does not make it more reliable without additional evidence. Some evangelical Christians treat the Rapture's eventual occurrence as though it were a fact, even though it is based on some rather vague and cryptic passages in the Book of Revelations. Most religions treat the events which gave them birth to be factual, does that make them all historically accurate? Your tests for suggesting the correctness of Christianity could be applied to any faith and therein precisely lies their problem (for your proof).
"I will say this - that any "believer" who comes to this site without a personal experience like mine will probably leave an agnostic, at the very least. Sorry if this sounds sexist, but this site separates "the men from the boys."
Regardless of the gender of your statement, you also imply some sort of adultness or maturity that is missing from those agnostics or atheists who lack your "personal experience of God" (specifically through Christianity). Again, you assume some kind of superiority to those who lack your evasive and unreasoned faith.
Posted by: Jeremy | December 30, 2006 2:30 PM
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RB - I cannot comment on anything regarding Islam, as I have no personal knowledge of the Muslim experience. I have never sensed Allah or Muhammed in any way. The Koran and Muslim literature are just words on a page to me, probably like the Bible is to you. It is my inward experience that validates the New Testament story for me.
Ted Swart - I enjoy the exchange. I think believers and non-believers alike profit from honest debate and discussion. None of us know exactly where the road will lead, but honest self-examination and willingness to hear other views are always beneficial experiences.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 30, 2006 2:21 PM
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Duckphup: When Sam Harris experiences altered states of consciousness, his internal filter tells him that it is not an experience of God, whom he does not believe exists. If Sam is wrong in his belief, then his internal filter is causing him to be deceived, and he may be missing the experience of the divine.
I have examined the resurrection as Skeptic has suggested, and while I have come to a different conclusion, I am familiar with the problems Skeptic mentions. This does not detract from the fact that the early Christians clearly believed and stated as a fact that Jesus had been resurrected. If they are correct (and no one has proved that they were not), then my internal filter of faith is not a delusion, but an accurate lense through which I can experience a reality beyond this one.
I will say this - that any "believer" who comes to this site without a personal experience like mine will probably leave an agnostic, at the very least. Sorry if this sounds sexist, but this site separates "the men from the boys."
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 30, 2006 1:47 PM
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Hi Bruce:
Well, that view leads to a stalemate, doesn't it?
Ok, leave that aside (for the moment) , why aren't 1.5 billion Muslims correct in believing their end-of-life miracle for Mohammad?
Posted by: RB | December 30, 2006 1:47 PM
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To Bruce Burleson:
Let me apologize for those atheistic contributors to this discussion who behave in a boorish manner. I regard them simply as letting the side down.
I would, however, like to make an important point about your description of your mystical experience which you feel validated your belief in the resurrection of Jesus. There is a truly vast treasure house of books on mysticism as I know only too well. As it turns out, I had a T Wistar Brown fellowship to Haverford College in 1963 and Haverford has what is arguably the finest and most comprehensive collection of books on mysticism in the world. So I think I can rightly say that I have a well above average knowledge of the subject.
And one thing stands out like a sore thumb. Although mystical experiences have a substantial amount of commonality --the feeling that time stands still, the feeling of being at peace and at one with the world and so on -- they are all too often linked to the particular religion (if they have one) which the individual mystics happen to be attached to.
A Sufi mystic will regard his/her experience as involving Muhammad and Allah. A Hindu mystic will explain the experience in terms of the Hindu pantheon. And a Christian mystic will explain the experience in terms of Jesus and/or his mother Mary.
So I suspect that your experience does not really validate anything. It is as if the door by which we enter a mystical experience has a strong influence on the door by which we leave it. I personally had my first mystical experience at a very young age -- something like 5 or 6 -- with all the usual characteristics but no religious connections at all (I was still too young to have been sufficiently indoctrinated).
As I have already explained I was brought up an Anglican and I used to accept the Jesus resurrection story as an adolescent. Now it seems to me nothing other than quaint nonsense. If anyone else had died and was buried and his/her body disappeared from the grave the very last thing that you or I or anyone else would conclude was that the person concerned must have risen from the dead. We would simply assume that the body was stolen from the grave or that the person concerned never really died. And given your very obvious desire to be honest with yourself you will, I hope, come to see that this must be true for Jesus as well.
Let me encourage you, as I have done before, to keep searching for the truth. I can assure you there is a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.
Most Christian when confronted with the hard questions which their faith raises run away and hide. So, I would like to put on record my appreciation of your courage in staying the course.
Posted by: Ted Swart | December 30, 2006 1:46 PM
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RB: I am familiar with the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics. If God does exist, He is outside of this realm and not subject to the laws of physics in this universe. Therefore, assuming that such a God does exist, the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics would not apply to Him and would not prevent Him from entering this realm and resurrecting a dead body. Of course, if you reject the idea of a God that exists outside of this realm, this explanation won't mean much to you.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 30, 2006 1:32 PM
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To all the naive pious who maintain that only the atheists spread mischief in the world, and to those who think Hitler was not referring to religion (besides constantly talking about divine providence), here is some juicy reading:
Original Luther quotations, everybody can google them for themselves (I try to translate below):
"Die Juden sind ein solch verzweifeltes, durchböstes, durchgiftetes Ding, dass sie 1400 Jahre unsere Plage, Pestilenz und alles Unglück gewesen sind und noch sind. Summa, wir haben rechte Teufel an ihnen...; Man sollte ihre Synagogen und Schulen mit Feuer anstecken, ... unserem Herrn und der Christenheit zu Ehren, damit Gott sehe, dass wir Christen seien (...) ihre Häuser desgleichen zerbrechen und zerstören."
I try to translate Luther:
„The Jews are such a desperate, thoroughly evil, poisoinous thing, that for 1400 years they have been our pain, pestilence and calamity and they still are. In short, we have real devils in them... one should burn their schools and synagogues to honour our Lord and all Christianity, so that God will see that we are Christians... break down and destroy their homes as well.“
"Darum wisse Du, lieber Christ, und Zweifel nichts dran, dass Du, nähest nach dem Teufel, keinen bittern, giftigern, heftigern Feind habest, denn einen rechten Juden, der mit Ernst ein Jude sein will."
„Therefore you should know, dear Christian, and never doubt, that next to the devil you have no more bitter, poisonous, atrocious enemy than a real Jew, who seriously wants to be a Jew.“
"Ich will meinen treuen Rat geben.
Erstlich, dass man ihre Synagoge oder Schule mit Feuer anstecke, und was nicht verbrennen will, mit Erde überhäufe und beschütte, dass kein Mensch einen Stein oder Schlacke davon sehe ewiglich.“
„I will give you my faithful advice. First, that one must burn their synagogues and schools with fire, and that which will not burn, be covered with soil, so that in eternity no human shall see a stone or cinder thereof.“
Hitler sagte: "Ich tue nur, was die Kirche seit fünfzehnhundert Jahren tut, allerdings gründlicher."
Hitler said: „I am only doing what the church does for the last 1500 years, only more thoroughly“.
So much as to religion and morals. It doesn't prove or disprove anything, but it casts some light on fanatic religious minds.
But then, he translated the bible. We can't easily escape history and its cultural implications, but we certainly can - and must! - learn from it!
Gerry
Posted by: Gerry | December 30, 2006 1:26 PM
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my apologies for that
Posted by: RB | December 30, 2006 1:17 PM
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Bruce:
You have not yet responded wrt the 2nd Law of Thermo.
Are you, like the writers of your holy book, ignorant of this property of matter, one which precludes resurrection of dead flesh?
You see, fairy tales flourish amid the ignorant and uneducated. The "miracles" could more easily be "sold" way back then.
A miracle described in the Koran concerns Mohammad ascending the heaven on a winged horse. There were many who claimed to have witnessed his departure from earth.
Surely you believe them, too, right?
Posted by: RB | December 30, 2006 1:15 PM
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Bruce:
You have not yet responded wrt the 2nd Law of Thermo.
Are you, like the writers of your holy book, ignorant of this property of matter, one which precludes resurrection of dead flesh?
You see, fairy tales flourish amid the ignorant and uneducated. The "miracles" could more easily be "sold" way back then. T
Posted by: RB | December 30, 2006 1:13 PM
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I just have had time to read about half of the comments. I agree that converting the religious to non-believers may take too long. I am concerned that the religious are going to destroy our world with their insanity. Our only hope is for another much more advanced civilization from another planet to actually show us the way to peacefull coexistance. I am 72 and have had this hope since the first report of flying saucers. I can only hope that there is other life on another planet that was not influenced by mystical gods.
Posted by: Myron | December 30, 2006 1:12 PM
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Bruce,
I good friend of mine, a Dutch catholic priest, has the position that we should focus not on the death (and the doubtful and irrelevant resurrection) of Jesus, but on his life. All this focus on what Jesus did, or now does, after his death should not be an issue.
Posted by: walter80111 | December 30, 2006 12:59 PM
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To Bruce Burleson:
As I indicated in my previous post, the belief that Jesus rose from the dead is based on reports from men who lived nearly 2000 years ago, very few in number and very poor in quality, evidence which pales in comparison to the evidence from the accumulated knowledge of human physiology and the billions of observations that people who die do remain dead. I specified the flaws in the ancient reports and speculated how your belief is most likely based on wishful thinking, the wish that you too will one day be brought back to life from the dead. I suspect that your "subjective evidence" involves this process of wishful thinking. However, your "subjective evidence" may simply fade away once you deal honestly with the objective evidence.
As Carl Sagan once said "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence." The Biblical reports surrounding Jesus' crucifixion and its aftermath are quite poor, let alone extraordinary. I doubt that you would ever accept the "heresay" of a few people to support a significant claim if it were in an area of your life other than the religious one.
I have a project to suggest to you, one that I actually completed myself. Set up a table in which you attempt to align the events from the four Gospels, those events described from the point in time that Jesus is presented to Pilate. Take note of the contradictions and dicrepancies in the different narratives. Tabulate whether major details are specified in one, two, three, or all four Gospels. Attempt to give explanations for the differences in the accounts. This will be an mind-opening experience! If you diligently and honestly carry out this task, you are likely to come to the conclusion that nobody who thinks rationally can conclude that the alleged resurrection of Jesus actually occurred.
Posted by: Skeptic in Tallahassee | December 30, 2006 12:39 PM
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In response to Martin's request to hear from teachers, I teach college writing and literature, and I often teach a course called Writing in the Sciences. For their first formal paper I ask students to write a position essay on whether creationism should be taught as a science in our public schools. I stress that the issue is teaching it as science, not philosophy or literature or history--strictly science. If they argue that creationism is indeed a science, students must convince me how it meets the scientific paradigm. Usually, about two-thirds argue it is not a science. The argument often taken by the one-third claiming that it is a science is "equal time"; that is, equal time to evolution. These students claim that education must put all the ideas out there for young people to see. Most of these students turn out to be devout Christians. If I ask them if the hundreds of other creation stories should be added to the educational buffet, they are often silent. Sometimes one will argue that America is a Christian country and that only the Biblical Creationism should be taught. If I then ask them if the laws of physics,chemistry, and biology vary from country to country they usually just stare at me. Although few will admit it, these devout students don't just want equal time, they want the entire time.
The good news (pardon the pun) is that by the time all the class discussions are over, all but one or two of the devout students has admitted, reluctantly, that creationism is just not a science. One of those students came up to me after the final draft was handed in and said, "I'm sorry I was such a jerk. I just felt like a traitor to Jesus." Her eyes strained over the words, a mixture of revelation and sadness. It was a painful admission.
Ultimately, despite the urgency to elimate the dangers of mythical thinking, I take some consolation in Emily Dickinson's warning that "the truth must dazzle gradually, or every man be blind."
Posted by: Rick | December 30, 2006 12:37 PM
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"But faith is not purely a matter of science, logic and reasoning. It does need to have factual basis, or it becomes mere superstition. But the mystical experience of true faith, while based in historical fact, is an experience that is beyond the mind."
This statement is astonishing in what it reveals, which Philip picks up, spot on and discusses; excellent job!
I was an individual who was raised catholic, sent to catholic school, etc. By 3rd grade I somehow came to the understanding within that it was rubbish, to the chagrin of my parents, mainly because I felt the need to tell everyone I knew and ask them to test it for themselves. LOL! Precocious as I was.
I abandoned religion and all it precepts. Years later I went to college, studied various religions as part of the curriculum, engaged in the New Age phenomena, actually thought myself able to "channel" etc. Turns out it was all rubbish again.
What did happen for me was this: I accepted that I was an adult, not a child; I accepted that I was responsible for my life choices; I accepted that I was accountable for my actions – no one and no thing was going to “save me” from whatever choices I made.
When this happened, I no longer needed a god, an angel, or whatever other superstition one might engage in to "look after me" and to "take care of me". This is a stance of being a victim; once a person evolves past this victimization they truly have no other choice but to abandon religion, new age, and the like because you come to realize the reality of the life you are living.
Science has opened up the world to me in ways that NONE of the other religions, new age, superstitions EVER did. No bible. No crystals. No astrology. Just the facts. Black and White in my face, look at the experiments, see their result. Observation is THE most powerful tool science and the individual has at their disposal.
You really can only accept or dispel something upon your own personal research into any subject matter. You cannot take another's word for it; you cannot accept only one text as reason for logic; you must mature in every way lest you stay trapped in a development stage prior to adulthood that renders you helpless to reach potential.
Posted by: Greg | December 30, 2006 12:24 PM
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To Fern:
Very nice indeed. The problem is how do we all come to understand that in the end we all bleed red?
Posted by: Jeff Reed | December 30, 2006 12:23 PM
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Apologies... I failed to complete the 'name' field in my last post.
Posted by: DuckPhup | December 30, 2006 12:14 PM
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Bruce Burleson wrote:
"Sam Harris gives an account in "The End Of Faith" of mystical experiences that he has had while meditating. He has experienced an altered state of consciousness similar to that achieved by Hindu gurus. I do not doubt his experience. My experience is somewhat different. I experience an altered state of awareness and consciousness in my private devotions with God. In that experience, the new testament story becomes alive to me, as though I were communicating through its words with a person on the other side (like these posts, only with an extra dimensionality). I do not hear audible voices, nor do I hallucinate. However, I do become acutely aware of the presence of one who is communicating with me, whom I understand to be Jesus. One of the results of experiences like this is "faith" in the scriptural accounts, which become alive to me and which I experience as part of my own life. There are many other inward benefits of this experience, but faith, which transcends rationality even though it is based in fact, becomes a reality to me - it becomes part of who I am. It would be just as difficult for me to deny the existence of my mother as it would be for me to deny the existence of the God with whom I commune."
*****************
Think back to a previous post, which you admitted "... required much thought". It had to do with certain internalized 'filters'... among them 'beliefs'... the output of which is one's 'subjective reality'. Can you not see that your comments, above, serve to illustrate what i was saying? Altered states of consciousness are common, in conjunction with meditation, intense prayer, deep contemplation of art or nature or music, chanting and rythmic dancing, and in other human endeavors involving deep focus and attention. Your INTERPRETATION of the meaning and significance of your own subjective experiences is ENTIRELY a function of those internal filters... primarily 'beliefs'... although 'misconceptions' and 'prejudices' undoubtedly play a roll, as well.
So, you are taking an experience that is essentially the physiological equivalent of that which could otherwise be achieved by immersing yourself in bongo-drum rhythms, or contemplating your navel, and coupling it with the faith-based delusion that such experiences mean you are in direct communion with the master of the universe.
Get a grip.
Posted by: Anonymous | December 30, 2006 12:12 PM
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In response to John M.
1. THERE IS A CREATION STORY. Evolution is based on objective evidence, not on speculation by the writers of the Bible, who were equally convinced that the Earth was flat and the center of the universe.
2. THIS CREATION STORY CANNOT BE VERIFIED. Evolution was verified by a mountain of fossil evidence and the understanding of genetics.
3. THIS CREATION STORY REQUIRES FAITH. The only requirement is accepting the blind faith from over 2000 years ago may be false, as they were in their understanding of the Earth and the universe.
4. THIS BELIEF SYSTEM HAS A LEADER OR FOUNDER. Darwin was as much of a "leader" or "founder" as Copernicus, Galileo, or Einstein.
5. THERE IS A TEXT THAT GUIDES THE FAITHFUL. It is called science textbooks.
6. THERE ARE CONTEMPORARY TEACHERS AND LEADERS WHO ATTEMPT TO ADD INSIGHT AND GUIDE THE FAITHFUL. This includes all science teachers, as well as the most eminent scientists in the world.
7. SUBSCRIBERS FEEL THEIR TRUTH IS THE ONLY TRUTH, AND ALL OTHERS ARE WRONG. Scientists admit they are wrong when evidence proves it. Religious faith is so dogmatic, they rarely admit they are wrong. Atheists are perceived as intolerant when they reject false belief. Galileo was perceived as intolerant to the dogmatic belief that the Earth is the center of the universe, and was persecuted by the devout relgionists.
8. THERE IS A CONCERTED EFFORT TO SHARE THIS BELIEF SYSTEM. This is called public education of science.
9. SOME FOLLOWERS FORCE THEIR VIEWS ON THE PUBLIC, THROUGH APPEALS TO THE GOVERNMENT. Again this is called public education of science. Creationism, a religious belief based on no evidence, cannot be taught in public schools because of the First Amendment (Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion).
10. SOME ADHERENTS ARE MOVED TO VIOLENT EXTREMISM. Hitler, Stalin, and Mao Tse Tung, were inspired by atheism the way Charles Manson was inspired by the Beatles. Hitler used Christian-based anti-semitism, not atheism, to justify the extermination of Jews. Hitler's was raised Catholic and his religious beliefs are disputible as he frequently contradicted himself with his public statements.
Atheism has none of the characteristics of organized religions. Nonbelievers of religious dogma are not at all organized as the members of the Churches, Temples or Mosques. Atheists are as well organized as the as the non-astrologers and alien abduction deniers. But we all belong to the acknowledgement that the creation of the universe and life on Earth is an open question to be studied by objective evidence, and not supernatural speculation. And we are not dogmatic because we accept the reality that no one has the answer yet.
Thank you Sam Harris for two well-written books that provide a logical, reasonable, and common sense approach to the absurdities of religious dogma.
Happy New Year to all.
Posted by: Robert Perovich | December 30, 2006 11:51 AM
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I personal see a lot more need for spirituality and usefulness for myth than Sam Harris does, but MAN am I glad he's out there with his message. When I first saw him on C-Span it was a revelation... I was thinking to my self "We're allowed to say this stuff out loud?"
Hahaha, Go Sam!
Posted by: Mad Love | December 30, 2006 11:49 AM
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This subject has really taken on a life of its own. I am blown away at the number of really intelligent thinkers that have contributed.
Pam's comment on December 30th at 4:50am is very relevant to Bruce Burleson and reinforces my belief that you can't use logic against religious beliefs. Many of you have been hammering Bruce with the "it won't hold up in court" idea, in an attempt to use logic to change Bruce's core beliefs. The trial argument is clearly a dead end. The huge amount written about the court premise is all about conjecture and supposition. Lots of people contributed lots of good stuff but it is just a dead end.
Pam's premise is a hard look at the physiology of death after 5-10 minutes of the heart ceasing. I think that even Bruce will agree that unless the the body is cooled way down, biological life ends about 5-10 minutes after the heart stops beating. Even with the miracles of modern surgery procedures, after 2 or 3 days, resurection is impossible in the real world.
Pam's premise speaks to the core of irrationality. Unless you suspend all laws of life as we know it, one simply cannot be resurrected.
I would guess that Bruce probably accepts many of the tenants of science as correct. He would probably even agree that in the real world, irreversable death does occur 5-10 minutes after the heart stops.
This is where Bruce and his religious brethren jump off the reality bandwagon. They suspend all of their beliefs in the real world, but accept that there is a separate world of the divine, where all rules are suspended and anything is possible. The divine spirit is given complete intellectual freedom to do anything. The spirit is also omnipotent and omniscient. The spirit is given complete authority to break any law of physics or space and time. Pretty cool huh, to have that kind of power given to someone.
The wonderful arguments that all of you so passionately use, in an attempt convince religious people to let go of their belief in the spirit world, will never work against anyone who lets that separate universe of the divine into their belief system .
Until a religious person discovers that within himself there are two belief systems, that of the real world and that of the spiritual world, will he ever be able to see the light.
That explains why some very bright scientists who actively use the scientific method in their profession, still believe in God. In many cases they try to fuse the reality of science with their religion to explain how things work.
That fusion really creates some interesting and wacky stuff. It is their clinging to the core of their spiritual world that clouds their thinking in comparison to an atheist.
Atheists, agnostics and all non-believers have simply made the connection between the real world and the spiritual world. They clearly separate the two. It's not that atheist don't feel a tremendous passion for the mysteries of life. It's just that organized religion does not explain it for them.
As any atheist or non-believers knows, the desire to understand the unknowable is a very powerful and sublime passion.
The frustration occurs when the free-thinkers engage the religious with pure logic. The religious counter with logic and base it upon the facts from their spirit world/religion.
The beliefs in the spiritual world and the belief in the real world are like oil and water. They cannot be mixed. Free-thinkers base their arguments on their reality. Religious thinkers base their arguments on their reality. You cannot mix the two realities. You either argue purely from the scientific method or you argue from spiritual world. You cannot incoporate both.
The instant any scientist argues from his religion or tries to combine any scientifc effort and meld it with his religion, he has instantly invalidated anything that he says.
On another note, everyone should read "Tom in Austin" comments on December 30th at 6:33am. Tom's comment about Jason Bradfield are both very funny and deadly serious. Tom states that Jason's diatribe is a perfect example of why we are all doomed.
As a science professor at the collge level, Tom sees firsthand the declining level of clear thinking that is happening to the youth of today. Tom's observation should scare the hell out of all of us.
I would love to hear from any other professors, teachers or anyone that works closely with young adults or teenagers as to level of "ignorance" that Tom's comment refers to.
Tom, you closed with "good luck my brethren". That is a cop out and I am sure that unless you are plannng to die soon, you are caught up in this mess and its ramifications just like all the rest of us.
Posted by: Philip Tripp | December 30, 2006 11:33 AM
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To Bruce Burleson - here's a text I recommend about evidence and credulity at the time of the Gospels:
http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/richard_carrier/kooks.html
Posted by: Martin | December 30, 2006 11:27 AM
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Back to basics. The issue is whether Jesus rose from the dead. If that happened, Christianity has an historical and rational basis in fact. If it did not happen, Christianity is a lie. Paul lists witnesses to the resurrection in I Corinthians 15. A fair reading of the passage indicates that he is discussing a physical person who was crucified, who died, who was buried, who physically rose from the dead, and who was seen by others. This was the uniform testimony of the apostles - that Jesus rose from the dead and that they saw him afterward. It is presented as an historical event.
Whether or not a person accepts this testimony, it is some evidence of the resurrection. If acceptance of this testimony were purely a matter of science, logic and reasoning, then I would have to agree with David Hume and with most of you that it is more likely than not that there is some other explanation for this story than an actual resurrection. But faith is not purely a matter of science, logic and reasoning. It does need to have factual basis, or it becomes mere superstition. But the mystical experience of true faith, while based in historical fact, is an experience that is beyond the mind.
Sam Harris gives an account in "The End Of Faith" of mystical experiences that he has had while meditating. He has experienced an altered state of consciousness similar to that achieved by Hindu gurus. I do not doubt his experience. My experience is somewhat different. I experience an altered state of awareness and consciousness in my private devotions with God. In that experience, the new testament story becomes alive to me, as though I were communicating through its words with a person on the other side (like these posts, only with an extra dimensionality). I do not hear audible voices, nor do I hallucinate. However, I do become acutely aware of the presence of one who is communicating with me, whom I understand to be Jesus. One of the results of experiences like this is "faith" in the scriptural accounts, which become alive to me and which I experience as part of my own life. There are many other inward benefits of this experience, but faith, which transcends rationality even though it is based in fact, becomes a reality to me - it becomes part of who I am. It would be just as difficult for me to deny the existence of my mother as it would be for me to deny the existence of the God with whom I commune.
For those of you who hope to destroy religion with science, reason and logic, you will find people like me to be hopeless cases. You will just have to tolerate us (unless you have more nefarious plans for us). I do not intend to impose my worldview on anyone politically or ecclesiastically or in any other way. But I am telling all non-believers that there are those who experience something inward and personal (just as Sam Harris does on his own level) that transcends rationality. You may rationalize this and call it a mental disease. But my own faith has an objective basis in evidence (the new testatment) and a subjective experience that confirms that evidence in me. Jesus is presented as actually alive, and I experience him in that way. It has nothing to do with popes or churches or politics or money or organized religion or what I was taught as a child (as I was never taught anything about this form of experience). So do not get overly optimistic about eliminating faith. It will never happen.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 30, 2006 11:22 AM
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Sam:
I would suggest that you demonstrate just how effectively you can shred the defenses of believers by debating one. I suggest you debate any one of the following belivers:
John Ankerberg
Ravi Zacharias
Josh McDowell
Norman Geisler
Posted by: Mark Eaton | December 30, 2006 11:12 AM
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Linda: right on. I don't travel much, but I'll remember next time I do, to do what you are doing, good idea. As described above, I'm also confronting religious bigots nowadays, no longer tolerating them in silence. Their feeble arguments are like swiss cheese.
Posted by: RB | December 30, 2006 11:11 AM
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Paraphrasing Mark Twain on the idea of different religions getting along: I performed a little experiment. I took a dog and cat and put them in a cage together and soon taught them to be friends. Then I added a fox, and soon all three became friends. Then I tossed in a rabbit, some doves, a squirrel, and a hawk. Before long all of them were getting along. Then, in another cage, I put in a Catholic, a Protestant, a Jew, a Muslim, a Pagan, and a Salvation army Colonel. When I came back there wasn't anything left but some bloody rags. "They had disagreed on a theological detail," Twain writes, "and had taken the matter to a higher court."
Posted by: Rick | December 30, 2006 10:49 AM
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hello, anybody home
Posted by: Anonymous | December 30, 2006 10:11 AM
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If Sam Harris takes the time to read all of this and gets to my email, I just want to say Thank You So Much for your book, End of Faith. It really gave me the comfort of knowing that I am not alone in the thoughts I have had about religion for a long time. Two other comments- I am currently reading a book called The Christ Conspriacy by Acharya S. It's an excellent reference that argues the non-existence of a historical person called Jesus. Also, to the question of how to get others to wake up. I write letters to newspapers whenever religious issues come up. Like the claim that the secularists are trying to take Christ out of Christmas. I wrote about how Jesus got put into the winter festivals in the first place (Constantine 360AD gave Jesus Mithras' birthday of Dec. 25th). I found that writing letters to newspapers is a good way to keep the conversation going. Sam Harris's book gave me the courage to challenge irrational public religous statements and put them on the same level as any other statement. Also, whenever I travel, I leave little marker notes in the Gideon's bible in the hotel rooms. I mark the Deuteronomy 21 passage about stoning disobedient children to death with the remark-"Isn't God great?!" I also mark the first page of the gospel of Mattthew which gives Jesus' geneology back to David and then also claims he was born of a virgin and a ghost. I make the remark- "Jesus either has a human geneology or not. It can't be both!" These are little steps to raise awareness, but if everyone who is responding to Sam's ideas do these small things, we may have some large effect.
Posted by: Linda Joy | December 30, 2006 10:06 AM
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Greg:
Thanks for the link. Sick, indeed. If you would like to know the source of such nonsense, check out:
Best to start with:
http://www.yuricareport.com/Dominionism/TheDespoilingOfAmerica.htm
Posted by: DuckPhup | December 30, 2006 9:58 AM
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I am SO SORRY. I meant to post this response to another panelist, on another page. It is a thread that is more tolerant and civil that this thread. Please dismiss my posting. It is out of context with this discussion. Sorry again.
Posted by: John M. | December 30, 2006 9:54 AM
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I have to agree with the Rabbi regarding a common belief system among most atheists. As I list these, you will some obvious parallels to organized religions throughout the world.
1. THERE IS A CREATION STORY. (It is called Evolution.)
2. THIS CREATION STORY CANNOT BE VERIFIED. (No one was around back then, so we can never be sure any creation story is completely true.)
3. THIS CREATION STORY REQUIRES FAITH. (There is no evidence to prove evolution ever happened. That system is a series of suppositions, one built on another. Just as faith is required to believe a Creator exists, faith is required to believe that everything came to exist without an Intelligent Being, by pure random chance.)
4. THIS BELIEF SYSTEM HAS A LEADER OR FOUNDER. (His name was Charles Darwin.)
5. THERE IS A TEXT THAT GUIDES THE FAITHFUL. (Darwin’s foundational text is Origin of the Species.)
6. THERE ARE CONTEMPORARY TEACHERS AND LEADERS WHO ATTEMPT TO ADD INSIGHT AND GUIDE THE FAITHFUL. (These include Sam Harris, Richard Dawkins and the late Steven J. Gould, who all wrote tomes that are often regarded among atheists on the same level as Darwin’s original work.)
7. SUBSCRIBERS FEEL THEIR TRUTH IS THE ONLY TRUTH, AND ALL OTHERS ARE WRONG. (Most atheists are intolerant of other views of creation. They speak in absolute terms about the certainty of their belief system, to the exclusion of all other belief systems.)
8. THERE IS A CONCERTED EFFORT TO SHARE THIS BELIEF SYSTEM. (It is not enough to adhere to this system. Adherents feel the need to share this belief system with others, in an effort to enlighten those around them.)
9. SOME FOLLOWERS FORCE THEIR VIEWS ON THE PUBLIC, THROUGH APPEALS TO THE GOVERNMENT. (This includes attempts to remove all displays of other religions in our schools, government buildings and currency, as well as the successful act of legally banning the teaching any competing theory of creation in our public schools.)
10. SOME ADHERENTS ARE MOVED TO VIOLENT EXTREMISM. (Hitler was inspired by Nietzsche and Darwin. He was attempting to accelerate 'Survival of the Fittest'. Stalin and Mao Tse Tung followed suit, creating evil atheistic tyrannies. This can happen when any or all of the above nine concepts are present.)
I submit this for your consideration.
Posted by: John M. | December 30, 2006 9:48 AM
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Duckphup, Thanks for the response. I agree with your review, I'm very concerned about the hijacking of our nation by all this religious crap. Perhaps you're right about Bruce, how unfortunate for him. A life not lived to it's fullest potential is a tragedy indeed.
I just read this and feel further disturbed:
http://www.peer.org/news/news_id.php?row_id=801
It's sick I tell you, sick, sick sick. :)
Your MLM description is very clever and indeed, I agree, it's fraud at it's zenith. No accountability; no restrictions; no enforcement of truth. I shall save that paragraph for future debates and credit your writing of it appropriately.
Posted by: Greg | December 30, 2006 9:42 AM
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Greg:
Regretably, I must disagree with you. I think that Bruce actually DOES "bleieve all this rubbish." I have encountered many just like him. It is very depressing.
I think that as religion 'evolved', as an aspect of human culture, the people who were the most intimately involved with it began to recognize its potential for influencing people via fear and other powerful emotions, rather than by persuasion.
I think that religion started out as an attempt by men to try to establish an understanding of the world with which they were confronted. At the time the bible stories were concocted, the perception was that the earth was the object and the center of creation. Why? Because they had no reason to think otherwise. Today, as we advance science, we stand upon the shoulders of all the scientists that came before. Back then, there were no shoulders to stand upon... so they did the best they could with what they had... their senses.
They were trying to do what science is trying to do today... trying to understand reality. Today, we have technology and disciplined meta-procedures (scientific method) to help us extract answers from nature.
Back then, they did not.
Today, we have 'theories' to provide consistent explanations for what we are able to observe in nature, supplemented and validated by the additional information that we are able to extract from nature by means of our technology, our disciplined methods and our intellectual tools (mathematics, logic). Most of our theories are incomplete, so we continue to work on them... because we know that they are incomplete.
Back then, they did not have disciplined methods, and they did not have the technology to extract answers from nature. The only information they had access to was what they could see with their own eyeballs. There was no technological knowledge base or scientific context in which to interpret their observations, so they had to appeal to their imaginations... and the 'supernatural'... in order to make sense out of what they saw. Actually, what they really achieved was deluding themselves into thinking that they knew the truth. Amazingly, over time, this delusion has become codified, institutionalized, and incorporated... complete with franchises.
Basically, early religious beliefs can be thought of as a 'hypothesis', concocted by people who were constrained by lack of technology, methodology and intellectual tools... but they sure weren't constrained by lack of imagination.
Over time, the people who were most intimately involved with using these made-up stories to quell the anxieties of their people began to sense a business opportunity... a way to use these made up stories to not just mollify, but to CONTROL people, and to gain wealth and power. It is the BUSINESS side of the equation that has been driving religion for the past 3,500 years or so.
Today, Christianity is essentially a criminal business enterprise, based upon fraud... in fact, it is the world's longest running and most successful Multi-Level Marketing (MLM) scam. The product they are selling is the illusion of 'salvation'... and the 'pay plan' doesn't kick in until after you're dead. Meanwhile the VICTIMS (having been deceived into believing that it is their God-given duty) are out there busily recruiting MORE victims. What a racket! FORTUNATELY, it only works on those who are gullible enough, and sufficiently lacking in critical thinking skills, to fall for it. UNfortunately, THAT accounts for about 80% of the population of the USA. (There are a lot more people who DON'T know how to think properly than there are people who DO know how to think properly.) That is why there are a lot more religious people in the USA than there are 'Free-thinkers'... including Atheists. Also, Christians are generally too dense to realize that proselytizing (spreading the 'good news') is a key element of the Christian MLM MARKETING PLAN, which was instituted after Christianity lost the political power that had previously allowed them to simply torture and kill anybody who did not comply. Now, they merely pester and annoy people to death, through persistent obnoxiousness. If you stop to think about it, you will realize that Christians are very much like the Borg, on Star Trek Next Generation: "You will be assimilated. Resistance is futile."
I would not be surprised to learn that thoughts of Christianity provided the 'creative spark' for the Borg concept.
Interestingly, statistics on supernatural beliefs count the USA on a par with backward, developing Third World nations, rather than among modern, advanced, wealthy industrial powers.
Remember where I said that that scientists (metaphorically) stand "ON the shoulders" of all who came before? Well, that's just the scientists. Religious people are not "standing on the shoulders" of anybody... they are standing "in the sandals" of an ignorant bunch of Bronze Age fishermen and peritatetic goat herders, and basing their world-view in their myths, superstitions, fairy tales and fantastical delusions.
Posted by: DuckPhup | December 30, 2006 9:27 AM
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Bruce:
You have asserted that no scientific study has disproven that the resurrection did not happen. Two points about this assertion:
1. It is false. The 2nd Law of Thermodynamics states that all real thermodynamic processes have losses (irreversibilities) that cause a production of entropy.
The three days of decay of Jesus' tissues, indeed occurring at the molecular level, would have been irreversible. All of the King's men could not put Humpty Dumpty back together again.
2. The burden of proof is not on non-believers. It lies with you. Prove to me that God intervened, suspended all the known laws of chemistry, physics, and biology to produce this "miracle." Explain how it happened.
I suspect I'll be waiting a looooong time.
Posted by: RB | December 30, 2006 9:19 AM
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I don't believe this Bruce chap actually believes all this rubbish. I think he found what he thought was a preverbal hole in the argument that jesus did exist, toward science/evidence to the contrary and has made that his argument by which he holds his faith. It’s rather clever, indeed. Certainly he has had an inordinate amount of attention paid to himself and his ridiculous notion.
If nothing more, the argument has assisted many on this particular blog with information regarding this stupid notion that jesus rose from the dead to the extent that he even existed.
I would be interested in research that attempts to uncover the background of why people are so willing to believe in this crap, let alone turn their life over to it. When you consider it, the aspect is just astonishing with regard to the populous that is involved and the hoards of money they glean from it all. Does anything else even compare?
If a person espouses a religious belief they are diseased within the mind. This is not an issue as everyone has certain levels of disease that they heal to one extent or another over time through various means. The issue is when the disease is so metastasized that it invigorates people to thwart governments, societies, and nations. I don’t believe a person can be rational and hold these religious beliefs at the same time. Their views and decisions will be distorted at the very least with regard to the rest of life. I liken it to being around the schizophrenic and never knowing when he/she will become irrational and violent.
I’ve yet to see a case where this wasn’t true. If you have I would be open to knowing more about it. I appreciate the intellectual arguments put forth here; they are excellent for future debates on other sites and discussions.
Cheers! Happy New Year!
Posted by: Greg | December 30, 2006 9:04 AM
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Bruce Burleson repeatedly makes reference to the credibility of the independent witness accounts of Jesus crucifiction and ressurection contained in the Gospels. What a hoot.
There is absolutely NO archeological evidence to suggest that Jesus actually existed. No writings. No artifacts. No official records. The only non-biblical written references (Josephus, Tacitus) are first of all, hearsay, and secondly, highly dubious hearsay, at that. At least part of the references in Josephus are an obvious forgery, added much later by a Christian scribe.
I have seen several comments here where Christians incorrectly state or imply that the Gospels were written by members of Jesus' posse, who actually witnessed the events. That is absolutely false. The Gospels are NOT independent accounts of actual events by actual witnesses. The First gospel to be written was Mark, just before the beginning of the 2nd century. Matthew and Luke (Bruce: Google for 'synoptic gospels') were written a few decades later, using Mark as a template and then inserting additional fictional scenes in which they put words into the mouth of Jesus... words that came from the 'Q-document', a lost list of Judaized versions of sayings from the Greek Stoic and Cynic philosophical traditions. Thus, many of the supposed SAYINGS of Jesus (in Matthew and Luke... they are absent in Mark and John) are similar... but the scenes and circumstances in which they are uttered are different (Sermon on the Plain vs. Sermon on the Mount, for example). John, the last gospel to be written, apparently did not have access to the 'Q-document', and is even more embellished and discrepant than the others. Earl Doherty ("The Jesus Puzzle") makes a nearly air-tight case for the idea that NONE of the early Epistles refer to Jesus as an actual historical person from the recent past... they present only a 'spiritual' Jesus, who was the product of 'revelation', dreamed up in the context of 'midrashic' modernization of OT scriptures, under inspiration from the 'Holy spirit'... an imagined emanation from the godhead, similar to 'wisdom', or the Greek 'Logos' that presented itself during deep contemplation of scripture, and heavily influenced by zeitgeist. In reading the early Pauline Epistles, it is only when one has their "Gospel goggles" on (Doherty's wonderful expression) that they can be interpreted as having ANYTHING to do with an actual, existing, god-man. In other words, Christianity is based upon additional, later, fictional embellishments of the hallucinations and delusions of Saul/Paul, moreso than anything resembling actual events.
Posted by: DuckPhup | December 30, 2006 8:04 AM
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This was fun, if a bit dizzying. I enjoyed the fact that no one responded to my earlier post - I've never been sure that I am on the right planet. As to I think Judy's plaintive request about agnosticism, I would offer that atheism says all this God hope is never going to work out in our circumstances, while agnosticism implies there might be a small area of hope remaining. This, of course, is pure personal conjecture. The pro-atheist criticisms of "Sam Harris" have been fun - I called him a "quasi-Buddhist," and I have yet to be corrected on that score.He took large amounts of psychedelics, and has sat for hours in meditation. I don't like drugs (alcoholics run in my family), and get headaches from trying to listen to the pounding of my brain. I am against professorial humanism, q then p, lonely typing, and claims to moral superiority. We need no savants in this epochal endeavor - just honest, funny posts, and the world is ours!
Posted by: hofmann | December 30, 2006 7:54 AM
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In response to Bruce, I do not think a trial judge would allow into "evidence" claims that people saw talking burning bushes, talking donkeys, or that dead people somehow supernaturally rose from the dead, for its "truth value" (maybe, however, to civilly commit the declarant :)
If you are a trial attorney you are well aware of the line of Supreme Court cases requiring that testimony be "scientifically reliable" and not suffer from any "analytic gaps" else it is INADMISSIBLE.
The point is, by modern evidentiary standards there can be no "eye-witness" testimony of the above, hence you have no "legal" evidence to introduce.
Hope this helps some on your spiritual journey.
Posted by: Anonymous | December 30, 2006 7:53 AM
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To Kerry Craig Walker
You write:
"I just wonder what kind of world we would have if it contained nothing but people with no sense of wonder about this unknown and mysterious energy behind all life, and behind this universe, and that had this conscience of apathy and superficiality about everything they did."
From where do you jump to the conclusion that atheists have no sense of wonder, a conscience of apathy, and similar baseless accusations?
It is exactly the contrary: The sense of wonder drives an atheist searcher to find out about the next possible step toward truth, using all "god-given" (excuse me) tools he has: Love, wonder, awe, surprise, error, curiosity, openness to possibly quite unexpected results.
What a difference as to human dignity when we compare this mode af action to the stale, boring, obnoxiously immobile, dead and prefabricated, "eternally" unchangeable "truths" the religionists are worshipping!
Gerry
Posted by: Gerry | December 30, 2006 7:38 AM
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The Earth is not 6000 years old.
Posted by: Sybil | December 30, 2006 7:23 AM
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I want you all to note Mr. Jason Bradfield's message. This represents the forefront in scientific knowledge among recent high school graduates. It's highly likely that he is valedictorian of his high school.
He’s a perfect example of why we’re all doomed.
I teach various scientific courses at the college level. The undergraduate students that I see have almost no understanding of logic, the scientific method or of science itself. A peer-reviewed article to them is something that is found on the Internet. We are cranking-out an entire generation of scientifically ignorant citizens. This is approximately the third consecutive generation of logically-impaired Americans. Karl Rove's perfect demographic.
I will ask these questions using a standardized form which is all these students can function with:
1) What do you want to be?
a) an astronaut
b) an athlete
c) “I want to be a member of a successful team.” (Correct Answer)
d) President
2) What campus club or activity grew exponentially over the last decade?
a) drinking clubs
b) young republicans (Almost Correct)
c) Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)
d) Religious clubs (Correct Answer)
If you want a perfect example of what I think America is and will become more of -watch Jerry Springer. How can you expect to carry on in logical conversation with someone you have to ask to put the snakes down before we get started? The only thing we can truly expect is the tyranny of the (ignorant) majority in larger and larger doses. There is nothing that an ignoramus hates more than an intellectual and they will lash out. (The "fourth" response)
Ask Santayana how long has it been since we burned heretics anyway?
Therefore good luck my brethren.
Posted by: TomInAustin | December 30, 2006 6:33 AM
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Bruce is gone because he had to get to school. I think it the fifth grade.
Bradford, thanks for making me laugh this morning. Did you know airplanes are held up by strings held by God? Forget all those scientific reasons we can fly.
Posted by: Duff | December 30, 2006 6:31 AM
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Sorry I'm getting to this after Bruce has gone, but he asked about science as it is germane to the resurrection, and there's a point that no one mentioned - medical science is able to speak to what happens to a body after death, specifically what happens to the cells of body, brain and organs when they are no longer nourished by blood and the oxygen it delivers. If more than a few minutes go by, the damage is irreversible. Not to mention that the intestinal bacteria begin devouring the body from the inside. Therefore, to believe in the resurrection, one has to believe in magic and the suspension of the laws of nature. Not likely to stand up in a court of law. Doctors would testify as expert witnesses as to the impossibility of returning body and brain to a functional state after three days.
The "eyewitnesses" would also be discredited by their failure to publish for 30-60 years, the possibility that it wasn't even they who did so, the fact that they had had time to collaborate, and the fact that they had an agenda (they were pushing a religion).
I don't see how Bruce's case turns out well.
Posted by: Pam | December 30, 2006 4:50 AM
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One more thing,
Most atheists I have encountererd, in life and on these forums, are of the "live and let live" mind-set.
If religion could stay out of our life, atheists could easily keep their nose out of religion. We would gleefully leave you to it.
But because religion is the very antithesis of "live and let live." Because religion asserts massive influence on our social and political discourse, we have no choice but to attack the validity of your claims to supreme knowledge, for which there is none.
We correctly believe that the onus should be on you to prove your outrageous assertion, rather than on us to disprove it.
You are winning right now. You still have influence in spite of the fact that your claims of supreme knowledge grow weaker and weaker year by year. You still have influence.
But the internet is here. Complete access to knowledge is here.
In other words.... tick tock tick tock tick tock tick tock.
Posted by: timmy | December 30, 2006 4:25 AM
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Oh LT,
Anyone who puts forward the notion that atheists have no good reason to be moral immediately loses any intellectual credibility thay might have had prior to such an ignorant assertion.
First of all, there are no shortage of biological and evolutionary explanations for human altruism. This is backed up by data that the most secular societies have a below average crime rate as opposed to their pious counterparts.
Athiests are equally as capablle of compassion and altruistic behaviour as the God fearing.
The only difference is, anything selfless that an athiest does is purely altruistic.
Surely more altruistic than doing good things because God wants you to.
As for atheism being dogmatic?
Not even possible.
Atheism is not a belief. It is a reaction to a belief. It only exists as a reaction to a preposterous assertion.
Atheists are no more a group who all believe in one thing that sceptics.
Posted by: timmy | December 30, 2006 1:38 AM
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To Anonymous or Bruce Burleson:
Thank you for your thoughtful comments. In turn, I will comment on your five responses, and I will hope that others will be interested in this tangent on which we have moved.
1) Jesus was at least a man, and therefore all evidence related to men living and dying is pertinent to your decision about whether or not Jesus was likely to have risen from the dead. If you are overlooking the billions of cases of people dying and not rising from the dead and the accumulated knowledge of human physiology, then you are not considering ALL the evidence pertinent to the decision about the alleged resurrection of Jesus. The evidence that wishful thinking is interfering with your judgement is circumstantial. Your conclusion that Jesus definitely or probably rose from the dead (which is it?) is unwarranted when one applies rational criteria to all the pertinent evidence. In almost all cases, when people use something other than a rational process to reach a conclusion, as you have, they instead use a process of wishful thinking. My suspicion is that the conclusion that Jesus rose from the dead is appealing to you because it feeds your wish that you too will one day rise from the dead. When people wish for something to be true, they often lower their standards of evidence.
2) I am pleased that you mentioned the report which alleges that a Roman soldier stabbed Jesus in the side because this is a good example of the poor evidence often used to support the hypothesis of a resurrection. If it were true that Jesus was stabbed in the side, then this fact would increase the likelihood that he died on the cross. Conversely, if it were false that Jesus was stabbed in the side, then this would decrease the likelihood that he died on the cross. So, it is an important question. I think that it is extremely unlikely that the stabbing ever occurred, and there are several reasons for thinking this: a) Only one of the four Gospels (John) alleges that the stabbing occurred. If the stabbing had occurred, because it would be a major detail, it is highly likely that most or all of the Gospels would have reported it. (In the same way, if three planes had crashed into the Twin Towers, because this would be a major detail, it is highly likely that most or all of the reports would have contained such a detail. It would be very unlikely that only one report or that 25% or less of the reports would contain this major detail.) b) The Gospel of John was the latest of the four Gospels to be written (probably in 90-95 AD) and delayed reports are more affected by lapses of memory, distortions, and embellishments than early reports. c) There appears to be no other report of a stabbing of Jesus on the cross from any other source in history. There is no corroboration of it at all. d) The stabbing makes no sense in the context of the narrative. Remember that it was reported that the Roman soldiers did not break the legs of Jesus because to them he appeared to be already dead. Thus, there would have been no motive to stab Jesus. The stabbing makes no sense when the incident is analyzed from the psychological perspective of the soldiers. e) The report of the stabbing is immediately followed by a statement that the stabbing fulfilled a prophesy. It is as if the author was trying hard to make his description of the incident fit an ancient prophesy. (Ironically, an embellishment wasn’t needed at all, since the piercing of Jesus’ palms and ankles would have been a fulfillment anyway.) Just because somebody says that something happened doesn’t mean that it did happen, or even that it did not happen. The claim must be rationally evaluated. Based on such an evaluation, it appears much more likely that the report of the stabbing was a fabrication by the author of the Gospel of John than that it was a factual report. From all the evidence about human life and death accumulated over the last two thousand years, it is appropriate to have a strong presumption that no resurrection has ever occurred. To claim that one did occur is to make an extraordinary claim which requires extraordinary evidence. The evidence from the Gospels is so weak that it can hardly be considered extraordinary.
3) I do NOT contend that a resurrection has certainly never occurred or could never occur, but I do contend that based on the evidence it is extremely unlikely that one has ever or could ever occur. It is much more likely that the reports of the Gospels contain significant fabrications, speculations, or mistakes than that a resurrection actually occurred. That billions and billions of people have died and stayed dead is evidence against the hypothesis that any man, including Jesus, came back to life.
4) The flaws in the Gospel reports regarding the crucifixion and its aftermath include the following: a) The Gospels were written anywhere from 20 to 65 years after the crucifixion, and delays of this magnitude are usually associated with unreliability. b) Most biblical scholars have concluded that the Gospel authors are anonymous, and thus their credibility history can not be assessed. c) Most biblical scholars have concluded that none of the Gospel authors was an eyewitness of the events about which he reported. (Only one claims to be, and his claim is dubious.) d) The Gospels are not written in the “first person”; they are written in the “third person”, as most novels are written. e) If the Gospels were based on the reports of any eyewitnesses, their identities and positions for observation were not specified. f) There are no signed affadavits. g) There are several contradictions from one Gospel to another. h) There are many major details reported in one Gospel that are not reported in any other, details unlikely to go unreported or unremembered if they actually happened. i) Our English renditions of the Gospels have gone through at least two language translations, and some translation errors are likely. j) There are no first-hand eyewitness reports from medical personnel testifying to Jesus being dead after removal from the cross or being alive three days or more later. k) By agreement of all Gospels, the only person in proper position to verify the death of Jesus was Joseph of Arimathea. We do not have a report from him and he was not present at the meetings alleged to have occurred with an alive Jesus days or weeks after the crucifixion. l) The tomb was probably not guarded at all (only one Gospel says it was) and if it was guarded, this occurred only after the tomb was left unguarded for at least 12 hours. The chain of evidence was broken. m) There are no nonChristian reports of the details of the crucifixion and its aftermath. I don’t see how anybody who has carefully and critically studied the Gospel reports could consider them to be convincing, unless of course, they are motivated by something other than the search for truth, something like wishful thinking.
5) Although you said that you do not confess to know the mind of God, actually you do claim to know it. By concluding that if God exists, he DID cause a single resurrection 2000 years ago, you are at the same time claiming that he WOULD cause a resurrection. You are claiming that causing a single resurrection 2000 years ago is compatible with God’s basic nature, if he exists. I am simply making the opposite claim to yours. I am claiming that he WOULD NOT cause a single resurrection 2000 years ago. Causing a resurrection in this way is not compatible with the basic nature of God, as most people understand it, if he does exist at all. It is more likely that an omniscient, omnipotent, and perfectly good being would NOT cause a resurrection in this way than that he would cause one. For a “perfect being”, there are so many better ways to make a point or teach a lesson.
Posted by: Skeptic in Tallahassee | December 30, 2006 1:37 AM
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I think it is unfair to point to fanatics who act on their own and murder others as evidence that religion is bad.
Any philosophy can be taken the wrong way and abused. I submit for your consideration that it is not religion that has been responsible for countless travesties throughout history. It is, instead, man's desire for power that is responsible. Religion is merely the excuse man uses to accomplish this evil.
Atheism is no exception. Hitler was inspired by Nietzsche and Darwin. He was attempting to accelerate 'Survival of the Fittest', which both Darwin and Nietzsche observed was lagging in modern humans, by creating a "master race". Stalin and Mao Tse Tung followed suit, creating evil atheistic tyrannies.
Did Darwin intend for this to happen? Weren't these brutal dictators acting of their own volition? Were they not hungry for power? Can we blame Darwin for their actions?
How, then, can we blame Christ for the non-believing popes who murdered countless non-believers (and believers) throughout the ages, just because they errantly did so in Christ's name? How can we blame Christ for Catholics bombing abortion clinics? How can we blame Christ for a few misguided evangelicals attempting to take over our government?
As a believer, I see atheist dictators acting on their own. Can any non-believers give me the same with respect to zealots who have ignored the loving, peaceful message of Christ, to create their own agenda?
Posted by: John M. | December 30, 2006 1:32 AM
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I wonder what legions of astrologers would be armed with??
sounds ominous
I wonder if Bush has considered this to be a new terrorist threat.
OK the simple truth as I see it (and I am on neither side):
the real battle issue between both Theism and Atheism is a simple one:
Insecurity.
Both sides are fighting over a question which for so many reasons can not be proven to the satisfaction to the others, and then as a result both sides are threatened at their core values.
And then sadly the legions of astrologers and clowns and mimes and politicians come in, and all hell breaks loose.
Gads this gives me a headache, I mean wake up and just be yourself, and accept yourself. Don't let other people's views change who you are or what you believe in. :) It's really that simple... accept yourself.
But sadly history has shown, over and over again. People just prefer to fight than to be themselves.
Humans are so silly :) bring in the clowns and mines and astrologers .. it makes just as much sense in the end since life is a circus.
My apologies to the astrologers and clowns. But not to the mimes, mimes just freak me out man...
Peace and Acceptance in your way
http://www.personaltao.com/
Posted by: Casey Kochmer | December 30, 2006 1:24 AM
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I will always be grateful to Sam Harris for opening my eyes to things I knew very well in my heart, but was unable or unwilling to see.
What a clear mind is his! He may be somewhat radical at times but at least there is none of the peculiar irrationality found in the likes of Jason Bradley's comments. The latter ends his longwinded and confused arguments against scientific truths by dogmatically stating that truth is the monopoly of religion. What religion? His of course! In a way this apparently childish argument is quite disturbing for the fate of humankind becasue he is far from being the only one professing such odd notions; from bitter professiobnal experience with certain Roman Catholic priests I have had the dubious honour of meeting some of the most retrograde minds of the 21st century. The Chinese Cantonese have a phrase for it: "No need to talk Jesus", which has come to mean "don't talk nonsense". This refers to their very sad past experience with preachers trying in one way or another to force them to believe that Mary conceived God (Jesus) through God. He, aparently, fathered himself. This is one of fundamental so-called truths that Jason Bradley and others like him feel compelled to put above any kind of reasonable argument.
Posted by: Julian | December 30, 2006 1:23 AM
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Saddam went to the gallows clutching his Quran. Will Allah protect him from his victims in the next life? Allah didn't protecte him here so what makes you think Allah is any more present in the next world than this one.
Ever since there's been people the notion of more life after this one has been the norm. That caused our early ancestors to behave themselves. They understood that anyone they killed would be waiting for them when they too passed on to the next life.
God is a man that claims to be able to intercept dead folks between here and the next life. Was he lying? Should I be polite and ask if he was mistaken or had a certain faith? He was the first Christ. Today Christs, people claiming the ability to get one past his imaginary road block number in the hundreds of thousands.
http://www.hoax-buster.org/gov101 is the first God story, the man who drew the 6th line in the sands of ancient Egypt. We know he was lying.
Posted by: BGone | December 30, 2006 1:07 AM
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As to belief in the resurrection of Christ, which Mr. Burleson espouses, imagine that you were sitting on a jury and the witness said -- "yeah, about 50 years ago, or at least according to my friend Barney, who knew Nat about ten years ago, who knew Todd about 35 years ago, this guy had a .38 caliber . . .". -- do you see where I'm going with this?
This is the type of evidence that Christians base their beliefs on. Dated evidence; hearsay upon hearsay, and probably motivated by external events (Christian leaders were becoming embarrassed that the end times forecast by Christ were not happening).
We'd never accept such testimony if we sat on a jury, but somehow this is valid evidence to Christians. (Other religions are based on the same flimsy evidence -- I don't mean to pick on Christianity alone.)
Go figure.
Nothing like the indoctrination of the young to cement ridiculous beliefs.
Posted by: Peter M. | December 30, 2006 12:46 AM
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Dear Jason Broderfield,
I have read your argument and wish to reply. Admittedly, I have not read Gordon Clark nor am I familiar with ‘Clarkian Presuppositianism’ so I will stick to your summarization of his views.
You first say observation is unreliable. Do you mean we are blind because we see? How is that possible?
Next you say multiple readings are taken due to unreliability of the senses. Since senses are unreliable, all scientific claims of truth are dubious.
How did Clark conclude all claims of scientific truth are unreliable? Was it through induction?
But isn’t induction inherently fallacious? You can’t use induction to disprove induction without resorting to a circular argument.
Nextly, if all science is based on induction, why do you next provide an example of a deductive argument in science based on the original fallacious induction?
Let me just say that the original induction is obviously false because the reasons for the inference are doubtful, not because induction itself is doubtful. We know stones are not bread; the inference is false because the premises are false. Once you clear up the false statement leading to the conclusion, your conclusion is on more solid ground. Clark merely points out an example of a fallacious inductive argument and then calls it the essence of all inductive arguments.
The same is true of the deductive argument posed later. To say one deductive argument is representative of all deductive arguments is to rely on inductive reasoning once again.
Aren’t you trying to disprove induction? Then why rely on induction to disprove it, if it is false to begin with?
As for the claim that universal propositions cannot be made because a scientist cannot know if every crow is black for all time periods and and all worlds, let's think about this for a moment.
Why couldn’t you say out of a sample of a 1000 crows, 1000 crows were black, therefore it is probable all crows are black? Isn’t this a well known fact about induction? Induction does not guarantee absolute certainty necessarily. I believe you misunderstand the point of induction in this regard. Induction provides probabilistic conclusions usually. In other words, induction provides tentative truth claims until new information appears. Must scientists gather Absolute knowledge, Absolute truths about the universe? Why? That is the job of the priests, the preachers, and the faithful. Besides, the field of logic is far more sophisticated than the examples of deduction and induction you provided.
What if the Universe cannot be relegated to Absolute Truth Claims? What if we are forced to accept that our theories are tentative and may change yet are still relevant for the time being?
Besides the probabilistic aspect of induction, you also overlook the circular aspect of faith-based truth claims. Is faith truly a better alternative to scientific philosophy? You argue that the basic premises of all scientific claims are based on the inherently fallacious method of inductive and deductive reasoning. Therefore the only alternative is a faith-based belief in your particular religious choice, namely Christianity. Even if you showed that the foundations of scientific philosophy are, in fact, inherently fallacious, which you haven't, the claims of faith-based religion still require reasons for critical acceptance. Otherwise, any belief whatsoever based on any whim or mood is on the same ground as any other belief. Since we are not madmen, we have to analyze a truth statement critically rather than just blindly accepting it. Surely you don’t believe all claims of truth are on the same ground based on pure impulse? Since you don’t, I surmise, it becomes necessary to provide reasons for one’s beliefs. How can you provide reasons for your beliefs if you also believe all methods of reasoning are inherently fallacious?
In sum, you cannot both provide reasons for why deduction and induction are inherently fallacious while, at the same time, provide reasons for why religion is a logical alternative to an allegedly groundless scientific philosophy.
This problem is one of the main reasons, I think, that Sam Harris finds it difficult to accept the claims of religion and of science simultaneously.
The claims of science and religion are based on very different mental attitudes, which I hope is apparent by now.
All forms of extreme skepticism dissolve under the weight of their own arguments.
Al.
Posted by: Al | December 30, 2006 12:43 AM
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To Howard Pepper:
You say, " In response to the question if Sam had seen "...anyone from the religious community actually come to realize the truth...?" I will step forward (and I know quite a few others)."
Let's hear from them - on this forum and however else they can be mobilized.
Posted by: E. Favorite | December 30, 2006 12:43 AM
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> Jeff Reed:
> Ok. Don't quite understand the blind men and the elephant, but nontheless, all else makes sense. Do
> you have any ideas for reconciliation?. For peace?
The blind men and the elephant is one of my more favorite things to keep in mind in discussions of this sort. We might have faith that there is, or is not, a God, but none of us know everything there is to know so we are all ignorant to some degree about what the truth really is. If we're honest, we acknowledge this ignorance. If we have a dash of humility, we are open to learning more because we realize our ignorance.
If not, the moral apples:
http://www.noogenesis.com/pineapple/blind_men_elephant.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blind_Men_and_an_Elephant
So oft in theologic wars,
The disputants, I ween,
Rail on in utter ignorance
Of what each other mean,
And prate about an Elephant
Not one of them has seen!
Your question about reconciliation reminded me of the a spiritual statement of principles that J. Michael Straczynski, an atheist, wrote as part of the Babylon 5 TV series a few years ago so I decided to post it below. I don't think it very important if an atheist uses the word 'universe' and I use the word 'God'. It's still a true statement.
If you're not familiar with the story "Narn, Centauri" etc are alien races. It works equally well substituting Christian, Jew, Atheist, Muslim:
The Universe speaks in many languages, but only one voice.
The language is not Narn or Human or Centauri or Gaim or Minbari.
It speaks in the language of hope. It speaks in the language of trust.
It speaks in the language of strength, and the language of compassion.
It is the language of the heart and the language of the soul.
But always it is the same voice.
It is the voice of our ancestors speaking through us.
And the voice of our inheritors waiting to be born.
It is the small, still voice that says we are One.
No matter the blood, no matter the skin,
No matter the world, no matter the star,
We are One.
No matter the pain, no matter the darkness,
No matter the loss, no matter the fear.
We are One.
Here, gathered together in common cause
We agree to recognize this singular truth and this singular rule:
That we MUST be kind to one another.
Because each voice enriches us and ennobles us,
And each voice lost diminishes us.
We are the voice of the universe, the soul of creation,
The fire that will light the way to a better future.
We are One.
Posted by: fern | December 30, 2006 12:37 AM
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In response to LT:
"*Merely rejecting religious beliefs is not my normal understanding of atheism. My understanding of an atheist is one who feels confident that there is no God. Since one cannot prove God's nonexistence, such confidence can only be dogmatic."
The definition of atheism is the lack of belief in a god. As others have done, you can get into the nuances of strong/weak atheism, but this is at it's core. As has already been pointed out in this thread and in Harris's and Dawkin's own books, however, is that you can't disprove a negative, i.e. that god doesn't exist, the same you can't prove that Santa doesn't exist (to use a previous poster's analogy). But this mere fact doesn't make Santa's existence probable or even likely.
"*This is a very narrow definition of spiritual experience. The statement is true only if there is no personal God to experience. If there is a God, then an atheist who feels confident He doesn't exist is definitionally unable to experience Him."
You confine spiritual experiences to experiences of god. Yet, wouldn't you describe a Buddhist's meditation as some form of spiritual exploration/experience? No God is necessary there. I don't quite agree with Sam's odd segue in this area, but God is not necessary for the spiritual.
"It is rational for an atheist to only ever be self-interested. We can find that self-interest repugnant, we can't prove it's wrong. If on the other, there is a God and the Bible is His Word, we can prove self-interest is wrong."
Not true. Are atheists incapable of caring for their children or loved ones more than themselves? As Dawkins points out, atheists could even be more caring about their impact to others in this life since they don't believe in any afterlife to have further experiences or see injustice righted. Christianity hardly proves self-interest wrong since the salvation of the individual is at the heart of it. Each Christian is foremost concerned with the eternal salvation of their immortal soul, whose salvation can be achieved (depending on the sect) by faith alone or by faith with works. For the Christians who believe that salvation can be achieved through faith alone (as many Protestant sects do), self-interest is most definitely a factor.
"And now let me propose a fourth line to defend Christian belief: I can't prove I'm right, but neither can any atheist prove there is no God. We do not simply surrender to a demonstrative proof of a worldview; such proofs don't exist. Instead, we *choose* to believe in Christ or in atheism or in something else, and that choice matters."
You skirted around your entire point. Yes, it's obviously a choice, but what sort of things is that choice based on? You can't choose to believe in a positive (something) simply because it cannot be authoritatively disproved - like believing in Santa Clause because his existence cannot be authoritatively disproved. Everyone has a choice, but it's the justification for that choice that matters most of all.
Posted by: Anonymous | December 30, 2006 12:31 AM
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LT, you haven't separated belief in God from belief in religion. They're two radically different things. God and the Bible is God's word must both be true for Christian religion to be true. There can be a God and the Bible not the word of God.
In fact, the Bible is a proved hoax. It's worse than that. The modern specification for God doesn't come close to the best one derivable from the Bible. The best interpretation of the Bible, 1501 by number, http://www.hoax-buster.org/sellyoursoul that is too long to repeat here shows the Bible is more likely the word of the Devil than the word of God.
Atheists don't believe in God. What is a person who doesn't believe in religion, any religion? Is that person also required to not believe in God?
Posted by: BGone | December 30, 2006 12:03 AM
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Looked up the elephant thing. So we need to enable the blind to see as well, as we can do. The question is still valid. Do you have any ideas for reconciliation? For peace? And if atheist, agnostic, or of religion, life is not meaningless. Look at your children, and if childless, look at your neighbors, relatives and friends. We are to enjoy the life we have been given, and leave this world better than we were left, so the next generation can enjoy even more. That, I believe, is a decent explanation of the meaning of life.
Posted by: Jeff Reed | December 29, 2006 11:56 PM
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I return to Sam Harris' post and "rise to the defense of God" using the third line, albeit with more nuance than "atheism is bad." I haven't read his book, but I have read his linked column and find several of his myths (straw-men, really) worthy of reconsideration.
1. Atheists believe that life is meaningless.
*Not all atheists believe that life is meaningless, but it is rational for an atheist to believe life is either meaningless or meaningful, and we can't prove either right. However, if the Bible, for example, is true, then life can only be meaningful.
3. Atheism is dogmatic....One doesn’t have to take anything on faith, or be otherwise dogmatic, to reject unjustified religious beliefs.
*Merely rejecting religious beliefs is not my normal understanding of atheism. My understanding of an atheist is one who feels confident that there is no God. Since one cannot prove God's nonexistence, such confidence can only be dogmatic. Jason Bradfield (2nd post) has gotten a lot of flak, but he is correct that any worldview, scientific or religious, is fundamentally unprovable. This third "myth" is actually completely true.
7. Atheists are closed to spiritual experience. There is nothing that prevents an atheist from experiencing love, ecstasy, rapture and awe.
*This is a very narrow definition of spiritual experience. The statement is true only if there is no personal God to experience. If there is a God, then an atheist who feels confident He doesn't exist is definitionally unable to experience Him. An agnostic who isn't sure where He exists can experience Him and be convinced, but an atheist cannot have such an experience.
8. Atheists believe that there is nothing beyond human life and human understanding....Atheists can freely entertain such possibilities.
*"Freely entertain"? How is that less speculative than choosing to believe, for example, the Bible, written over centuries by dozens of people? If we revise myth 8 to "atheists have no logical basis to believe..." then the statement is true.
10. Atheism provides no basis for morality.
*Add "irrefutable" before "basis" and the statement above is true. It is rational for an atheist to only ever be self-interested. We can find that self-interest repugnant, we can't prove it's wrong. If on the other, there is a God and the Bible is His Word, we can prove self-interest is wrong.
Overall, Mr. Harris' column reflects his unwillingness to face the implications of true atheism. Atheism is actually pretty bad. That doesn't prove Christianity is correct, but it may equalize the relative appeal of the two belief systems for some people.
----------------
And now let me propose a fourth line to defend Christian belief: I can't prove I'm right, but neither can any atheist prove there is no God. We do not simply surrender to a demonstrative proof of a worldview; such proofs don't exist. Instead, we *choose* to believe in Christ or in atheism or in something else, and that choice matters.
Posted by: LT | December 29, 2006 11:42 PM
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Ok. Don't quite understand the blind men and the elephant, but nontheless, all else makes sense. Do you have any ideas for reconciliation?. For peace?
Jeff
Posted by: Jeff Reed | December 29, 2006 11:31 PM
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> There appear to be just three: either a person argues that a specific religion is true, or he
> argues that religion is useful, or he simply attacks atheism as intolerant, elitist, irrational,
> or otherwise worthy of contempt.
It's too bad Sam did not run into other arguments besides those three. There is at least one other argument - the blind men and the elephant frame of reference. From this, we perceive a piece of the truth but don't understand how that piece fits into the whole. We see paradoxes in belief and between belief but we don't see how the paradox is reconciled. And most don't understand how people out of various motives have distorted and rewritten parts of religious doctrine for their own limited purposes. In addition, belief in God is no reason to disengage one's brain. After all, the ability to reason is a gift from God and should be used.
Posted by: Anonymous | December 29, 2006 11:09 PM
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No one seems to have addressed Mr. Burleson's point directly, so I will try.
First, no one actually saw the resurrection. Just an empty tomb and Jesus days after he was supposedly dead. Secondly, there are inconsistencies within the eyewitness accounts reported in the Bible (see http://atheism.about.com/od/gospelcontradictions/p/Resurrection.htm). Third, the Bible you read today is not the original source - it has undergone numerous editings, translations, and manipulations over the centuries.
For something as spectacularly improbable as a resurrection and ascension, this is spectacularly weak "evidence."
This came about because you consider this the lynchpin of your belief. Yet I would argue that it is necessary but not sufficient. Eliminating the resurrection would certainly make it hard to be Christian, but so would any number of other things - virgin birth, 6000 year old earth, etc. Depending on they variety of Christian, some are not necessary of course, but for any particular variety there are a number of highly improbable things that must be accepted as true with little or no evidence other than the demonstrably self-contradictory and unreliable books of the Bible.
Posted by: S. Landry | December 29, 2006 11:08 PM
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Quick correction to Bruce's 5 witnesses - Paul (of Tarsus) lived decades after the death of Jesus. While Paul claimed to see an apparition of Jesus, he could hardly be called an eye-witness to the death and resurrection of Jesus (even though Paul formed the foundation for much of Christian theology and some of its doctrine).
That leaves only 4 witnesses. Of these, it should also be noted that Mark, Luke, and Matthew's Gospels are all roughly similar, but that they differ substantially from John's Gospel in content and structure. So there aren't just minor differences and contradictions between the four Gospels, but some quite curious ones that would require explanation in order for them to be called reliable evidence (especially Jesus's last words of "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" in only two of the Gospels).
Posted by: Jeremy | December 29, 2006 11:06 PM
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Question .. Religion tends to cause people to seperate rather then bringing people together .. this creates conflict how can we fix this ...
Together we stand seperate we fall
Posted by: Toquertion | December 29, 2006 10:50 PM
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Ditto, Timmy. And Roger, John Lennon's words couldn't be more appropriate at this sad hour.
Posted by: Kaattie | December 29, 2006 10:46 PM
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Thanks for playing Bruce.
You made it interesting.
Posted by: timmy | December 29, 2006 10:36 PM
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I enjoyed the discussion. Good night.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 10:34 PM
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Amen, Sam, Amen.
John Lennon said it best years ago:
Imagine
Imagine there's no heaven
It's easy if you try
No hell below us
Above us only sky
Imagine all the people
Living for today...
Imagine there's no countries
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace...
You may say I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will be as one
Imagine no possessions
I wonder if you can
No need for greed or hunger
A brotherhood of man
Imagine all the people
Sharing all the world...
You may say I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will be as one
Posted by: Roger Westermeyer | December 29, 2006 10:32 PM
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Have to rebut you again, Bruce. Who cares if you have theologians to opine that in their expert opinion the New Testament is "authentic". The issue is, what is the bulk of the evidence in favor of resurrection? That issue must be decided in court on the best available evidence, with evidence presented that it is reliable. Surely medical science will trump 2000-year-old heresay in a rational court. Oops, we no longer have that in this country, do we? Thanks to the disgusting injection of "faith-based politics" into every aspect of our society, including the highest court in the land. Okay, nevermind, you win.
Posted by: Kaattie | December 29, 2006 10:30 PM
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Bruce it was you that decided to profess that you could win a cout case based on your evidence and I correctly pointed out that your assertion was preposterous.
You should just stick to saying that you believe the evidence and move on from this attempt to make it credible in any legal sense.
Posted by: timmy | December 29, 2006 10:24 PM
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I can't top what Sam said, but I just want to say thanks Sam for saying it.
Posted by: Realist | December 29, 2006 10:24 PM
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Saddam Hussein has been executed. Long live our glorious religious traditions! (And get thee to thy bomb shelters...we will all go together when we go, to quote a marvelous prophet.)
Posted by: Kaattie | December 29, 2006 10:20 PM
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Timmy: Of course there is no case where this has occurred. This is all hypothetical, as this is not a justiciable controversy. Perhaps you and the others can file a class-action suit of some sort, seeking a declaratory judgment that Jesus did not rise from the dead. I will file an answer to that suit on behalf of believers. Let's see what the judge allows.
I did not say that any document 20 years old or older would be the "sole evidence." I only said that the rule cited would allow it to be introduced. You can introduce all your evidence that Jesus did not rise from the dead, if you have any.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 10:14 PM
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"There appear to be just three: either a person argues that a specific religion is true, or he argues that religion is useful, or he simply attacks atheism as intolerant, elitist, irrational, or otherwise worthy of contempt. Any conversation between atheists and believers is liable to fall into one or more of these ruts, or lurch back and forth between them"
We first need to clarify that atheists' or believers alike can be women. And as for the three "ruts": I do not believe that any one religion is the only true religion. Secondly, although religion has been known to unify humans (and if we look around the globe, you can see the positive impact of religion has I believe through history outweighed the negative) I do not believe it to be "the" necessary component of every day life. And thirdly, I do not care if a person is a believer, atheist or agnostic, as long as they respect their fellow human beings. And if any one particular point can be made about Christ, it is that respect for other humans was paramount. Disregard the words attributed to Christ from others, look at his actions. And if any human would simply attempt to follow his actions, then any God would have a hard time not allowing them into whatever Heaven there may be. And if there is no God, then we will still be much better off because I truly believe that his most stringent point was to first make a Heaven here on Earth, before anything else.
Posted by: Jeff Reed | December 29, 2006 10:11 PM
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Kaatie: Daubert (without going into all its legal niceties) requires my expert witnesses to be methodologically reliable. My evidence does not come from experts - it comes from eyewitnesses - fact witnesses. The only expert testimony I need is a theologian to establish that the New Testament is authentic (not true - just what it says it is). Then my eyewitness testimony from that document is admitted under Federal Rule of Evidence 803(16). My evidence will show that Jesus rose from the dead. No evidence that he (not other billions) did not rise from the dead will be introduced, as there is none. Therefore, I will win, as I have the only evidence. There will be a directed verdict in my favor.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 10:08 PM
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Sorry Bruce,
Try it. And see if it works.
You will find that you are so very wrong.
Find me one case where a single word from the Bible was ever accepted as evidence of anything.
According to your interperatation of the legal statute you cited, anything printed in any book more than 20 years ago could be presented as sole evidence of an assertion and hold up in court.
By the way, what are the last names of Mark, Luke, Paul and the boys.
You don't even have any proof that your witnesses exist.
You court case is bankrupt of evidence sir.
Posted by: timmy | December 29, 2006 10:07 PM
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Bruce: Forget about heresay, check out Daubert. Nice try.
(Google it - or dredge it up in the memory banks. Applicable primarily with respect to the lack of scientific evidence that breast implants cause disease, thus resulting in millions of cases of product liability being thrown out.)
Posted by: Kaattie | December 29, 2006 10:04 PM
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Timmy: Please refer to Federal Rule of Evidence 803(16) - "Statements in a document in existence twenty years or more the authenticy of which is established" are not hearsay. All I have to do is call an expert witness such as a theologian, and have that person testify that the New Testament is authentic, which simply means that it is what it says it is. I don't have to prove that it is true beyond all doubt, only that it is authentic (a "real" New Testament), and the statements in it will be introduced into evidence, because they are not hearsay as a matter of law. You will have to wait until another day to celebrate your victory. Nice try.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 9:53 PM
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Bruce: I sincerely appreciate that you have evidence to support your beliefs. The problem for us non-believers is that the evidence you are relying on is papyrus-thin. This evidence surely would not stand up under the Daubert rule.
Peace, and so be it.
Posted by: Kaattie | December 29, 2006 9:47 PM
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but the scientismo is so clearly based on the 10 commandments-
MR STEWART- IN WHAT WAY IS THE PALESTINIAN-ISRAELI CONFLICT BASED ON religion? the faiths lived in harmony in that region for a thousand years-
it is completely political in its nature-
google rabbis against zionism and see what the religious jewish people have to say about it
it seems that you fall into the category of alarmists which is your right- but doesnt make for interesting or edifying dialogue-
isnt there one original idea here?
Posted by: VICTORIA | December 29, 2006 9:42 PM
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Bruce Bruce Bruce,
You have it wrong about how the trial would go.
You would say
"I have this testimony to prove the resurection of Jesus"
And the judge would say
"Where are these people who will testify?"
And you would say
"they have been dead for 2000 years. But I have their sworn statement here in this book."
And the other lawyer would say
"Objection! Hearsay."
And the judge would say
"Sustained. Do you have any other evidence Bruce?"
And you would say...
"Well... No, not really. Just the warm fuzzy feelings in my heart."
And the Judge would say
"Case dismissed"
that's how it actually works.
So the answer is no.
Nobody ever has to admit to you that there is some evidence of the resurection. Because there isn't.
There is only 2000 year old hearsay.
Meaningless in a cout of law.
There.
You have no evidence.
I just destroyed Christianity.
Posted by: timmy | December 29, 2006 9:39 PM
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What a good laugh I had from the person who posted the long sermon aboout science not being true but scripture is. The pathetic morons who post this drivel are taking up valuable oxygen on this planet. The best solution would be to let these idiots; Christian, Jew & Muslim fight and kill each other, if it could be done without harming the rest of us. Of course it can not, so we must find another way. Its these religious fools children I feel sorry for, having to be brainwashed by retarded parents.
It's time to take off the gloves & give these brainwashed cult-members the verbal spanking they so sorely deserve every time they open there mouth with lies about a false god that runs the univerese. "God; a lie yesterday, a lie today & a lie tomorrow."
Posted by: Cliff R. | December 29, 2006 9:34 PM
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Anonymous, formerly known as Duckphup:
I apologize for not fully appreciating the fact that you were being facetious regarding a religious experience. Your post has required much thought. I understand the distinctions that you make regarding faith and belief, and they are well-taken. If Jesus rose from the dead, that is a fact, a truth that exists apart from my belief, faith, knowledge, etc. His resurrection is either true or not true. It does not depend upon my faith, belief or knowledge. I personally believe in the resurrection for the reasons I have stated before. My original point is that there is "some evidence" to support my belief. No one has successfully repudiated that position, and no one can. My faith is not a blind faith, devoid of evidence. I believe in the evidence I have cited, and no one else on this site does. So be it.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 9:20 PM
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I thought the Scientismo example was quite interesting, along with the rest of the post.
Alexei
Posted by: Alexei Poplov | December 29, 2006 9:20 PM
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also making a blanket statement as to the honesty of the friends of god seems a little tacky and doesnt in any way advance his position one way or the other
i had hoped that sonce atheists(non believers?) were more rational and less emotionally motivated and would be above that kind of thing
ah well, were all just people arent we?
Posted by: victoria | December 29, 2006 9:12 PM
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To Doug Adam:
You say:
"A critque of Harris and Dawkins
Conventional wisdom as expressed in the western corporate media maintains that terrorism is motivated almost entirely by religious belief namely in Islam."
This is a caricature of what goes on in the media. Most of them are so darned scared of causing offence that they pretend terrorist attacks have nothing to do with Islam. They are often even scared to use the word terrorist let alone the word Muslim. They certainly chickened out -- for the most part -- when it came to publishing the Muhammad cartoons.
Further along you say:
"If this is true then the world will never know peace, the prognosis therefore is that death and destruction will continue in the world for all eternity."
Maybe the world will never know peace but it would sure stand a better chance of doing so if most of the worlds citizens were not enslaved by patently nonsensical religious beliefs.
"The intellectuals (is this supposed to be a pejorative term?) Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins appear to subscribe to this doomsday analysis but they also seem to be implying that if the majority are converted to atheism the world will be delivered from religious inspired terrorism."
It is hard to know what to make of this caricature of what Harris and Dawkins say in their books. Have you actually read their books? Neither of them would even remotely suggest that throwing off the shackles of religious beliefe would suddenly and miraculously produce a peaceful utopia. All they are saying is that the world would be a much better place if it was not held back by baseless religious dogma.
You go on to say that:
"However there is a glimmer of hope because another belief exists that terrorist and suicide attacks are motivated by political events. (This does not deny that their religious convinctions, like patriotism, may supply their courage to make the supreme sacrifice.) This seems to be more reasonable than the proposition it is just religion or hatred of the U.S."
Nice of you to say that "This does not deny that their religious convictions, like patriotism. may supply their courage to make the supreme sacrifice." This is a sort of half hearted concession that religion does plays a role in the current conflicts in the Middle East and its spill over into the West. Your use of the word "may" is ,however, a grudging concession. Let me ungrudgingly concede (as I am sure Harris and Dawkins would) that political considerations do pay a role in the conflicts.
Your problem seems to be that you have a kind of either/or attitude rather than a both/and attitude. Moreover, I think you play down the role of religion way beyond what is justified. The Taliban in Afghanistan was (and will again be if it is given half a chance) one of the nastiest examples of religiously based oppression in the history of the world. And it was hardly foisted on the Afghanis by lust for oil or other indefensible motives on the part of the West.
You come very close to talking as if Bush, Harris and Dawkins are in bed together -- which you must know is so way off the mark as to be laughable.
Apart from the final quotations (some of which are rather odd) you end by saying:
"Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins, in their noble mission to expose the fallacies of religion have opted for an easy ride and jumped on the bandwagon of U.S. and U.K. propaganda machines which lie and exaggerate to engender fear to ensure a compliant and at times somnambulant public. Harris and Dawkins have departed from truth and logic in this respect which is unprincipled and a disservice to their just cause."
On the one hand you talk about H&D's "noble mission" and "just cause" yet you begrudge them the common courtesy of fair treatment and, at very minimum, a more discerning read of what they actually have to say. They are certainly not uncritical supporters of Israel but to imagine that the Israeli/Palestinian conflict does not have religious roots (my God is better than your God rubbish) going back well over a thousand years is to be blind to the truth.
Incidentally, Dawkins certainly has no hesitation in criticizing Tony Blair -- nor does Harris when it comes to Bush and they are hardly prone to fall for what you call "propaganda".
Let me end by asking you a question. Do you really think that the current Middle East conflicts would exist in the form they do if the Arab and other Muslim nations had outgrown their religious shackles and the USA had not gone backwards in terms of its obsession with fundamentalist religious beliefs? Maybe there would have been an agnostic President in the USA and a democratic governance structure in Saudi Arabia.
Posted by: Ted Swart | December 29, 2006 9:11 PM
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I wonder if teaching the children "Scientisimo" is the same thing as teaching them lies. I suppose it depends on whether or not the teachers have faith. The 11th commandment, "Thou shalt not believe thy own lies" is the most violated of them all. Religion is useful because the truth is not important only what people believe is important.
Posted by: BGone | December 29, 2006 9:10 PM
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Well, as a believer with an open mind and hopefully respectful to my fellow humans- i was very interested to find out what seems like the spokeperson for atheism-agnosticism thinks.
sadly- it seems like not only right wing christians use 911 as an alarmist battle cry to get the little soldiers in order-
it seems improbable that if hes so intelligent he doesnt know how to separate politically motivated actions from religiously motivated ones.
so i can only surmise that he knew what he was doing.
it is most unfortunate that mr harris has not found intelligent intellectual foils of belief to spar with-
its a very limited category of 3 that he thinks all believers fall into in respnonses
i really was hoping to have my mind blown a little
like i keep saying
any fool can enumerate the problems
it takes real guts and brains to come up with solutions
(not implying foolishness to mr harris or anyone this is my saying)
with mild disappointment but not surprise anymore
peace all
Posted by: victoria | December 29, 2006 9:07 PM
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Travis Fowler: You have pointed out many failures of Christians and Christianity. Good job. Christians need to hear about their failures, which are legion. You have failed to disprove the evidence that exists for the resurrection of Jesus. But you are in good company.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 9:06 PM
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The scientific understanding of nature is lost on the religious.
Nature has no care as to your skin color, gender, sexual orientation, religion, right, wrong, good, bad, moral or immoral.
It does care about survival and those that are strong enough to survive it, be they human, animal, etc. (although we are animal, you get my point).
Given this understanding of Nature, we are better off as a civil society deciding, that which is socially acceptable with regards to laws and rules in order to stay civil and organized. Create consequences for behavior that deviates from this foundation and be done.
The moralizing of any society is doomed from the start for the most obvious of reasons.
Posted by: Greg | December 29, 2006 9:02 PM
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Greg: Sorry that I offended you. Apparently there is no basis for further discussion.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 9:01 PM
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Ted Swart: I also appreciate your honesty. Reasonable people can disagree.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 8:56 PM
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Michael: I read your comments with interest. Here is my response. The issue in your court analogy is "did Jesus rise from the dead." I bring in my five witnesses who testify that he did. You bring in your billions of witnesses who say nothing at all about Jesus. I would then move for a directed verdict in my favor, as you have brought forth no evidence at all that Jesus was not resurrected, which is the point at issue in the trial. I win - the judge will grant my motion because I alone have brought evidence that Jesus rose from the dead, and you have not brought one piece of evidence that he did not. There is no issue about other people - only Jesus. This is the testimony that has lasted for 2000 years - that Jesus physically rose from the dead. I fully agree with you that no one else has. That is not in dispute.
All claims that someone rose from the dead must be evaluated by looking at the witnesses. This is why I believe Matthew, Mark, Luke, John and Paul, and not all the Heaven's Gate and Elvis believers. They have not, and will not stand the test of time, and my assessment of them is that they are not worthy of belief. You may disagree. But to put the New Testament in the same category as Elvis is indicative of the fact that you have not seriously studied it. But thanks for your arguments.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 8:48 PM
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Travis - great points, I've saved them for future debates on other sites, I shall justly give credit to you for your insight.
Philip - check out Townhall.com, it's filled with this religion garbage. I've spent about a 1/2 year since the site started, battle with the unenlightened. Dawkins, Harris, this blog and others have supported my position and helped clarify it.
Kaattie - nice post. I do try and keep my comments short, thanks for the reminder.
Cheers!
Posted by: Anonymous | December 29, 2006 8:41 PM
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After watching all 10 of the Beyond Belief sessions, I felt enlightened, enraptured, edified; then disheartened and cynical. In spite of the eloquent, heartfelt, informative presentations and the inestimable Mr. Dawkins, I cannot help but to conclude that in the debate between science and religion, science and humanity does not stand a prayer.
What I find most disheartening is that there is a debate science and religion at all. Both are so intransigently ensconced in their respective camps that neither is willing to concede its respective shortcomings and fatal flaws. That lays the foundation for my cynicism.
Science may know the properties of the carrot down to his most elemental cellular structure. But science cannot explain the creation of the carrot. Borrowing from one of the above comments, science may prove to a mortal certainty that every crow ever seen and known to man was black. Christian clerics need only announce that a red crow divulged to Jesus the orgin of the carrot,to, with the support of their one billion plus followers, have anyone who denies the existence of red crows to be deemed a heretic,stood up against a wall, and shot. The point is, that science's greatest fear is that its scrupulously constructed emperical truths will be denigrated to heresy by a groundswell of religious fervor. While religion's greatest fear is that its carefully honed anti-truths that have been sustained by centuries of the fervor of its congregants will collapse of under the weight of irrefutable truth. Therein lies the dilemma that must ultimately be confronted by folks like me.
Not for a moment do I believe that lotus flowers gave birth to humanity, Earth was brought into being in six days, or that Phaeton, during his joy ride with the sun, descended upon the people of Ethiopia and turned them black. But given the choice of believing such drivel or being shot, call me a coward, but I would most likely embrace the former. Science may well carry the day with reason and truth. But religion seems poised the win the war with bullets and bombs. As one who excepts as truth the existence of a superior being, but totally reject the self righteous, self serving polemics of religion, I see no outcome in this debate that will be beneficial to the human race. Science may well learn the truth about origins of all things, but never their creation. Religion will remain intractible in its anti truths regarding the creation of all things without extending as much as a casual nod to the truths about their origins. But neither science nor religion can lay claim to bragging rights in the area of human morilatity.
Science continues to argue that it can provide imperical foundations for ethics and morality, but sees no immorality in giving us even more powerful guns, poison gas, and, of course, the nuclear bomb. It rightly extols it extraordinary achievements, but then seeks refuge behind an impassive truth god when confronted on the issue of moral responsibility. From the beginning to even as I am writing this comment, religion as committed some of the most unconscionably vilest, dispicable acts in the name of morality, but has articulated and demonstrated morality with levels of heroism and bravery that science cannot begin to approach. So at this moment, our species is, in my estimation, moving unalterably upon a course of self extermination with solutions from neither science nor religion in sight.
Why?
During his military campaign in the Middle East, Napoleon marveled at the discipline of the Arab fighters. When he was told that their willingness to die so readily was because of their religion, he brought in a tutor to teach him about Islam. When he became emperor of France, he began restoring to the church what had been confiscated from them during the reigns of monarchs. There is no evidence of Napoleon being an especially religious man. But he well understood that a man is far more likely to steal a loaf of bread knowing that he is going to jail, than to steal a loaf of bread knowing that he will go to Hell. Therein lies the challenge to both science and religion. If the truths uncovered by science emboldens men to steal bread, and the fraud that is religion dissolves their fear of Hell, upon whom will fall the responsibility of providing the moral compass that will show humanity the way from extinction?
In about a month or so, a novel written by me will be published by Iuniverse. It's title is "The Phaeton Continuum." In addition to being, what I think, is a damn fine mystery, it will offer a unique and profound perspective on religion and, hopefully, possibilities for science to explore. Watch for it online through Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and Iuniverse.
Posted by: Charles T. Williams | December 29, 2006 8:37 PM
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Hey, you long-winded-ones must be firing up the ovens for no one to have posted in like an hour? Just make your (cogent) point.
Posted by: Kaattie | December 29, 2006 8:26 PM
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Okay, Doug Adam, very nice diatribe. I agree with you almost 100 percent. But, Sam, Richard et al are not arguing that theism is the root cause of all the evils you describe. In fact, most of their argument uses the current political state in the Middle East as only an exemplar of how useless, irrational, incoherent, laughable and EMBARASSING (to borrow from several posters on this site) belief systems influence human (political or sociological) events. Faggetaboutit. We're talking here about universal God-uselessness!!!! Yeah the whole world's a mess but I am f-ing sick and tired of In God We Trust, and I pledge allegiance under Dog, please, we need to find a way to get it out of our daily lives if we don't want to be a part of it!
I have to say, Bruce said a good thing - to state, "I do not believe in God, any God", is not a proposition that anyone can refute! Because that debate can never be won or lost, at least not for centuries or millenia, as long as it takes for aliens to come and save us!
Posted by: Kattie | December 29, 2006 7:44 PM
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Bruce Burleson wrote:
Duckphup: If your position truly is that "I do not believe that God exists" and not "I believe that God does not exist", then I agree that your position is not faith based. But when you say that you would reassess your logic if you had a personal divine experience (your "noodly appendage"), are you not admitting that subjective experience which confirms objective evidence provides a rational basis for faith? Therefore, if I have had such an experience, and it is in accord with the evidence in the New Testament, would you not have to admit that, for me personally, my faith has a rational basis?
********************
I was not "... admitting that subjective experience which confirms objective evidence provides a rational basis for faith." I was being facetious.
First of all, I did not say that I would "reassess my logic"... I said that I "...would be logically obliged to reasses my disbelief". There is a difference, you see. Further, the context related to a direct PHYSICAL encounter with an alleged diety... which, of course, is never going to happen to me, since there is no such thing as magical sky-fairies... er... gods. It's not going to happen to you, either... in "accord with the evidence in the New Testament", or in accord with anything else.
If you asserted that you had such an experience, I can assure you that nobody would suspect you of being rational... there is nothing 'rational' about religious faith.
Let's examine 'belief' and 'faith'. 'Belief' is very much misunderstood. It is perfectly correct and acceptable, in ordinary conversation, to say things like:
"I believe that the sun will come up tomorrow."
"I believe that OJ did it."
"I believe that the earth, the universe and Heaven were created in six days."
However, in the course of non-trivial discourse, there are important distinctions to be made with respect to nuances of meaning... nuances which seem to ESCAPE THE NOTICE of the majority of people... that majority being those with a 'religious' mind.
A real 'belief' is a certainty of the absolute 'truth' pertaining to some aspect of existence and/or reality. It is one of the primary 'filters' via which we interpret input from objective reality, and from which we create our 'self-description' and our world-view... our 'subjective reality'. Here are the key elements of that internalized filter set:
* Misconceptions
* Prejudices
* BELIEFS
* Knowledge base
* Experiential reference
With our five senses, we are able to perceive only a tiny fraction of a billionth of a trillionth of the input that the universe provides. Most of what we DO perceive is filtered out by the subconscious. The tiny bit that is left over gets processed through those 'filters' of our self-description... and the output of those filters is our 'world-view'... our 'subjective reality'. Of course, in addition to what we perceive directly, we also similarly process abstracted information... stuff that we read, hear from media, from teachers, from preachers, from our family, associates and aquaintences.
So... going back to the sentence "I believe that the sun will come up tomorrow"... that is not really a 'belief', per se. First of all, it is a metaphor, not a statement of fact. Second, we all know that some day, the sun will NOT "come up tomorrow." In about 5 billion years, the Earth will be reduced to a crispy critter and then blown away as ashes, as the sun expands to a red giant. No... at most, this statement can be said to represent a 'reasonable expectation', supported via 'knowledge base' and 'experiential reference'. It is not a real 'belief'. This is NOT the kind of thing that gets incorporated into the primary filters of our 'self-description'.
Similarly, "I believe that OJ did it" is really just a strongly-held opinion, based upon evaluation and interpretation of the 'evidence', as influenced by our misconceptions and prejudices. It in no way represents a definitive statement or certainty of 'truth' with regard to existence and fundamental reality. This, also, is NOT the kind of thing that gets incorporated into the primary BELIEF filters of our 'self-description'. However, it MIGHT affect our misconceptions and prejudices, and contaminate our 'knowledge base'.
The final statement, though... "I believe the bible, which says that the earth, the universe and Heaven were created in six days"... represents a fundamental component of one's self-description. It is a primary filter, through which one interprets, evaluates and judges information which might potentially have an effect on one's interpretation of reality... for example, new information about the age of the universe, the age of the earth, evolution... all of that gets processed... and rejected, as false by the religious person... here... in this filter. Beliefs are an internal representation of what we hold to be absolute certainty of 'truths' pertaining to findamental aspects of existence and objective reality. Well, guess what? NOBODY knows ANY absolute 'truth' pertaining to objective reality. (The ONLY thing we an say with any certainty about objective reality is that it is 'non-local', as revealed by Bell's Theorem.) Essentially, then, a 'belief' is a delusion, which is sustained by 'faith'... wishful, magical, thinking. It has nothing whatsoever to do with what IS.
Belief is an insidious mind-killer... it cuts one off from the intellectually honest (willing to question and doubt the veracity of one's own assumptions) consideration of alternative possibilities.
Imagine Mr. Mackey, the counselor, on South Park: "Bleeefs are baaaaddd... m'kay?"
The only way for a person to 'evolve' (change and grow) spiritually and personally, and achieve 'open-mindedness' (the ability to honestly consider alternative possibilities) is to ELIMINATE beliefs... and prejudices... and misconceptions... from that internal filter bank.
Open-mindedness and intellectual honesty, quite simply, are not a possibility in conjunction with a religious belief system. It is only when 'beliefs' are DEMOTED to 'paradigms' (useful ways of thinking about things) that personal and spiritual growth can effectively begin, and open-mindedness can (some day) be achieved.
Oh... and we must learn to get comfortable with the concept of "I don't know." That does, after all, describe the 'true' state of affairs.
Anyway... 'faith'... as stated above, and in the context of religious belief, is nothing more than wishful, magical thinking. It is the insubstantial, ephemeral clouds upon which 'belief' is sustained. 'Faith' is a substitute for evidence... 'belief' is a substitute for knowledge. Faith + belief = delusion.
It is interesting to note, referring to the inability of the religious mind to discern subtle differences in the meaning of 'belief', they similarly are unable to discern or appreciate subtle nuances of meaning pertaining to the concept of 'faith'. Fundamentalist preachers seem to be aware of this deficiency, and use it to their advantage. Typical evangelical harangues include things like "You have 'faith' that the chair you are sitting in is not going to collapse under you, don't you? You had faith that the plane that brought you here wasn't going to crash, didn't you? You have faith in your spouse, don't you? Well, have faith in the Lord." They are simply unable to discern the qualitative differences that are implied in those uses of 'faith'. It is very disconcerting, when having a conversation with someone, to suddenly realize that they are not capable of making the kinds of subtle distinctions that the rational person for granted.
Posted by: Anonymous | December 29, 2006 7:37 PM
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Sam's article certainly has stirred up the choir. The problem is that while we all have different perspectives on this issue, most of us who are responding are non-believers. We are in effect, preaching to the choir. Figuratively speaking, Bruce Burleson is a lamb who stepped into the den of lions. He certainly has retained his views in the face of much feedback. I wouldn't expect him to be different than any believer, regardless of their faith.
With so much fervor, energy and thought spent denouncing religion on this site, how about if some of us lambs go into the religious lion's den? There must me a huge number of web sites, where the choir is very religious, that we could go into and make some kind of assertion that God does not exist. Using a similar assertion that Bruce Burleson made, I think we could stir up the water just like Bruce has. If each of us follows up the responses with some of the wisdom imparted by Harris, Dawkings, Dennet et,al to bolster our arguments, I can't think of a better way to utilize the anti-religious passion on this site.
If anyone agrees with me and could publish a list of sites, I would be happy to throw myself to the lions. I used to do this regularly over thirty years ago, long before the internet. I use to attend meetings sponsored by various churches in my area. The meetings were usually held in someone's home and they welcomed fellowship with new faces. That was my way of getting in the door.
What I experienced, many years ago, is quite different than what Bruce experienced today. While many of the attendees at those meetings spoke with great concern about my beliefs, a small minority were outright hostile and on several occasions I felt that my personal safety was in great jeopardy by attending the meeting.
One observation of mine when reading the comments on Sam's site, is that most comments are rational and name calling and threats are rarely if ever used.
I think if you venture into the lions's den you will be shocked at some of the attitudes towards your prescence on the site and may even be threatened with violence. Religious dogma does not welcome opposing views. It is a closed club and only open to members.
On another note, I really think that Tim Rykert nailed it on his comment on December 29th at 4:59pm in which he began with "This debate is in desparate need of clarity". Right on Tim!
The same for Kaatie, Stan Yoder, Burton Wolfe, Duckphup et,al. My hat is off to all of you.
Posted by: Philip Tripp | December 29, 2006 7:32 PM
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How many people have been killed in the name of god? Why?
If the gospels are the accounting of the life of Jesus and a guide on how people should live...why are there so many different interpretations of those words?
Which interpretation is correct and why?
Why were gospels deemed unfit for inclusion in the bible? Might have had something to do with differing accounts of parts of Mr Burlesons accounting of the "facts".
Why have many religions moderated their positions over the years? To keep membership, power, and money?
Why do 90% of the Christians I know fail to live by the words of god dispensed in their respective churches? To keep up appearances, to keep a spouse happy, or maybe as a just in case...like...hey I'll go to church, just in case there really is a hell.
What I've gleaned from historical accounts is simple. Christianity was a way for men to gain power and maintain power....not only in morality but in government as well. It provided some structure and meaning to a largely poor and illiterate contingent. For all those that willingly adopted the Christian faith...how many adopted it with a sword against their throat?
My christian friends talk about many good things from religion. Friendship, brotherhood, charity, compassion, a strong moral compass. Oddly enough I have all of those things without faith. I am somehow able to have all of those things without being subjected to any guilt about how to live that way.
I happen to enjoy it when my neighbors wife does yardwork in her bikini. Sometimes I think impure thoughts. There was a time that I would deserve death just for saying that. Nowadays maybe that's only a slap on the wrist for a Christian..... are the 10 commandments only for show?
My actions are my responsibility. I have no excuses when I commit a wrong and I have no crutch to fall back on to make me feel better about myself. Religion generally proves itself to be a hyprocrisy.
Posted by: Travis Fowler | December 29, 2006 6:57 PM
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Bruce
I'm glad you're getting the attention you seek outside of yourself on this blog, perhaps with enough of it; you will find the esteem within to stop seeking outside of yourself that which can only be found within.
One seeks outside himself/herself that which they cannot find from within; projection is the means by which we personalize the experience, regardless of its truth or not to make ourselves feel better about ourselves and the world around us.
One does not seek god when one accepts the traits of adulthood that include responsibility and accountability for all aspects of one's life; there's no need to do so.
Many adults get stuck in childhood fantasy and magical thinking which leads to many fallacious ideas including god, happily ever after, perfection, someone will save me, if I’m good Santa will bring me presents, etc.
Science, reason and logic need not provide proof of god's existence. Utilizing your bible text is a circular argument that is unsubstantiated and lacks any credible evidence. Do you have your beliefs beyond the text? Notice how the position of science, reason and logic allows for all human beings to live their life as they wish; notice how religion is controlling, manipulative and destroys people.
While I have been entertained by the attention you've received, you are being intellectually dishonest to make the claim that a man, any man, arose from the dead to walk the earth again without any irrefutable scientific evidence. While you may be comfortable with this illogic, it hardly holds any intelligence to any reasonable person with logic on his/her side.
The line of danger comes into play when others like yourself decide to fly planes into buildings because they believe something of a religious nature; war is more tolerable when it's against a particular nation who's ideals differ from ours upon their attacks on our soil; war with an ideology of religious beliefs is a war difficult to win, if at all.
If our country continues down this road of religion, having our government hijacked by Christianity and other religious beliefs, we will certainly self-destruct or be taken over by another that will find this weakness from within; so far Islam has managed a media campaign that has successfully divided the country.
I do not respect your religion or beliefs about it as it has been the basis for too many deaths along with bigotry, hatred, and discrimination.
Posted by: Greg | December 29, 2006 6:53 PM
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On the question of what should atheists do about religion?
The debate seems to be Revolution? or Evolution?
For those who are arguing for Evolution, I'd like to know exactly who you are arguing with?
Certainly not me or Sam Harris or Richard Dawkins. Nowhere in either of their books do I see a call for revolution. I see no call for gatherings or meetings or plans to overthrow anything.
Sam and Richard are not leaders of the Revolution.
They are raising our conciousness to the evolution that has been taking place for centuries.
It is by natural selection that their books were printed and published. Go with it.
Timmy
Posted by: Timmy | December 29, 2006 6:50 PM
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A critque of Harris and Dawkins
Conventional wisdom as expressed in the western corporate media maintains that terrorism is motivated almost entirely by religious belief namely in Islam. If this is true then the world will never know peace, the prognosis therefore is that death and destruction will continue in the world for all eternity. The intellectuals Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins appear to subscribe to this doomsday analysis but they also seem to be implying that if the majority are converted to atheism the world will be delivered from religious inspired terrorism.
Added to this philosphy of course is the ‘brilliant’ observation of of President George W. Bush that terrorism is motivated by hatred of ‘Freedom and Democracy’ exemplified by the United States. I suggest that ‘hell will freeze over’ before myth and superstition is supplanted by world wide love of the Bush adminstration. I also believe the same can be said of the idea in the wholesale acceptance of scientific understanding per the Harris/Dawkins axis no matter how many books they pen, nothwithstanding that their pursuit of atheistic reason and logic is entirely commendable.
Of course the thought of perpetual war may gladden the hearts of the wealthy elite who receive huge profits from the Military Industrial Complex. General Dwight Eisenhower warned the world about this complex in his farewell speech on his departure from the presidency of the United States. How prophetic are Eisenhower’s words today? For instance David Lesar, the head of Halliburton has personally made over a hundred million dollars since the Iraq war began!
Political lobbyists to the U.S. Congress hire former high-level military people who are paid huge amounts of money for services rendered; they deliver cash that go into the campaign funds of the two political parties which according to Greenwald “is quite shocking.” Halliburton is only one of many companies with ‘no tender contracts’ who are on this war gravy train being protected at the highest levels of government. They have no interest in securing peace which would inevitably slow their cash flow. The proposition that it is a ‘war against the Moslem religion.’ is a licence to print money for the war profiteers in perpetuity. Of course this largesse is curtesy of the tax paying middle class, the elite pay little or no tax, some even received subsidies.
However there is a glimmer of hope because another belief exists that terrorist and suicide attacks are motivated by political events. (This does not deny that their religious convinctions, like patriotism. may supply their courage to make the supreme sacrifice.) This seem to be more reasonable than the proposition it is just religion or hatred of the U.S.
It is impossible to address the religious concepts in the short term but if politics are the main cause of most of the conflicts and these were to be addressed. it would be possible to bring a modicum of peace and understanding in the world in reasonable time. Why could not this path have been taken before a large part of the Middle East was set on fire?
I offer the following from the Wikipedia free Encylopaedia in support of my contention that terrorism is mainly motivated by political considerations in opposition to military domination of one country by another: -
‘The 9/11 Commission Report determined that the animosity towards the United States felt by Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the "principal architect" of the 9/11 attacks, stemmed "not from his experiences there as an Islamic student, but rather from his violent disagreement with U.S. foreign policy favoring Israel." The same motivation has been imputed to the two pilots who flew into the WTC: Mohamed Atta was described by Ralph Bodenstein—who traveled, worked and talked with him—as "most imbued actually about... U.S. protection of these Israeli politics in the region." Marwan al-Shehhi is said to have explained his humorless demeanor with the words: "How can you laugh when people are dying in Palestine?"
According to official U.S. government sources, the September 11th attacks were consistent with the mission statement of al-Qaeda. The overarching motivation for the present al-Qaeda campaign was set out in a 1998 fatwa issued by Osama bin Laden, Ayman al-Zawahiri, Abu-Yasir Rifa'i Ahmad Taha, Shaykh Mir Hamzah, and the (Amir of the Jihad Movement in Bangladesh, Fazlur Rahman).[53]
The fatwa, in part, lists three "crimes and sins" committed by the Americans:
• U.S. military occupation of the Arabian Peninsula.
• U.S. aggression against the Iraqi people.
• U.S. support of Israel.
The fatwa states, in part,that the United States:
• Plunders the resources of the Arabian Peninsula.
• Dictates policy to the rulers of those countries.
• Supports abusive regimes and monarchies in the Middle East, thereby oppressing their people.
• Supports Israel, and wishes to divert international attention from (and tacitly maintain) the occupation of Palestine.
The Question is why have not the true political motivations of the terrorists, along with their stated aims received any real prominence in the corporate mass media? I suggest it is because of the incestuous relationship beween the corporate media, the military industrial complex and the Whitehouse, the media of which slavishly and largely without question propagates Whitehouse foreign policies, for if these policies were open to discussion in relation to the motivation of the terrorsts it would make the Bush cabal deliberations subject to scrutiny and change which in turn would hinder the spread U.S. corporate and military power throughout the world which has been so eloquently and accurately described by Rodrigue Tremblay, Ph.D in his book ‘The New American Empire.’
Sam Harris and Richard Dawkins, in their noble mission to expose the fallacies of religion have opted for an easy ride and jumped on the bandwagon of U.S. and U.K. propaganda machines which lie and exaggerate to engender fear to ensure a compliant and at times somnambulant public. Harris and Dawkins have departed from truth and logic in this respect which is unprincipled and a disservice to their just cause.
Doug
For further information go to the video clip “What motivated the 9/11 hijackers? See testimony most didn't, Lee Hamilton, vice chair of the 9/11 Commission said, "…….I'm interested in the question of motivation of these hijackers……..”
Found on Google, MSN Search, Ask.com
QUOTATIONS.
“The first casualty when war comes is truth”. Iraq? Ed
Boake Carter, American Journalist and Radio Reporter 1989-1940
“And always we had wars, and more wars, and still other wars — all over Europe, all over the world. Sometimes in the private interest of royal families, but never a war started for any clean purpose, there is no such war in the history of the race.”
Mark Twain
‘Christianity has made one half the world fools and the other half hypocrites’
Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) third President of the United States
Any forces that would impose their will on other nations will certainly face defeat
General Vo Nguyen Giap (Vietnam)
.
Posted by: DOUG ADAM | December 29, 2006 6:48 PM
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To Bruce Burleson:
I am sorry I got your name wrong in my previous post. And I must thank you for absolving me from having to grapple directly with your either/or conundrum.
Nevertheless I can not absolve myself since now that you have defined your concept of God very clearly I have a confession to make. I was born into an Anglican family and once believed in a God in much the same way as you do. That was until I realized I was being untruthful with myself since I did not believe some of the core beliefs (of Anglicanism) which I was supposed to believe. So I hunted around for another home and ended up becoming a Quaker which suited me fine for a while until I realized that even the creedless, priest free Society of Friends held to ideas which I could not accept. So I ended up as an agnostic. And now I feel as if I have come home and the truth has set me free. The truth being that there is really nothing to support formal religious beliefs -- no matter what any of the believers claim.
So, let me end by suggesting that there is still hope for you. You can change and drop the shackles of formal religion and be free as a bird. Let me tell you one thing that does not happen if yo do this. Your ethics and morals do not change one jot or one tittle and there is no reason at all why they should do.
Best wishes. You are clearly an honest man and if you keep at it your honesty will win out.
Posted by: Ted Swart | December 29, 2006 6:30 PM
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Sam
Am I the only non-believer frustrated by your speaking as a hardnosed empiricist one moment, an abstract idealist the next?
When in your empiricist mode, you emphasize the importance of “reason,” “evidence,” and “common sense,” proposing: “There is not a person on this earth who has sufficient reason to be certain that Jesus rose from the dead or that Muhammad spoke to the angel Gabriel in his cave.” (By “sufficient reason,” one supposes you mean “material justification”.)
But, having made such convincing empiricist arguments, you then trot off to an idealist never-never-land, not merely implying, but energetically insisting, that the philosophical/-religious views you disparage have no material dimensions, i.e., no origin in the experiences of the individuals who embrace them.
Now, since Sam-the-idealist appears to be as closed to material evidence and common sense as his religious opponents, the following observations and arguments are addressed exclusively to Sam-the-empiricist.
* Today, it’s considered indisputable that just as no two of the approximately six-and-a-half-billion humans inhabiting this planet have identical fingerprints, no two of them have
identical eyes to see with, identical neurons to transmit what they see to their brains, or, identical brains to interpret what has been transmitted. Looking out my window at an oak tree, I’m aware no two of the six-and-a-half billion will see any one of its leaves in precisely the same way.
* Common sense argues that asking which of them comes closest to viewing the “objective truth” is a silly question. Each obviously sees what the leaves “absolutely and objectively”
look like if one possesses their particular viewing equipment and stands where they are standing. In the same way, a 12-year-old boy who declares a 100-lb weight to be “very
heavy,” and an Olympic weight lifter who pronounces it “remarkably light” are equally and objectively correct.
Defending the common sense premise that all our truths are at once products of an “out there,” an “in here” of the observer, and the relationship between them, the Polish philosopher Leszek Kolakowski queried:
“What justifies our belief that the visual world of a fly, made up of light and dark spots of neutral colors, is less ‘authentic’ or less ‘true’ than ours, except the fact that ours is better adapted to our needs? . . . In all the universe man cannot find a well so deep that, leaning over it, he does not discover at the bottom his own face.”
* Now, where political and philosophical consciousness is concerned, it’s obvious that, with rare exceptions, none of us, whether politically Left, Right or Liberal, knowingly calls true ideas which, if we act upon them as valid, will result in our socio-economic expropriation. No less obviously, we must either regard this as a miracle of “walking on water” and “raising the dead” proportions, or, consider it irrefutable evidence that, before all else, our political truths are blueprints and justifications for defending our personal social existences (much as our biological truths are blueprints and justifications for defending life and health).
* While one might argue there are individual exceptions to the above rule, Christ perhaps, and Che Guevara, there are clearly no community exceptions. And we know well how people in community rationalize not following such individual egalitarian exceptions. Describing Christ as the “Son of God,” Christians excuse their failure to share as the actions of “mere mortals.” Self-declared Marxists have similarly rationalized not imitating Che by calling him “the socialist man alive today;” an elevated status which, they concede, they have not yet personally attained. If tomorrow everyone began behaving as Christ prescribed surely it would mean the end of Christianity. People might thereafter love him as they loved themselves, but idolize? In the same way, the men who joined Che in the Bolivian mountains no doubt loved him. But is it reasonable to suppose they worshipped him for doing the same thing they were doing? (That which people idolize they never emulate!)
In short, common sense and universal experience argue our religions/philosophies are but blueprints and justifications for keeping what we have; Christianity an interest-protective excuse for not behaving as Christians.
* This last point was hammered home by Marx (and no, my agreement with him here aside, I do not consider myself a Marxist). Adam Smith described all the members of capitalist communities as engaged in trying to better their socio-economic conditions/enhance their material situations, while an “Unseen Hand” somehow binds them together. For Marx, however, the preservation of their “social existences” (i.e., reproduction of the socio-economic conditions they already enjoy) is far more important than improving it for citizens of every community. And it is the things a community’s members cooperatively do to achieve that paramount objective, not some mysterious “Unseen Hand,” which unifies them around every given system of production. ”Production,” said Marx, “aims at the reproduction of the producer” and “his objective conditions of existence.”
According to Marx’s materialist dialectic, as new productive orders became viable their elite-originated blueprints were gradually absorbed by everyone, furnishing the assumptions with which they began their thinking about matters social, economic and political. Idea and experience being “a unity,” just as political States impose system-protective limits on everyone’s doing, philosophies/religions he argued, establish system-protective boundaries for their thoughts. Obviously, if non-elite members of a community were to reject its (to date, elite-originated) philosophical vision, refuse to act upon it, they would have to confront the elite physically, and neither of them would be socio-economically sustained. Therefore, so long as productive orders were able to perpetuate their social existences, non-elites have been found to reflexively internalize, rather than reject, such visions.
* Of course, Sam-the-impiricist might reason that while the animist religions of hunter-gatherers and the Religious Absolutism of feudal societies may have served as blueprints and justifications for preserving the “social existences” of the individuals who embraced them, today, given global warming, global pollution, nuclear weaponry and the creation of an integrated global economy, we will either construct a philosophical peerspective which ascribes equal value to everyone’s life and security, or, none of us are going to make it.
Instead, Sam-the-idealist seems to believe that for between two-hundred-thousand and two-million years (depending on the paleontologist), humankind wandered in darkness and fear, waiting for Sam to bring them enlightenment and soothe their jittery nerves.
Theosophus
Posted by: Theosophus | December 29, 2006 6:27 PM
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Bruce,
Let me try another approach, because you seem reasonable.
Pretend we are in a courtroom. We have an impartial jury who are deciding if Jesus's resurrection actually happened. We will take as an assumption that Jesus's existence as a human is not in question. Fair?
Ok. You say that the gospels + Paul are 5 pieces of evidence, in the form of testimony, for the literal resurrection of Jesus. I agree -- so we bring in the 4 gospel writers and Paul, and we sit them down in the courtroom, and they give their testimony, and they leave. Certain details in the testimony differ, but that can be expected. The point is, they all agree that they saw a man who was previously dead walking around.
Now I get to call my witnesses. For my first witness I call in everyone in the United States. And every single person comes in, and gives testimony that they have never seen a dead man come back to life. That's 300 million pieces of evidence against resurrection in general, of which Jesus's resurrection would be a subset. For my second witness I call in the rest of the world. Another 6 billion people file into the courtroom, and each one declares that yes, indeed, they have never seen anyone who was dead for 3 days come back to life. Not only that, but instead of just giving the testimony and leaving, they stay in the courtroom, and allow themselves to be cross-examined. You can talk to any of your relatives and ask them if they've seen someone come back to life.
The judge adjourns, and the courtroom empties, and the jury goes to deliberate. On the one hand, they have 5 guys, who they could not cross-examine, claiming that a person rose from the dead. On the other hand, they have 6.3 billion people claiming they have never seen such an event. Where do you think the balance of probabilities is going to swing? 5 vs 6.3 billion? And that's not even including the testimony of countless humans before our time who, by their very deadness, make an implicit case for non-resurrection.
You have to admit that this jury would be very hard-pressed to vote in favor of Jesus.
It would be the same as 5 people claiming they saw a flying pig, with billions saying they've never seen a pig fly...
Or 5 people claiming they saw a talking horse, with billions saying they've never seen a horse talk...
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.
If the only evidence is this testimony, then I'm afraid the case is dismissed. There is nothing substantial here to warrant the belief that this event took place.
The reason other commenters have brought up Elvis and Heaven's Gate and others is to show you that you are not universally applying the same decision-making method to all claims. You reject claims that have even more testimony than Jesus's resurrection (such as Elvis' resurrection), but accept the account of Jesus because you are inherently bias towards it. Perhaps you were raised Christian or perhaps your life took an excellent turn for the good once you found religion -- there's no need to speculate -- but the point is you are not being universally fair towards extraordinary claims.
At best this makes you naive. At worst, a hypocrite.
Sincerely,
Michael
Posted by: Michael Aherne | December 29, 2006 6:22 PM
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Duckphup: If your position truly is that "I do not believe that God exists" and not "I believe that God does not exist", then I agree that your position is not faith based. But when you say that you would reassess your logic if you had a personal divine experience (your "noodly appendage"), are you not admitting that subjective experience which confirms objective evidence provides a rational basis for faith? Therefore, if I have had such an experience, and it is in accord with the evidence in the New Testament, would you not have to admit that, for me personally, my faith has a rational basis?
Greg: Where is the church of Santa that you attend? Give me the address, and I will come visit. Let me see the eyewitness accounts of Santa that you mention. Perhaps I will convert.
Ivan A. D'mocracy: To answer your question, I have no more and no less right to impact society than any other individual.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 6:17 PM
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Nice article, Sam. Keep up the good work. Note to Jason Bradfield: Experiments are not repeated with varying results because senses lie. Results vary because of normal variation, and experiments are repeated in order to establish the standard deviation of the results. Good grief.
Posted by: Rick Bunte | December 29, 2006 6:09 PM
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Bruce: Oh but I do believe! He wasn't the only witness, I've met countless numbers of people over the years who have said that they, too, have seen Santa.
Why Macy*s every year has Santa arrive and stay there during the season before boarding his sleigh and delivering all the toys to good girls and boys.
You have no evidence that Santa doesn't exist, do you? If I have witnesses who have seen him, he therefore exits. For you to say otherwise would negate your own arguement for your Jesus.
And my witnesses have been within the past 40 years so certainly their account is more accurate.
Additionally, the post office will gladly accept all letters to Santa at the North Pole; NORAD has a website that actually tracks Santa and his sleigh on Christmas Eve, both of these are government programs which would be lying to the American people if Santa truly doesn't exist.
The Marine Corps every year has a toy drive to help Santa with gathering toys and those officers take an oath, so if they're lying about Santa, certainly wouldn't lying be cause for court-martial?
Every year I read The Night Before Christmas and even the inspired writer of that story has a claim to have witnessed Santa on Christmas Eve one year, along with the reindeer and sleigh. If the writer is a witness as well, how is that not proof enough for you.
I've listed many examples, more than you, to support my case of people who would swear that Satna exists - I think you need to accept this and stop trying to lie about it.
Posted by: Greg | December 29, 2006 5:50 PM
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At best, religion is a powerful placebo that one can replace with others . Faith is the I just say so of gullibility.Theistic evolutionists violate Occam's razor by conflating natural selection with teleology."End states are consequences[ selection]. not foregone conclustions[ teleology]. To marry origins[ selection] or contingency and creation[ teleology] or necessary being as Russell Stannard does is to beg the question of the second category.Selection does the job on its own. To deny that as shallow theists do is to make the new Omphalos argument that God deceives us in so thinking as the old one has God deceiving us into thinking that evolution occurred . Theists beg the question in assuming that a god had us in mind when selection mindlessly gave us being . Theists beg the question in assuming there is perfection. Theists beg the question in assuming a complete starting point of the cosmos. We, contrary to the shallow Francis Collins in Chritianity Today do not beg the point in denying any gods as we show there can be no evidence for any and he there begs the question of ultimate purposes and other matters!In his book , he maintains that the god redundancy[ violation of Occam's razor ] makes a contrbution to thought , but that is osbcurantism. Why is it thought to be dogmatic in asking for facts and logic? Our transient passions- purposes and meanings, human love and this life suffice. One needs counseling to overcome the wishful thinking of Francisco Jose Ayala and other believers that one desperately needs an ultimate purpose, divine love and a future state! Logic is the bane of theists. Fr. Griggs rests in his Socratic ignorance and humble naturalism.
Posted by: skeptic griggsy | December 29, 2006 5:49 PM
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Ted Swart: I agree with your criticism of my post, with respect to the point you made about defining what I mean by God. If you are a true agnostic, then what I said does not apply to you at all. By God, I mean an infinite, eternal personal being, who created the universe, who exists outside of the universe but can interject himself into the universe, and who is more complex than the universe. He was not created, and in his realm there is no law that requires that he be created. He is self-existent. He is triune. My basis for this belief is the teaching of the New Testament, primarily of Jesus, in whom I trust because of his resurrection. His resurrection establishes him as the ultimate authority on spiritual and religious matters. If he was not resurrected, he is not worthy of belief. If he was, he is worthy of belief. My whole faith is built on his resurrection, which confirmed that he was the Son of God. Disprove that, and you destroy Christianity, as even the apostle Paul admitted.
That is my definition of God. But for a true agnostic such as yourself, my post really had no relevance. It was mainly for atheists, if I can use that word.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 5:47 PM
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When I'm feeling fearful, I desire certainty....
when I'm feeling exited, I desire uncertainty!
Posted by: Gary Llewellyn | December 29, 2006 5:46 PM
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Timmy :
LOL - Elvis is Alive!
& "Bruce Bruce Bruce" - your patience and politeness and sincerity of your proffered conversations / rebuttals are truly appreciated by the "mostly lurkers" among us.
But, I beg of you, of all the questions that have been put your way - please directly address Timmy's question as follows:
"if ... (snip) ... a very large group of Elvis believers were to have a massive amount of influence in the affairs of our political and social discourse? Would this sit well with you?"
This is my concern with religion precisely! Exactly.
Please, others of "the faith" are requested to weigh in on this topic as well (Bruce Bruce Bruce may need some Kingdomly help on this one!).
What on earth (or off!) could give you and your myopic, parochial, wee, exclusionary and disparate faith(s) any right whatsoever to continue to have any moral right (or indeed validity of any kind whatsoever!) to impact civilization as we have it today?
And, uhhmmm, whose faith would it be? Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?
And to what end? Google any of the Humanist Manifestos on the web for a better, more sustainable, open, and accepting version of hope for the future. Please - For the love of Jesus (who may or may not have existed, but in the spirit of true love of the species "mankind").
Posted by: Ivan A. D'Mocracy | December 29, 2006 5:43 PM
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Bruce Burleson wrote:
Believers assert an absolute affirmative - God exists.
Non-believers assert an absolute negative - God does not exist.
Believers cannot absolutely prove that God exists, yet they believe, and argue passionately for their belief.
Non-believers cannot absolutely prove that God does not exist, yet they do not believe, and argue passionately for their non-belief.
Ultimately, both are faith positions. Both sides believe passionately in something that they cannot absolutely prove. Both sides cite their evidence and their arguments.
********
Forget labels and definitions. Just consider the following sentences:
1. "I do not KNOW whether god(s) do or do not exist.
2. "I DO NOT believe that god(s) exist."
3. "I believe that god(s) DO NOT exist."
1 is generally taken to be the 'agnostic' position...
2 is generally taken to be the 'weak' atheist position...
3 is generally taken to be the 'strong' atheist position.
Notice that 2 (weak atheist position) is TRUE for both 1 and 3.
If you don't 'know' whether or not god exists (1), then you do not 'believe' in god (2).
If you 'believe' that god does not exist (3), then you do not 'believe' in god (2).
Also, pay particular attention to the qualitative difference between 2 and 3... if you can perceive that difference, then you should be able to appreciate why your assertion (above) is an absurdity... and that there is NOTHING about 2 which is 'faith-based', or that constitutes a positive assertion about some aspect of existence and reality; it is simply a refusal to be sucked into embracing nonsensical delusions.
So, the common denominator between 'agnostic' and 'atheist' is that neither positions harbors a 'belief' in god... and thus, both are 'non-believers'. That also seems to be the only position that makes sense, since for someone to say that they 'believe' that there is no god implies a logical proposition that 'god does not exit = true'. THAT implies that there must be some kind of logical 'proof' for that assertion... and, of course, since it is impossible to prove such a thing in the absence of infinite knowledge, it is no more than a red herring. Further... if you possessed the infinite knowledge necesary to 'prove' such a logical proposition, then you would fulfill the definition of a god yourself, and end up in a 'Divine Paradox'. Thus, position (3) is logically untenable... just the same as religious belief is untenable.
For purposes of this answer (and for most of the answers I give), it should be understood that when I say 'belief', I am referring to an internalized (part of one's self-description) certainty of the 'truth' of some matter pertaining to a fundamental aspect of existence and/or reality.
The only sensible course is to say "I do not believe in god," and let it go at that. It would seem obvious to me that if the FSM descended from heaven on a cloud, and touched me with his noodly appendage... or some other god performed his own version of that trick... I would be logically obliged to reassess my disbelief. But, until that happens... I don't believe in god(s).
Posted by: DuckPhup | December 29, 2006 5:42 PM
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To Bruce Burlington
You write as follows:
"Believers assert an absolute affirmative - God exists.
Non-believers assert an absolute negative - God Does not exist.
Believers cannot absolutely prove that God exists, yet they believe, and argue passionately for their belief.
Non-believers cannot absolutely prove that God does not exist, yet they do not believe, and argue passionately for their non-belief."
But . . . . There is a real problem about these sentences. They assume that the word God has the same meaning for believers and unbelievers. But this is not necessarily the case. What if we asked instead the following question.
If there is a God what would God have to be like?
(The question could be accompanied by a partial definition of God as some kind of trans-human Divinty)
And the very first thing that springs to my mind is that such a Divinity could not possibly be a creator of the universe. This can easily be ruled out by noting that such a Divinity would have to be more complex than the universe itself thus raising the unanswerable question as to who created the Divinity. This comes pretty close to proving that the God believed in by Christians, Jews and Muslims most certainly does not exist. There is much more that can be said but there is really no doubt that your either/or conundrum doesn't even exist if you permit defintions of Divinity -- other than those espoused by the monotheistic or polytheistic religions.
So, to summarize, I am not in the game of asserting an absolute negative as you claim I must since I am an agnostic and I first want to know the definition of God you are talking about. And even within the monotheistic faiths the definition of God is far form uniform. Muslims will say Allah is the right God to believe in and Christians will say it is a strange triune God consisting of Father, Son and Holy Ghost.
So I don't think your argument can even get off the ground until you do at least a half decent job of defining what you mean by God.
Cheers.
Posted by: Ted Swart | December 29, 2006 5:25 PM
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Iwant to follow up on the comment by Watercolor Genius. Yes, Catholicism is certainly a club and also a world-historical community. That makes it extremely difficult to leave behind. And the clergy make it very costly to try. Marrying a non-Catholic used to involve demeaning contracts over the baptism of children. Leaving the church meant and perhaps still means certain ostracizastion by famiy and friends. Apparently the same is true for Mormons and Jews. Moslems can be executed on sight for apostasy. It is one's life literally or figurative that one loses in daring to free oneself from the religion of one's birth. I believe the loss of community is the biggest hurdle to allowing oneself to see through the delusions of dogma and faith. The Catholic church of the early 20th century was hostile to members joining "secular" and civic organizations. They feared the creation of alternative communities. But alternative communities is what we need if we are to break the stranglehold of religion on the public imagination. Robin
Posted by: Robin | December 29, 2006 5:24 PM
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Randy: Sorry about being verbose. I am not picking and choosing the parts of my Holy Book that I believe in. I have a different interpretation of the Old Testament than fundamentalist Christians, so I did not want to waste time on all the issues that arise in talking about those passages, many of which I believe are poetic or otherwise metaphorical. I can believe that the Scripture accurately reveals truth about God without accepting a hyper-literal interpretation of all Old Testament accounts. That is an issue of interpretation, not of validity.
The New Testament accounts of the resurrection are different. By their very nature they purport to be eyewitness accounts of an historical event, which were recorded relatively soon after the event occurred. The account of the resurrection in I Corinthians 15 is written by an extremely intelligent man - the apostle Paul - who lays out the evidence for it. I find no contradiction in the evidence of the resurrection accounts. They all report the same thing.
I am not my own religion, as you suggest, but I am not part of any denomination. I am simply a believer in Jesus. The subjective experience that I refer to is my own inward experience of the presence of God, which accords with the descriptions of that phenomenon that I find in the New Testament. In other words, my subjective experience confirms the objective evidence that I see in the New Testament. Look at Sam Harris' own mention of his inward spiritual experiences in "The End Of Faith." Mystical experiences happen even to non-believers. In my case, those experiences match what I see in the New Testament. I will not bore you with the details, lest I become "verbose."
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 5:17 PM
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Bruce Bruce Bruce,
Thousands upon thousands of people claim to have witnessed Elvis at the shopping mall since his death. Many have written books about their sightings.
Will you admit that there is at least some evidence that Elvis is still alive?
Will you admit it?
You kind of have to don't you?
I mean people went so far as to actually write books about it.
Perhaps you might reject that evidence. But you have to admit that it is evidence. Don't you?
How would you feel, if based on such weak evidence, a very large group of Elvis believers were to have a massive amount of influence in the affairs of our political and social discourse?
Would this sit well with you?
The influence of your faith on my life does not sit well with me I can tell you that.
Timmy
Posted by: Timmy | December 29, 2006 5:11 PM
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This is a great article, and I'm particularly fond of the three divisions of possible atheist-theist conversation: religion is true, religion is useful, atheism is bad.
Sam's words are as sharp as a katana, slicing away the fat of religion from the underlying actuality. Atheism may be in a limelight for the time being, but its so misunderstood, being burned by bias. It is ridiculous that scientific growth and expansion is being decreed as "unethical" by the faithful.
We may be the dominate species, but that doesn't make us exempt from being slaves to custom and tradition, and this we share too much.
Posted by: Ron | December 29, 2006 5:04 PM
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This debate is in such desperate need of clarity!
Christianity is a belief. Islam is a belief.
Atheism is not a belief. It is a reaction to a belief.
Christianity and Islam exist on their own. They can be discussed without the necessity of a counter point.
Atheism only exists as a counterpoint.
To imply that atheists all have the same belief, is the same as implying that sceptics all have the same belief.
You would never lump all sceptics together as a group who all believe in the same thing, nor should you with atheists.
The argument between atheism and religion is not a debate between one certainty vs an opposing certainty.
The debate is between certainty and uncertainty, with atheists, agnostics, scientists, and secular humanists all falling on the righteous side of uncertainty.
Agnostic is simply a polite way to say atheist. We will both burn in Hell at the same temperature.
Atheists and scientists are the very first ones to gleefully admit to not having all of the answers to the mysteries of life.
If the position of science and atheism is hubris, then we are in need of a new word to describe the depraved odacity of those who claim to know with certainty ecactly who God is a what God wants.
So I emplore all agnostics, atheists, secular humanists and scientists to stop arguing amongst one another about cemantics. We are all like minded compared our delusional counterparts. Let us speak as one voice for reason and intellectual honesty.
Go Sam Go!
Tim Rykert
Posted by: Timmy | December 29, 2006 4:59 PM
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ShawnM: I do appreciate your comments. But there is evidence that the resurrection occurred, as I have pointed out in my posts. Non-believers choose to reject that evidence, even though it has never been positively disproven (other than by the a priori assumption that resurrections do not occur). Non-believers are capable of citing arguments in support of their position, but ultimately they take a faith position - that God does not exist and that the resurrection did not occur. Since they cannot positively prove by evidence and logic that this position is true, there must be at least an element of faith in it. This is not really a criticism, it is just an observation. Ultimately, none of us has personal experiential proof of at least 90% of what we believe. We are all trusting in someone else's account, whether it be in the realm of science or religion.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 4:53 PM
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First of all, to re-state what ShawnM said earlier, Pure water will boil at EXACTLY the same temperature every time at the same pressure. There is NO question or doubt about this. It seems silly to have to even bring this up.
Regarding Bruce's arguments, I have to say it's sad that what appears to be a significant intellect based on his verbose responses is wasted on useless religious belief.
Bruce, it's just stupid that you get to pick and choose which parts of your holy book are true and untrue. You say that you're basing your belief in Jesus' resurrection on the New Testament accounts when the Bible itself is contradictory. Are you admitting that the rest of the bible is false?
What leads you to believe that just these New Testament accounts of Jesus' resurrection are true but yet you can so easily dismiss the rest of the bible as not-quite-so-true? You said, "I view the books in the New Testament as independent accounts..." Ok, but what makes them so different that you believe what they have to say, but you don't believe in the other books? The leadership of your chosen religion have deemed the Bible in its entirety to be true, but you've decided differently? Are you your own religion? Based on what? What are these "subjective evidence" you keep referring to?
Posted by: Randy | December 29, 2006 4:49 PM
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Most believers may never be turned away from their irrational thoughts, because they have a defence mechanisim dubbed "Pride and Bias". When they read somthing on this site, or others, or talk to one of us, they, I believe, begin to see some light. BUT... their "Pride and Bias" always comes to the rescue. From what I can see, the believer converting to rational thought is few and far between. But, converting a few, is better than none. I think if Christainity had adopted meditaton as one of their creeds, I think it would never have spread the way it did, because through meditaion, Pride, Bias, EGO would diminish. Pride and Bias should be one of the areas of concentration on this site. If this idea could be Emphasized, maybe more belivers would be inclined to look inward and see what they refuse to see.
Can you imagine a beliver suddenly seeing that their is no God, then having to tell thier children that they were wrong, and maybe their spouse, and their co-workers that they argued with... and especially their religious circle of friends... tough to do when "Pride and Bias" exists.
Posted by: Darrin | December 29, 2006 4:32 PM
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Just one of the problems I have with the supposed resurrection of Christ lies with my sole faith: the Laws of Physics. If there exist -- or existed -- such "miracles" as the resurrection, as well as so many other "miracles" we hear about on a daily basis (child birth, prayer-based healing, storm survival, etc.), then can the laws of physics be true "laws" if they are broken so easily? Seems to me the universe would be a mighty chaotic place indeed. Why would "God" make "miracles?" Is "he" insane? For example, it seems we should be witnessing bizarre, abnormal ocurrences constantly, based on the prayers and "miracles" accorded special "others."
Posted by: Pecos (NM) Skeptic | December 29, 2006 4:31 PM
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Nick, to quote Sam:
"This marriage of modern technology and preliterate superstition is a bad one" - Very bad in Bradfield's case!
Posted by: Kattie | December 29, 2006 4:20 PM
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To Sam Harris, I loved your article and adore the way you think. Keep up the good work! To DuckPhup, I so enjoyed reading your comments. And to Randolph Lee, there IS such an organization out there attempting to "extinguish every last bit of religious nonsense from our government". It's The Freedom from Religion Foundation - check it out at www.ffrf.org. Happy New Year to all!
Posted by: lastpolka | December 29, 2006 4:18 PM
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To B. Burleson:
You ever notice how so many attempt to discredit a disbelief in something that is very improbable and for which no evidence actually exists by calling this disbelief just another type of faith...as if the default should be that believe everything and anything unless we have actual proof that something, however preposterous, is false?
Posted by: ShawnM | December 29, 2006 4:15 PM
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Jason Bradfield (above)said, "all scientific laws are based on fallacious arguments" & "science is not capable of giving us any truth" by way of his computer!
Posted by: Nick | December 29, 2006 4:02 PM
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Believers assert an absolute affirmative - God exists.
Non-believers assert an absolute negative - God does not exist.
Believers cannot absolutely prove that God exists, yet they believe, and argue passionately for their belief.
Non-believers cannot absolutely prove that God does not exist, yet they do not believe, and argue passionately for their non-belief.
Ultimately, both are faith positions. Both sides believe passionately in something that they cannot absolutely prove. Both sides cite their evidence and their arguments.
Believers assert a positive position, and so must assume the burden of proof. But if I cannot convince non-believers of the existence of God or the resurrection of Jesus, that only means that I have failed to convince them. Others are convinced, and can cite the evidence that gives a rational basis to faith, whether others accept that evidence or not. Ultimately, each individual decides, and ultimately, the truth, whatever it may be, exists independently of our belief or non-belief in it.
If the resurrection of Jesus actually occurred, it is reasonable to believe in it. If it did not actually occur, it is not reasonable to believe in it. Whatever position you take, you cannot escape faith. You either believe that it happened, or you believe that it did not happen.
The reasons that people believe or do not believe are never completely based upon science, reason or logic. There will always be a subjective element involved.
So, I have objective evidence of the resurrection (the New Testament accounts) and subjective experience that accords with that evidence. That makes my faith a combination of reason and experience. And that is as far as the argument can be taken.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 4:00 PM
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Thanks for that excellent article, Sam!
There are, unfortunately, not many words to describe what I disbelieve - a few, like "atheist" Bright", "eupraxsopher", "nullifidian", and "realist" come close, but of these, only "atheist" is in common usage, and can be more or less understood by most people. So, though I don't much care for the word either, I feel like I'm stuck with it, so I won't tilt at windmills by bemoaning the word being applied to me. At least until a better one comes along. "Unbeliever" works pretty well for me, though, since I'm a nihilist.
Posted by: Unbeliever | December 29, 2006 3:55 PM
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Re Dee (Posted December 29, 2006 3:42 AM) and your message to Burton H Wolfe: I generally agree. I think many of us see the manifest dangers of Islam.
But please proceed with caution. I would suggest that we not isolate the Islamic (or any "single") religion as the boogey-man. Heck, look how this "persecution" thing has been twisted into strengthening the faiths of Jews and Christians. I would rather eradicate this dogmatic superstition than strengthen it.
Instead, I would suggest an all out "justify-yourself" challenge as more suited to our needs.
Whenever anyone around me brings up religion, God, or Jesus, I assume that they do so because they feel that it is their divinely inspired duty and "right" to preach their assumed "rightous-ness". In all fairness, this gives me as much right for a rebuttal and viewpoint challenge.
Thanks to the recent books, lectures, and articles by the likes of Harris, Dawkins & Dennett (among others), it has become easier to grow more adept at giving very polite, but challenging responses to these people. Within the context of the conversation I can usually demonstrate how "incredulous" there viewpoint really is. Generally, I am able to accomplish this without perceived malice (as none is intended - I mean, ignorance and the darkness of blind faith is more likely to evoke sympathy / empathy from me than malice!).
True, sometimes hurt feeling do ensue. But as I convey no personal malice, spite, hatred, or unbalanced biases (I treat all mono/poly theistic religions with equal disdain!), I am often amazed at how frequently I have these same used-to-be-sheeple inquiring more and more about reason and commonsense as time goes by.
Hey, like, who knew that honey attracts more flies than piss-n-vinegar!!
Posted by: Ivan A. D'Mocracy | December 29, 2006 3:48 PM
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Im an atheist but I don't feel I have to be FOR anything
except reality based reasoning as opposed to faith based reasoning. And even more simply...I see an atheist as one who just can't buy into the notion of the sky god; he doesn't need to have an alternate theory. There's no reason to believe there's a god up there except that a lot of people say there is.
A lot of people say there are UFO's up there too,and
that alien abductions really do occur.
A lot of people swear by their astrology sign,and others are into numerology and palm reading.
I'm an atheist because I just don't get it.
Any of it.
Posted by: yoyo | December 29, 2006 3:25 PM
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Duckphup: Even if Josephus, Tacitus have been debunked regarding their statements about Jesus (which not everyone accepts), the New Testament accounts themselves are historical evidence. Just because they were later put together in a religious book does not mean that they do not contain historical accounts of events. You may choose not to believe them, but it is arbitrary to completely deny them any historical significance. And what about the accounts of Pliny the Younger and Seutonius - have they been debunked, too?
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 3:05 PM
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Cindy: Nice work! You convinced me! Obviously our Jesus-believer was not convinced however. This is the really tiresome dilemma we face: believers can't be shaken off their faith. They have too much at stake, as others on this site have observed.
Patti: I am an extrovert. I have always shunned religion, as a child even though forced to go to church I thought the whole thing was a bunch of hooey. My passion is work. I am a doctor. I have always been a humanitarian, and an animal-tarian, too. Had to dissect and experiment on a live dog in medical school. It was truly disgusting. But I've seen plenty of disgusting things that people do to their fellows also.
I think our best hope is to be saved by aliens.
Peace,
K
Posted by: Kaattie | December 29, 2006 3:03 PM
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Greg Wirth: You don't believe your own brother's story about Santa, and you know him much better than I do. You yourself do not believe him to be truthful on this issue. There is no reason for me to believe him, either, based upon your testimony.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 2:56 PM
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Dear Sam,
I think it would be an almost wet dream of American atheists to see you and Dawkins square off against Ann Coulter and ...... Pat Robertson (although and religious asshat will do) on Real Time with Bill Maher. How can we make this happen?
Regards
Posted by: Bill C. | December 29, 2006 2:54 PM
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Skeptic in Tallahassee: Thanks for the very thought-provoking post. I respond to your points seriatim.
1) I am considering all the evidence I have about Jesus, and it all says that he rose from the dead. The evidence about other people dying is not in issue. Obviously, the norm is that dead people stay dead. That is not in dispute. What is your evidence that my wishful thinking is affecting my judgment?
2) We have an account of a Roman soldier stabbing Jesus in the side and coming to the conclusion (along with everyone else present) that Jesus was dead. We have the accounts of the resurrection. I don't know why this is deficient, insufficient and weak. How many times does one have to report a truth to make it true? Other than the fact that resurrection itself is improbable, there is no reason to reject the accounts.
3) I agree that billions have died and stayed dead. That is no evidence that Jesus stayed dead.
Only the a priori assumption that resurrections don't occur.
4) I agree that there are other logical possibilities to explain the resurrection. There is no evidence that any of them occurred. The only evidence is that Jesus rose. I disagree about the alleged poor quality of the accounts. I find them convincing.
5) I do not confess to know the mind of God, or all the reasons why He would cause a resurrection. It is pure speculation to talk about what God would or would not do and why He would or would not do it, unless it is revealed in some way. Thanks for making me think.
Posted by: Anonymous | December 29, 2006 2:52 PM
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Judy, Petegrif et al;
All this talk about whether or not it is okay to call oneself an agnostic rather than an atheist seems to me rather silly. Of course it is perfectly okay to call yourself an agnostic and equally okay to call yourself an atheist or for me to call myself a radical pantheist. Words do not have an immutable rigid meaning and most certainly acknowledging ignorance or incomplete knowledge (as agnosticism does) is nothing to be ashamed of. It is the dogmatic nature of formal religion -- as much as anything -- which makes it so deplorable.
I have never been comfortable calling myself a humanist since it seems to me it elevates us humans unjustifiably. I sometimes long for the day when we get some clear cut messages from intelligent life elsewhere in space. It might help to pull us up short.
Certainly the notion that we need to think about positive stand-ins for religion, as currently practised, is sensible. I think to some extent these already exist. The notion that most people need religion, as we know it, is highly suspect. The education system is deplorably inept about inculcating even a half decent understanding of what science or basic logic is about. If all children were taught that they have both a right and a duty to think for themselves the world would be a much better place.
Most of us in the Sam Harris neck of the woods are agreed that we would indeed be better off without formal religion and the sooner the better I say. The Harris, Dawkins, Dennett triumvirate may well have given inadequate attention to the best way of weaning people off religion and perhaps discussions like this can help reinforce good ideas in this regard.
Posted by: Ted Swart | December 29, 2006 2:44 PM
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To Bradfield, Craig, et al.:
As most but not all of you will already know, pure water always will boil at exactly the same temperature if the pressure in the system is kept the same...but this hardly bears mentioning in the face of Bradfield's other misconceptions.
Posted by: ShawnM | December 29, 2006 2:42 PM
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Interesting discussions. Sam, as usual, you have with your precise perfect arguments found words for so many of us who see religious irrationality as a threat to our continued existence.
I read an article a couple of years ago with a lovely term for many moderates: the author called himself an "apatheist", in other words someone who frankly my dear, didn't give a damn about others' religions. This, when I read it, seemed a very cute expression, but now having read The End of Faith, I see it rather as another potentially dangerous example of moderate tolerance.
This issue needs to be opened up, even at the risk of being unpopular with our moderate friends, in frank and clear discussion of the issues, exposing the extremists for their fanaticism in all corners of the world. If we can be swayed to 'get it' then perhaps so can our moderate friends.
We just need to get on it, in huge numbers!!!!
Posted by: C.Compston | December 29, 2006 2:34 PM
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Sad thing is, I have an ex-inlaw who is an atheist and who espouses some of the same arguments Bradfield did above. He is an ex-heroin addict (perhaps still?) with little hope. He lives off is grandparents' money. He once berated something I said about science or my science teaching with the retort: "Just because the sun came up today doesn't prove it will come up tomorrow." I think the problems here lie in the words proof and truth. Isn't proof a mathematical term? I don't know where the word truth comes from. And while we're at it, let's throw out the term scientific law. Scientific theories are human mental models of how things work in the universe. They predict the outcomes of experiments or the outputs of machines. If the experiment has an unexpected outcome, we modify the theory. If the machine puts out garbage, we build a new one.
I think Bradfield is pissed off that water never boils at the same temperature and somehow blames that on science itself. He obviously doesn't know how boiling works. To him, the fixed words of the bible are pure, concrete, and unchanging and for some reason his mind can't cope without them.
Posted by: Craig | December 29, 2006 2:29 PM
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Ed W - Thank you for your thoughtful response. OK, so you cannot point me to scientific studies which conclude that resurrections are not possible. That was the very point of your first post, that science had concluded that it was not possible. I guess you are conceding this point in my favor.
If you are telling me that you saw Napolean rise from the grave, I do not believe you, because you have already told me that you do not believe such things. Your claim is of a completely different nature than the accounts found in the New Testament, as you don't even believe it yourself.
If you think resurrection is a "bad idea" that can be dismissed out of hand without further discussion, then you are taking a position that is not based on evidence. That is blind faith. There is the possibility of hyperbole or fabrication in any account, including those made by scientists today. That is all part of the process of deciding what to believe and what not to believe. I have the evidence of the New Testament accounts, which accounts have not been proven false. Coupled with my own subjective experience, that gives me an adequate basis upon which to build a worldview. One may think that quantum mechanics or string theory is a "bad idea" that just can't be true. That says nothing about the actual truth of such things. Science has discovered many strange, improbable things. Resurrection may be improbable, but that does not mean it did not happen.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 2:29 PM
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My brother swears that he saw Santa and his reideer leaving our house one year, based on his account, and I know him to be an honest individual, I would say that we MUST believe in Santa Claus and keep on believing.
Of course, I did hear one time that faith was believing in something when common sense tells you not to...
Hmmm?
Perhaps since Santa is so jolly and kind that we could start a religion based on his ideas of generosity, kindness, giving, 8 tiny reindeer, traveling the world over in 1 night, having sugar cookies and milk for snacks, and employing a great number of little people we'll call elves.
No one has one shred of evidence that Santa doesn't exist, even you Bruce, so I say we base our laws, our Constitution, our morals all on Santa and we should kill those people who disagree with us.
I'll write to Santa and see what inspiring things he has to say about abortion, gays, giving money to the poor and a host of other topics by which we'll all follow once I get the final word.
Stay tuned.
Posted by: Greg Wirth | December 29, 2006 2:29 PM
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Mr. Bradfield not only misunderstands what Russell had to say, but also misapplies basic logic as well as revealing a misunderstanding of how science operates.
First, Russell's emphasis was on the problem of induction, which was first articulated by David Hume. The problem of induction does not lead to the conclusion that inductive generalizations are therefore false, as Bradfield seems to believe, but that reasoning begs the question and isn't strictly valid. However, this does not give any sort of hope to the philosophical skeptic that doubts empirical knowledge as is evidenced by Bradfield's inclusion of the many inductive generalizations he uses to show why inductive generalizations are "false". What Hume and Russell showed is that claims based on such generalizations are tentative and open to revision with new evidence. It also means that it is difficult to address the question of why we should expect the future to resemble the past without begging the question. However, even if the philosopher spends time arguing this question, he or she never behaves otherwise. David Hume makes this abundantly clear.
Secondly, Bradfield claims that science is based on fallacious arguments and he gives the example
If p then q
q
Therefore p
This is indeed a fallacious argument, but it is incorrect to say that science operates in this way. To use one of Bradfield's favorite words. His claim is false. If we are going to reduce science to a set of abstract arguments (a questionable endeavor as it is) then we should represent it accurately.
If, and only if p, then q
q
Therefore p
is a logically valid argument and is also a better representation of what scientists are striving to accomplish.
In the end Bradfield leaves us with the appearance of sophisticated apologetics, but it is only philosophical skepticism of the worst kind, which we have just as much reason to believe as solipsism. I would ask, given such skepticism on his part and in the interest of keeping an open dialogue, how he came to the conclusion regarding the truth of the Bible, if not through observation, and why he regards this method as being more reliable.
Posted by: Rob Singleton | December 29, 2006 2:15 PM
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To Bruce Burleson:
I just want to make a few comments about your thoughts about the alleged resurrection of Jesus.
1) I think that you are correct that the Gospel narratives ARE evidence in favor the alleged resurrection of Jesus but they are hardly sufficient evidence to justify your belief that Jesus truly rose from the dead. To use your court analogy for a moment– you are failing to consider ALL the evidence and to properly weigh it, and you are allowing your subjective biases (wishful thinking) to affect your judgement.
2) The alleged resurrection of Jesus is a hypothesis not an observation or set of observations. It is true only if two other sub-hypotheses are true, i.e. Jesus died as the result of his ordeal on the cross and Jesus was subsequently alive. If either one of these sub-hypotheses is false, then the resurrection hypothesis is also false. The problem is that the quality and the quantity of the reports used to support the two sub-hypotheses are deficient, insufficient, and weak.
3) There is an abundance of evidence that people do not come back to life after they die. For all the dead people I have ever seen, not a single one has ever come back to life. This is also true for all the dead people seen by all my family, friends, and acquaintances. I am not aware of any case where it has been shown beyond a reasonable doubt that a person died (lets say displayed at least a non-beating heart and rigor mortis) and came back to life. So, we have billions of cases of people dying and not coming back to life and not a single case of a person dying and coming back to life. Mr. Burleson, you must consider this evidence alongside the Gospel narratives as you make your judgement about the alleged resurrection of Jesus.
4) Consider alternative hypotheses about the Gospel narratives themselves: a) they are accurate reports, b) they are fabrications, c) they are speculations, d) they are based only misperceptions, faulty inferences, or abnormal sensory experiences. There may be others, but these are perhaps the most important alternatives. I suggest that there is a much greater probability that b), c), or d) is true than that a) is true, GIVEN the poor quality of the Gospel narratives (compared to good journalistic, historic, or medical reports) and the overwhelming evidence that dead people don’t tend to come back to life.
5) Not only is the idea of Jesus’ resurrection unlikely based on historical and scientific criteria, it is unlikely based on theological considerations. If God existed, COULD he cause a resurrection of Jesus? Of course, he could. If God existed, WOULD he cause a resurrection of Jesus? Not very likely! An omniscient, omnipotent, and perfectly good being would hardly use a poorly documented single event, occurring two thousand years ago, to deliver an important message or teach a critical lesson to humanity. That would hardly be the action of a perfect teacher.
I hope this will help in your reconsideration of your conclusion that Jesus rose from the dead.
Posted by: Skeptic in Tallahassee | December 29, 2006 2:11 PM
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Cindy: Thank you for your response. First, I view the books in the New Testament as independent accounts, so that the credibility of those accounts does not rest on the credibility of Old Testament accounts of miracles, about which I am making no argument in these posts. The accounts in the New Testament are all written relatively soon after the event - I Corinthians 15 is about 55 AD, Mark (the first Gospel) perhaps in the 60's, John (the last Gospel) somewhere around 90. Whatever inconsistencies you are referring to, these accounts are all consistent on the point at issue - the resurrection of Jesus. There are differences in the facts reported, which is to be expected when multiple witnesses see the same thing. But they all clearly report the resurrection of Jesus.
You are correct - this is an amazing thing. I imagine that it was also an amazing thing when the Wright Brothers first flew. It was amazing when we landed on the moon, which would have been considered impossible only a few decades before. When it occurred, it was the first time that it had occurred. You are absolutely right that our usual daily experience is that dead people stay dead. As you say, so far, dead things stay dead. But there has been a report of one who did not stay dead, and that is the issue that we are discussing. Whether or not that is credible to you, there is some evidence that has not been refuted by positive scientific proof that a dead man rose.
I am not saying this on the basis of one book. I am saying this on the basis of five separate accounts (Paul plus the four Gospels), none of which have been scientifically shown to be false. The New Testament as one book did not exist until the church put it together a couple centuries later.
It was improbable that a resurrection would occur before it occurred. It was improbable that the Big Bang would occur before it occurred. Yet it occurred, and to our knowledge, it has never occurred again. It is improbable that life would exist, yet here we are. Improbable things happen, and we have eyewitness accounts that a resurrection occurred.
I believe those accounts in part because of my subjective experience, which others may not share. My only point in all of this is that there is some evidence of the resurrection, which has not been positively refuted. Therefore, it simply cannot be said that believers have "no evidence" for their faith.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 2:10 PM
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With everything that is good or bad about religion or its organizations, the one descriptor Harris gave to religious belief that resonants so loudly is that it is just plain embarrassing. Although much more profound, it is like someone who still thinks George Bush is a good president or who still believes the Iraq War is a good and just endeavour...just plain embarrassing.
Posted by: ShawnM | December 29, 2006 1:59 PM
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God wants us to be athiests -- that's why he or she or it gave us a brain; so we can logically devine superstition from truth. (For the rest of my posting I'm going to refer to God as He. Actually, I'm going to use "god and "he" in lowercase, because I don't think god is that self-important.
Back to my argument. If god really wanted us to believe in him, he's certainly smart enough, by definition, to think of ways to make it happen. A gigantic picture of him in the sky everywhere would work for me. And that's just one idea. I'm sure god can come up with a better one if he wanted to. If god wants us to believe in him based on faith alone, that's kinda nuts; that's why there are so many religions. And if god is as smart as everybody says, he's too smart for that. So, clearly he doesn't want us to believe in him. Okay, I know on the surface this doesn't make any sense, but think a second; if god can do anything, then god can make himself not exist.
That last thought is hard for even me to grasp and I said it. Once you get into this god stuff, it's very confusing. And I don't think god wants us to be confused. Except many of us are, so maybe he does. See what I mean? I don't think god wants me to keep typing. Hey, look, I'm still typing. Maybe god wants me to go on. I wish he'd just project a huge picture of me in the sky typing so I'd know what he wants. Sometimes not knowing is anxiety provoking -- which is probably the basis for religion in the first place.
Posted by: Allan Katz | December 29, 2006 1:58 PM
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Check out Sam's web site www.samharris.org and join his forum
Posted by: Mark | December 29, 2006 1:55 PM
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Bruce Burleson:
I was not aware that science had concluded many times that resurrections like the one reported in the New Testament "aren't possible." Please refer me to the scientific studies that reached this conclusion.
Mr. Burleson, I have read your post and the resulting dialogue with interest.
I offer the following thoughts related to your claim that Jesus was resurrected, and that evidence exists which supports this claim.
----Do we believe everything that we read?---- You say that you have read in the Bible that eyewitnesses saw Jesus after he was known to be dead. (Matthew 28:1-10 etc.) Is the Bible a source that we can trust? I think we all ask ourselves similar questions when we read information. When I pick up the Washington Post, and it states that an individual witnessed something happening, I admit that I am pretty likely to believe what I read. The Post has a reputation for good reporting, I have verified things that I have read in the Post through other sources previously, and there's an author listed by the article so I could always contact him or her if I had a question about what was reported. Is the same true for the Bible? The Bible claims that angels fly down from heaven routinely, that the sun stood still in the sky, that Moses parted the Red Sea, etc. These are claims that I think even you will admit are pretty amazing. That the Bible reports these things as happening makes me question it as a source. There are numerous inconsistencies in the bible (compare accounts of Jesus's life between the 4 gospels), again which make me question the source. And most importantly, where is there another book or source where I can check this claim that witnesses saw Jesus rise from the dead?
---Is this event consistent with reason and experience?--- I think we all compare what we read about to our experience. In my experience, the sky is typically blue, though it is sometimes grey or pink or red. I have never known it to be green, and I wouldn't accept without question an account of the sky truly turning green without some evidence. I have encountered dead things in my life, animals and people, and I have never known one that was truly dead to come back to life. (We could spend some time defining "truly dead" but let's say for convention that the heart has stopped, and brain activity has ceased.) I have never read any account in any reputable textbook, or seen any news report, or heard any expert testimony on dead things becoming alive again. You have to admit that a dead thing becoming not-dead is outside of common human experience. Now there are many things in the universe that humans have probably yet to experience, and I would not claim that we can even imagine what some of these are, but so far dead things stay dead. Do you agree?
So you are saying that on the basis of one book, which has claimed some pretty fantastical stuff in other sections, that some people might have witnessed something completely outside of human experience happening, and on this you base your entire religion and worldview? I have to say it's not enough for me. I'd like to hear your comments on my thoughts.
thanks-
Cindy
Posted by: Cindy | December 29, 2006 1:35 PM
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Dialogue? A civil one? Wouldn't that be nice. But I'm reminded of what my grandfather always said, "You can't teach a pig to sing - it'll only frustrate you and make the pig angry."
Posted by: WC Brooks | December 29, 2006 1:27 PM
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bruce:
when evaluating some kinds of assertions we are able to dismiss them without further evidence: the claim that humans are immortal is an example. we don't need to hear further facts about a certain person's lifestyle to determine that they won't live forever. so, back to my analogy... what would you conclude given the fact that i told you that i was at napoleon's grave site and watched him crawl out of the ground and walk away.
you ask for studies on resurrections... as far as that goes: they arent necessary. how would one study resurrections anyway? its not like they actually occur? that is like asking me for the scientific studies that show that sperm whales don't time travel? in any case, im sure there is plenty of related data from biologists that would support my argument.
the fact of the matter is there is no scientific reason to consider resurrection a possibility, let alone assume it happens. the reason you have for assuming they occur is this: some people witnessed it happen once thousands of years ago. well ok, leaving out the possibility of hyperbole or fabrication, it is still a bad idea. if you want to construct your worldview based on stories from thousands of years ago, that is fine with me. im just here to point out that that is an intellectually faulty pursuit.
Posted by: Ed W. | December 29, 2006 1:21 PM
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Reading many of the comments regarding Sam's article gives me great hope that there are many bright and articulate non-believers out there. In the same light, it is also very disturbing to read Jason Bradfield's comments. Unfortunately, Jason's arguments, which made me numb with their illogic, represent the hard core beliefs of the vast majority of religious people, regardless of their individual faith. His "logic", as ridiculous as is seems, absolutely represents the basic core beliefs of so many humans regarding their own personal faith. That is scary to me.
Jason's arguments reminded me of the scene in Monty Python and the Holy Grail, where the townspeople used "logic" to determine whether the woman was a witch or not. The movie made fun of medieval people and their primitive logic yet Jason's arguments are even more befuddling and the year is 2006. Even more scary!
Stan Yoder's suggestion to stop focusing on using logic to persuade religious believers away from their religion is dead on. Using logic,you will never ever persuade a shizophrenic that they are not really hearing voices and you will never ever convince an individual like Jason to recant his world view. The logic of non-believers is not even in the same universe as Jason's.
Harris, Dawkins and Dennet are indeed the holy trinity of non-belief right now and there is no better way to carry on their mission than what they are currently doing. We do need additional approaches however. I doubt that militancy is the answer. I wish I had the answer. The illogic of religious belief is truly baffling to me.
I just know that I am very afraid of all people who invoke Christ, God, Allah, Mohammed, the Bible, the Koran and the like to justify their world views. Religion has been the bane of mankind for thousands of years and with the weapons of mass destruction that are now readily available, those wars between religious enemies will almost assuredly lead to the extinction of not just our species but could lead to the next mass extinction on this planet.
It doesn't take many people to destroy the planet. Only a few lunatics that are willing to die for their beliefs. Nuclear weapons were developed by sane governments to have military supremacy with the mutual understanding that they are only deterrents to being attacked. Those same weapons in the hands of people who really don't care about human life, either theirs or ours, or the rest of life on this planet are absolutetly the enemy we should all fear.
Perhaps it won't happen immediatly but it is almost a certainty that their ultimate attack on the world will happen. The really sad thing about the dominant species on the planet is that we are now capable of destroying all life on a really unique planet. This planet would be so better off without any humans. We are the only species that doesn't fit into any food chain whatsoever. The planet would thrive without us. With us in charge, the planet is almost certainly doomed.
Posted by: Philip Tripp | December 29, 2006 1:21 PM
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Judy
Just to get my situation on the table - I'm an atheist.
I think one of the things that is tricky for atheists is the question of what SPECIFICALLY they stand FOR as opposed to AGAINST.
I believe, along with Sam, that religions are antiquated crude belief systems but whilst it is easy to mock their absurdities it is worth remembering that they do provide a code and guidance on how to live one's life. This code and guidance may be violent and bigoted and inappropriate to modern life and values. It may be largely ignored, as Sam points out, by most 'liberal' practitioners. But it is nonetheless guidance. There are congragations that focus on positive values and helping the less fortunate.
Atheism, by way of contrast, offers little in the way of such concrete guidance. I consider myself a humanist and don't miss this lacuna, but I think many people find it a little disorientating. What do we stand for except for denigrating their cherished beliefs? There is a real danger we just come across as smug clever dicks. In a forum such as this you can smell that tone. It's natural when you find kindred spirits. In groups trash out groups and here the religious are the out group.
I like the fact that without some superior force telling me what to do through the medium of his chosen representatives and body of texts and practises I have to take the responsibility for my decisions and social acts. But let's just think for a minute. Let's explore a happy thought experiment. Let's assume all religions disappeared tomorrow. Obviously that wouldn't eliminate the need for civilized behavior. I would argure that it would ultimately be better. But it would be an awkward transition for many because there is nothing to effortlessly slip into religion's place and MOST PEOPLE NEED SUCH A FRAMEWORK.
A historical example might be helpful. Karl Marx pointed out many interesting aspects of capitalist society. His critique lit a fire under those who sought greater social justice. Armed with his economic and social theories they set out to change society and better the lot of the working class. The problem was that whilst they were against the capitalist state Marx didn't actually have a political theory. Economics - yes. Sociology (particularly social class) - yes. But politics and political institutions - no. Jurisprudence - no. He just had the crude notion of the withering away of the state. So what where the agitators to do? How were they to organize? They knew the capitalist state was bad but Marx didn't tell them how to replace it or what with. That's when Lenin entered the picture. Hence Marxism Leninism that led to apalling tyranny.
The point is that it's not enough to rail against the inadequacies of the status quo. If one faith is eroded without thought as to the alternative we may well end up with another tyranny and it might be even worse. That may seem hard to imagine, but so was the horror of the Soviet Union.
Judy - when your Quaker friends shudder, I think it is in part not just the fact that you don't believe in God that they find scary, it's their more or less conscious feel of a Godless world. and by this they mean a world without any values etc etc. such a world would indeed be a scary place. It is up to atheists to ensure that it is not and that we move on to a 21st century world view and morality that, we hope, will save the planet. This world view will need to embrace some very unsavory facts about human behavior and what may well be sad truths about humankind. The more recent research into sociobiology and evolutionary biology has not been that encouraging.
However, in the immortal words of Antonio Gramsci - "Pessimism of the intellect, optimism of the will"
:)
Posted by: petegrif | December 29, 2006 1:05 PM
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I find the following contribution most unfortunate.
" satanhimself:
I hope that Sam will grow more comfortable with the word "atheist", as I did, when I realized the simplicity and honesty of the word---"without belief in gods". Nothing more, nothing less. An atheist could still hold beliefs in other concepts, like multiple universes or (a word I really detest) "spirituality"....as long as no supreme beings are involved."
When Sam suggests that he is not too keen on the term atheist I can identify with him. It is a 'not' style word. And although you (Satan -- scared of revealing your own name?) say that atheism permits other beliefs it does tend to be rather emphatic.
I do not believe in the Christian concept of God, ditto for Judaism or Islam or Zoroastrianism or the Bahai faith or the multiple gods of Hinduism. But I have for some long time now regarded myself as an agnostic. The fact that religious believers try to take advantage of the word agnostic is neither here nor there. They sure do everyhthing possible to take advantage of the word atheist.
I am an agnostic simply because I do not believe in the conception of God put forward by the worlds formal religions. But I lay no claims to knowing all the answers and I feel unable to exclude the possibility of some numinous aspect to the world we live in.
I have just finished reading The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins and I find myself attracted to what Dawkins calls Einsteinian religion. After reading his detailed explication of deism, theism ,agnosticism, atheism, pantheism etc I guess I am a pantheist or more particularly a radical pantheist (to borrow from Douglas Adams -- who styled himself a radical atheist).
But, to come to the point, I think it is a waste of time to try and force all those of us who reject the erroneous views of the world we live in, propounded by the worlds formal religions, to use the same label. There are more important things for us to do. Enjoy your label atheist, if you so wish, but please don't fuss over forcing or even coaxing the rest of us to use the same label. To suggest that those of us who use a different label are not honest is unfair to say the least.
Posted by: Ted Swart | December 29, 2006 12:55 PM
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Bruce Burleson wrote:
"Duckphup & Alvin Hurst: Both of you believe that Jesus was an entirely fictional character. You are both taking positions that are against the weight of historical scholarship on this issue."
*********
You are confusing 'historical scholarship' with 'religious scholarship'. There is no HISTORICAL evidence for the existence of Jesus, whatsoever. Josephus, Tacitus and Tertullian are effectively debunked. There are no other historical references.
Posted by: DuckPhup | December 29, 2006 12:52 PM
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Ed W: Thanks for your comment. I was not aware that science had concluded many times that resurrections like the one reported in the New Testament "aren't possible." Please refer me to the scientific studies that reached this conclusion.
With regard to your Napolean analogy - 1) neither you nor anyone else has told me that Napolean did rise from the dead; and 2) if you or someone else did, I would have to evaluate your testimony based upon a variety of factors. If I reject it out of hand, I am making an a priori assumption not based on evidence.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 12:40 PM
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Great post Sam....I think you're making a dent in the way people think about religion and god.
Seems to me that religion is the mother of all groupthink,where one naturally buys into what ones
community believes. Thats why we have catholics in Ireland,Hindus in India,Muslims in Saudie Arabia
and evengelicals in the USA.
Groupthink is a powerful influence on how we think,and see the world. And a good arguement
for questioning our beliefs in the supernatural.
Posted by: yoyo | December 29, 2006 12:38 PM
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agnosticism is a position on knowledge: "we can't know".
atheism is a position on belief: "i don't believe zeus exists".
one can be an agnostic atheist or whatever.
Posted by: Anonymous | December 29, 2006 12:29 PM
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Duckphup & Alvin Hurst: Both of you believe that Jesus was an entirely fictional character. You are both taking positions that are against the weight of historical scholarship on this issue. You can point to scholars that deny his physical existence. I can point to more scholars that acknowledge his existence (whether or not they believe in his deity or resurrection). So I have educated myself on this issue. I am interested in knowing whether Sam Harris believes that Jesus, as a human being, is a completely fictional character. Does anyone know?
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 12:27 PM
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bruce:
science has concluded many times on resurrections: they aren't possible.
how is that for evidence?
i dont know what delusions one must harbor to really believe that things like this happen. is it just that you were told it many times as a child? or is that you convinced yourself after watching passion of the christ?
besides... if i told you that Napoleon rose from the dead and i saw it happen... would you believe me? no. there are innumerably more plausible explanations: i was on drugs, i walked onto the set of a movie, i am lying, etc.
Posted by: Ed W. | December 29, 2006 12:25 PM
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Steverootdoc: I agree completely. I was not saying that the accounts of the resurrection are true because they have not been proven false. But science cannot be the ultimate arbiter of this question because it cannot prove the resurrection true or false. My point is that the eyewitness accounts of the resurrection, coupled with a lack of proof that they are false, equals "some evidence."
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 12:18 PM
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It took me a long time to read through all the comments. In a way it is comforting to find so many people thinking about the conflict between science and religion. Surely an intelligent polite dialogue is one of the healthiest way to work out a problem.
Having read Sam and Dawkins and Dennett,I have loved everything they've had to say, but I have one little niggling item to post here. I've tried to understand why using the word "agnostic" is unacceptable to some atheists. I have read the Dawkins probability argument and found it helpful, i.e., from a scientific/astrophysics point of view that the chances of there being a god is almost non-existent, still, scientists are open to questioning of any theory, are prepared for criticism and further data, etc.. to revise, and to do further studies, etc.. So what's so bad then about saying, "We simply don't know what happened back then--big bang or what--but whatever did happen we can live our lives decently without knowing. It doesn't have to be settled. Why the bi-polarity?
One way or the other, it has little to do with the way we conduct ourselves whether we are agnostics or atheists. For years I've told people that I am an agnostic, that I simply didn't know about the existence of a god. No one ever shunned me. But last summer some Quaker friends were visiting. I told them that I had once enjoyed going to a Quaker meeting because it was the only place I knew of where a group of people could just sit in absolute silence together for a whole hour. No music. Nothing. Just silence. It was meant as a compliment and they knew it, but they really wanted more from me. On the spur of the moment I added, "but I'm really an atheist." The reaction was quite amazing. Their body language was like a reverse magnet. They physically shuddered, were totally annoyed and repelled. These are people I see once a year at most. When they were leaving, the husband called back over his shoulder, "We may not be able to prove there is a god, but you can't prove there isn't one."
It's not easy to reject outright the prevailing belief system of your peers, expecially when they are so uncomfortable, even frightened by the alternative. To them it means the loss of a church and a congregation, people who are friendly and who try to do good works together. It's group dynamics. People tend to think their group is better than someone else's. The sad part obviously is that this can lead to violence. If they can't convert you, they tend to dislike you, and too often killing you and your kind is the only answer. Religions are dangerous groups for many reasons, but that's the worst one of all.
Well, I've muddled my way through this and hope someone out there will have an answer to the agnostic versus atheist question. It seems as if atheism may grow into a group, not just a definition of a non-theistic belief.
Posted by: Judy | December 29, 2006 12:18 PM
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Jason Brafield writes as follows:
One answer to "atheism" that you have not mentioned and has been out for quite some time is Clarkian presuppositionalism.
Nothing that I have read in your writings so far would come even close to addressing the issues Gordon Clark had raised in a number of his books.
In my opinion, he has logically demolished not only your framework, but even the Christian "empiricism" held by the vast majority of Christendom. (intelligent design arguments, evidentialism, classical Thomistic arguments, etc.)
Here's to name a few of the arguments:
1)Observation is unreliable. Scientists do not perform an experiment only once. Experiments are always repeated, and the results most always differ in some way. Why? Because the senses tend to deceive us; they are not to be trusted. Hence, numerous readings are taken in an attempt to guard against inaccurate observation. So much is this the case in science, that tests with unrepeatable results are never taken seriously. But if observation is unreliable, if the senses are so easily deceived, if the results frequently differ, why should one ever believe that he has discovered truth through observation?
*******
This has got to be the most clueless observation I have come across in a long time. The strength of science lies precisely in the fact that it insists on repeatability. If an observation cannot be repeated by others it quite simply does not enter the scientific canon. The issue of “inaccurate observations” is simply a red herring. If different scientist do not get the exact same figure for the speed of light or the mass of the electron this does not mean we do not have a very good idea of what these values are.
***********
(2) All scientific experiments commit the fallacy of asserting the consequent. In syllogistic form this is expressed as: "If p, then q. q; therefore, p." Bertrand Russell, certainly no friend of Christianity, stated it this way:
All inductive arguments in the last resort reduce themselves to the following form: "If this is true, that is true: now that is true, therefore this is true." This argument is, of course, formally fallacious. Suppose I were to say: "If bread is a stone and stones are nourishing, then this bread will nourish me; now this bread does nourish me; therefore it is a stone, and stones are nourishing." If I were to advance such an argument, I should certainly be thought foolish, yet it would not be fundamentally different from the argument upon which all scientific laws are based.
In the laboratory scientists work with a hypothesis. In this case the hypothesis is: "If bread is a stone and stones are nourishing, then this bread will nourish me." The scientist then attempts to deduce the predicted results that should occur if the hypothesis is true, such as "this bread nourishes me." He then performs an experiment to test the hypothesis to see if the predicted results occur. So he sits down at the table and eats the bread, and wonder of wonders, the bread does nourish him. The hypothesis, he concludes, is confirmed: "This bread is a stone and stones are nourishing." Silly you say? Yes! Yet, as Russell has asserted, it is not "fundamentally different from the argument upon which all scientific laws are based." That is to say, all scientific laws are based on fallacious arguments.
******
What a bizarre contention. I don't know of a single scientific conclusion which follows such a caricature of what science is about. Examples please! Scientists discover radioactivity, by accident as it so happens, and go on to find – by repeatable experiments which elements in the periodic table are radioactive. They then go on by further repeatable experiments what the half lives of different radioactive elements are and further go on to estimate (yes estimate – not claiming exact accuracy) what the age of the earth is from ancient rock formations. And they discover that the earth is billions of years old – irrespective of which suitable radioactive element are used for this determination. Where, in all of this, is there any confusion between bread and stones? Pray tell.
********
(3)Science commits the fallacy of induction. Induction is the attempt to derive a general law from particular instances. Science is necessarily inductive. For example, if a scientist is studying crows, he might observe 999 crows and find that they all are black. But is he ever able to assert that all crows are black? No; the next crow he observes might be an albino. One can never observe all crows: past, present, and future. Universal propositions can never be validly obtained by observation. Hence, science can never give us true statements.
********
This is just further mumbo jumbo. Science is not prone to say all crows are black – freely admitted uncertainty to the rescue – but simply that most crows are black. Crows are not the only birds which are black and their characteristics embrace many other aspects which distinguish then from other birds. So, there is built in room for albinos in the world of science.
********
(4)Equations are always selected, they are never discovered. In the laboratory the scientist seeks to determine the boiling point of water. Since water hardly ever boils at the same temperature, the scientist conducts a number of tests and the slightly differing results are noted. He then must average them. But what kind of average does he use: mean, mode, or median? He must choose; and whatever kind of average he selects, it is his own choice; it is not dictated by the data. Then too, the average he chooses is just that, that is, it is an average, not the actual datum yielded by the experiment. Once the test results have been averaged, the scientist will calculate the variable error in his readings. He will likely plot the data points or areas on a graph. Then he will draw a curve through the resultant data points or areas on the graph. But how many curves, each one of which describes a different equation, are possible? An infinite number of curves is possible. But the scientist draws only one. What is the probability of the scientist choosing the correct curve out of an infinite number of possibilities? The chance is one over infinity, or zero. Therefore, all scientific laws are false. They cannot possibly be true. As cited above, the statement of Karl Popper is correct: "It can even be shown that all theories, including the best, have the same probability, namely zero."
* * * * * *
Why this ridiculous aversion to averages? It is not as if science excludes averages from its discourse. No scientist would ever claim that there is even such a thing as the exact boiling point of water. But we do know a lot about water including the fact that ice is less dense than water and that it therefore floats on water – which is a massively fascinating observation tied in with the issue of how life came into being. And we do know that the earth is roughly spherical and we do have a good idea how the sun produces radiant energy and so and so on. And these are all facts that have been discovered by the scientific method.
*********
(5) All scientific laws describe ideal situations. As Clark has said, "At best, scientific law is a construction rather than a discovery, and the construction depends on factors never seen under a microscope, never weighed in a balance, never handled or manipulated."3 Clark uses the law of the pendulum as an example:
The law of the pendulum states that the period of the swing is proportional to the square root of the length. If, however, the weight of the bob is unevenly displaced around its center, the law will not hold. The law assumes that the bob is homogeneous, that the weight is symmetrically distributed along all axes, or more technically, that the mass is concentrated at a point. No such bob exists, and hence the law is not an accurate description of any tangible pendulum. Second, the law assumes that the pendulum swings by a tensionless string. There is no such string, so that the scientific law does not describe any real pendulum. And third, the law could be true only if the pendulum swung on an axis without friction. There is no such axis. It follows, therefore, that no visible pendulum accords with the mathematical formula and that the formula is not a description of any existing pendulum.
* * * * * *
All I can say to that is so what! No scientist would dispute what you are saying. This in no way negates the reality of scientific progress.
* * * * * *
From our study of these five logical difficulties, it can be readily seen that science is not capable of giving us any truth.
* * * * * *
How on earth do you arrive at such a ridiculous conclusion? Medical science has uncovered the existence of appendices attached to our digestive system. And we know that these appendices can became inflamed and even burst thus endangering the lives of those so afflicted. And innumerable lives have been saved by appendectomies. These are all true scientific facts and to suggest that “science is not capable of giving us any truth” is quite simply perverse.
* * * * * * *
Science has its place in a Christian philosophy, an important place. But science is never to be seen as a means of learning truth. Truth is found in the Scriptures alone; the Bible has a monopoly on truth. It is God’s Word that must be believed, not the experiments of men. As Robbins has said: "Science is false, and must always be false. Scripture is true and must always be true. The issue is as clear, and as simple, as that."
* * * * * *
An how do you arrive at this indefensible conclusion? Just how do you know which scriptures to pick from the large range on offer? What repeatable procedure do you suggest I follow to come to the same conclusion as you do?
Posted by: Ted Swart | December 29, 2006 12:17 PM
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Don: Well, at least you answered the question. Thanks for that. Science cannot prove, nor can it disprove, the eyewitness accounts of Jesus' resurrection. In a court of law, an eyewitness account of an event accounts as "some evidence". There are several eyewitness accounts of the resurrection, none of which have been disproven by science or any other method. I agree that eyewitness testimony should not be taken at face value, and if you could present me here and now with scientific proof that Jesus did not rise from the dead, then you would destroy the basis of Christianity once and for all. You, however, are not able to do this. We have 1) the accounts of the eyewitnesses and 2) a lack of scientific proof that the accounts are wrong. That equals "some evidence." We disagree on this point, but at least the issue is defined.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 12:11 PM
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Mr. Burleson,
The proposition that something is true because it has not been proven to be false, or that it is false because it has not been proven to be true, is a logical fallacy of relevance. It is called "Argumentum ad Ignorantium".
Posted by: Steverootdoc | December 29, 2006 12:08 PM
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"It is God’s Word that must be believed, not the experiments of men."
And which account of God's Word was that that doesn't ultimately rely on the testimony of men?
Posted by: "Q" the Enchanter | December 29, 2006 12:00 PM
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Sam: thanks once again for your cogent words. Your prose not only makes sense; it is always well-written, and a pleasure to read.
Jason Bradfield: as I read through your response to Sam, which assures me that that science is not capable of giving us any truth, it occurred to me that science alone made it possible for me to read what you wrote. Had your thoughts been delivered through the magic of religious incantation, they might have carried more weight.
Posted by: Fred in Sonoma | December 29, 2006 11:57 AM
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Jason Bradfield HAS clearly and correctly pointed out the inherently flawed and "probabilistic" nature of the "Scientific Method"...
..... which certainly DOES dramatically contrast with his own simple "declaration" (albeit, by proxy)
of "All Knowingness"!
He burns all the "logical" bridges to his OWN conclusion, then simply declares "IT"... as Absolute Truth!
Thanks, Jason, but...I'll stick with clunky old Science for now......
Gary
Posted by: Gary Llewellyn | December 29, 2006 11:55 AM
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Sam really has a way with words. once again he confronts the issues raised at hand and is attacked for his opinion. Religion is belief. athiesim is not non-belief. its belief in unknown truth, and that scares people.
people percieve athiesm as folding your hand in poker. "i dont know what to belive so ill sit this one out", and thats not far from the truth. but folding a hand in poker is an agressive move if you know you have the weaker hand.
Posted by: Jasontz | December 29, 2006 11:46 AM
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"Science is false, and must always be false. Scripture is true and must always be true. The issue is as clear, and as simple, as that."
If Mr. Bradfield expects to convince anyone of this, he'll have to make a clearer, simpler case for it. He has way too much time on his hands.
Posted by: Steverootdoc | December 29, 2006 11:44 AM
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The fallacy of Mr. Bradfield's argument is found in the first sentence of his post. He's working his way through Sam's second book. You're right Jason, that "Letter to a Christian Nation" is a real toughy.
If,a, the opening statement is ludicrous. And,b, the following arguments ridiculous than ,c, Jason is ....
Thank you Sam. Keep it coming.
Posted by: Phil Stout | December 29, 2006 11:43 AM
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Bruce,
There is a big difference between "evidence" and a "claim". I would call the reported eyewitness accounts in the Bible "claims" not evidence. Evidence (in science) is subject to independent verification. Even in a court trial, eyewitness accounts are subject to scrutiny and not simply taken at face value. Unfortunately for your position, it is next to impossible 2000 years later to verify the eyewitness claims. Thus, while there are claims of resurrection, my answer to your last question regarding whether I will agree there is some evidence is "no".
With respect to the death of cult members, I merely was making the point that a willingness to die for some belief does not make that belief true.
Don
Posted by: Don | December 29, 2006 11:40 AM
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Hi Sam,
I enjoy your writing a lot, and I think what you're doing may be very important. I have one objection here: On the one hand, you quite frequently call for the disposal of religion on the grounds of its negative consequences. But, here (and in the Dennis Prager debate), you deny that its positive consequences could ever score points in its favor, because the only real issue is whether its factual claims are true or not. It seems not a little dishonest to let the bad consequences, and only the bad consequences, count in your evaluation of it!
Posted by: David R. | December 29, 2006 11:39 AM
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Bruce,
There were actual "eyewitness" accounts for weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, and that false witness launched a terrible, needless war. Eyewitnesses usually observe what they are expected to, or desire.
Christ's life and message becomes much more valuable when stripped of the hocus pocus.
Walter
Posted by: Walter80111 | December 29, 2006 11:38 AM
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Bruce Burleson said...
"Duckphup: I will read the Jesus Puzzle. Thank you for the recommendation. Will you be honest enough, however, to admit that there is some evidence for the resurrection of Jesus, whether you believe that evidence or not?"
**********
Ahem... I dispute the contention that there is even credible evidence for the EXISTENCE of Jesus... which makes speculation concerning his 'ressurection' irrelevant, at best.
Myth, superstition and fictional accounts do not constitute 'evidence'... no matter HOW many people believe it, or how many copies of it have been printed.
It is interesting to note that the entire accumulated time span for which the comings and goings of Jesus are accounted for in the Wholly Babble (not counting his supposed 40-day sojourn in the desert) amounts to no more than 3-weeks. The Gospels are a fictional account of a non-existent personage, weaving contemporary 'savior' myths (Mithra, Dionysus, Osirus, et al) around a set of prophecies from the OT.... essentially, the myths, superstitions, fairy tales and fantastical delusions of an ignorant bunch of Bronze Age fishermen and peripatetic goat-herders... a helluva base upon which to establish one's world-view.
Posted by: DuckPhup | December 29, 2006 11:33 AM
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Bruce, there is no evidence of the reserection of jesus, jesus is a fictionan character,educate yourselfe please.
Posted by: Alvin Hurst | December 29, 2006 11:32 AM
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I'm thrilled to see that there are so many people finally speaking their mind about the issue of religion and how it adversely affects our world. Just one person standing up and declaring to the masses that "The King Has No Cloths," may set our world on the path of accepting what should have been obvious all along. I really like the way KAATTIE expressed her thoughts. It was short, simple and to the point. I'm sure the founding fathers of our country wanted a true separation between church and state to avoid the path our country is headed down today. No religious beliefs should have ever gained influence in governing our nation's commerce, education or foreign policy but tragically religion has woven itself into the fabric of all our government does. We have a world, armed to the teeth, taking up sides which are drawn across religious lines while none of those religions are based upon any verifiable facts. Do we really want to kill off our fellow man because of differing religious ideologies? We will always have psychotic religious fanatics who inflict unimaginable death and destruction upon the innocent. We need a measured response to such tragedies. We need to be the nation of reason and as long as our religious beliefs guide our reasoning, our responses will be counterproductive.
Posted by: DaveL | December 29, 2006 11:30 AM
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Alvin Hurst: Thanks for the recommendations. I will read these books. By the way, my church does not tell me what I can read and what I cannot read. When I am reading these books, I will be looking for accounts of eyewitness testimony of the resurrections of these other deities that you mention. If there are eyewitness accounts of historical events in these accounts, then I will have to admit that there is "some evidence" of those events. I may choose not to believe in those accounts, based upon a variety of objective and subjective factors. But an eyewitness account is "some evidence."
Now, will you be honest enough to just admit that there is some evidence of the resurrection of Jesus?
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 11:29 AM
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The solution is to create antireliginanity, AR, the religion of reason. As a believer in AR, an ARian, we now have the right to create our own set of ridiculous reasons for behaving the way we want. Personally, I do not really want to have 30 virgins waiting for me when I die. I prefer women with experience. If I thought this true then I might be interested in blowing myself up to get my reward.
Seriously, religious belief is a learned experience. We believe what we were taught to believe. Only a few are able to break from the grasp of religious teachings and seek real truth. For me, the truth is that god is a convenient concept that men use to solve unanswerable questions about life. It is just too hard to face life directly and on our own. The concept that we can let go and let god take over is very powerful. So we make god truth and learn to believe this. That is why there "are no athiests in foxholes".
How then does the world come to grips with the incredible world conflict we now face. Only when more and more men understand the Truth - each of us is responsible for solving our own life problems - will there be a chance for Reason to prevail. We can only hope man will survive the next thousand years while the conversion to reason based thinking occurs.
Posted by: Joseph Finn | December 29, 2006 11:24 AM
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Don: Thank you for your response. 1) With respect to Heavens Gate, I am not aware of any eyewitness testimony reported from them that the spaceship arrived. Was there any? The biblical account has eyewitness testimony of the resurrected Jesus. 2) I am not aware of the resurrection of Jesus having been proved to be false. If it ever is, that would destroy the basis for my faith. 3) If I did not have the testimony found in the Bible about the resurrection of Jesus, I would have no basis for believing that it occurred. There I find eyewitness accounts. It is that objective evidence coupled with my own subjective experience that has resulted in my belief in this event. To answer your question - "No", without the testimony, I would not cling to my faith, as I would have no objective basis for my faith. The testimony, coupled with my subjective experience, creates the faith. That faith is not based on "no evidence", as I have the evidence from the Bible. You may not agree with that evidence, but you honestly cannot say that there is "no evidence" of the resurrection. The scriptural accounts are the only objective evidence that I have, to answer your last question.
Now, will you answer my question: Do you admit that there is some evidence of the resurrection of Jesus?
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 11:24 AM
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The late Carl Sagan's thinking leaves room for the mystery of what we (science) have not yet discovered or explained and graciously allows for this realm to be labeled "god". This leaves an open door for those that might be fence sitters tettered to a lifelong indoctrination of religion and the uneasy feeling that abandoning any notion of their traditional "god" has negative consequences. (fear)
A suggested step would be to consider the proposition that, although there is the great mystery we might call "god" there is no reason to accept any myth, miracle, or action atributed to this or any "god" that does not make sense in today's world. There is far more to admire in the mystery of what we do not know today, than at any time in the history of mankind.
The universe is incredible enough. No need to "believe" a "holy" book. Christians should question the virgin birth; miraculous recovery (by Christ or anyone else) from death; and the dubious value, if not outright damage caused by the notion of "forgiveness of sin".
Lie on your back one starry night and wonder.....
Yes, thanks to all for the support of reason in this forum. But let's be even more reasonable.
Confrontational attack usually has the "born again" dig in even more.
Gentle does it......
Thanks Sam, for your initiative. I have given your little "Letter" book to quite a few people, and it has had some tentatively positive responses from "christian" friends. Really!
Walter
PS, Carl Sagan's "Gifford Lectures" recently re issued/edited by his partner as " The Varieties of Scientific Experience" is a wonderful read on the search for "god".
Posted by: Walter80111 | December 29, 2006 11:19 AM
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Bruce Burleson, you need to reed just pretend by dan barker, and Ken Smiths guide to the bible, and the book your church doesn"t want you to read,Available at evolvefish.com,study comparitive religion and you will find more evidence of many other gods ,and sons of god being resurected in much the same way as jesus,your religion is assembled from other religions.
Posted by: Alvin Hurst | December 29, 2006 11:18 AM
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Bruce:
1. A willingness to die for some belief or delusion is hardly sufficient evidence of anything. Look at the hundreds who died following Jim Jones, or the 39 members of the Heaven's Gate cult in California who slipped into plastic bags and suffocated while expecting some spaceship was coming for them. Did their willingness to die prove the spaceship was real?
2. There are witnesses for many events (including those related to religions and "miracles") throughout history that subsequently proved to be false or that have other more rational explanations.
3. Tacitly, you recognize that evidence of some sort is crucial to underpin your religious faith. That is one reason you so willingly accept at face value the "testimony" provided in the Bible. Would you still cling to your faith without this evidence? Is this the only "evidence" you have?
Don
Posted by: Don | December 29, 2006 11:12 AM
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Graham Cleverly: Therefore, science can never prove that Jesus rose from the dead, even if He actually did. So science is not going to be helpful on that issue.
Furthermore, science has yet to prove that Jesus did NOT rise from the dead. So since science cannot prove that He did rise from the dead, and since it has yet to prove that He did not, science is really of very little value in determining that issue.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 11:05 AM
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Atheists do not pay the salaries of clergymen.
I have spent considerable time considering how to make a atheism as big a business as religion. I have not come up with any method.
My second point is that trying to convert a believer into non-beliver is similar to trying to convert a Jew to Catholicism: Difficult and time consuming and more than likely unsuccessful.
Posted by: gary gromet | December 29, 2006 11:01 AM
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The one named "Jason Bradfield" is an idiot. Congratulations Jason, you successfully missed EVERY point of reason, observation, evidence and logic presented throughout human history. WELL DONE! You religious nutjobs are pathetic and will be dealt with in time. Tick tock tick tock tick tock...
Posted by: JL Wallace | December 29, 2006 11:01 AM
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Let me add to that.
Science doesn't prove anything. EVER. Science advances by DISPROVING things.
It starts with an hypothesis, usually based to some extent on observation - say, that p is true. It then attempts to deduce from that a necessary consequence q, so that one can say 'if p then q'. It then observes q.
If q is observed to be true that does not prove anything about p: p is not DISproven, but it is not proven either.
However, if q is observed to be false, it proves that p must also be false, so the hypothesis that p is true is DESTROYED.
Science is therefore never certainly sure that anything is true, only that some things are not true. That is what distinguishes it from religion.
Posted by: Graham Cleverley | December 29, 2006 10:55 AM
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Duckphup: I will read the Jesus Puzzle. Thank you for the recommendation. Will you be honest enough, however, to admit that there is some evidence for the resurrection of Jesus, whether you believe that evidence or not?
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 10:55 AM
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Dear Mr. Harris,
I see myself as an atheist in the full meaning of the word. As such I do agree with your philosophy.
On the other hand I also recognize that the reality you present is not complete. It does not relate at all to the foundation of it all namely, the nature of human beings and the reasons beyond the absolute adoption of faith as the "true" meaning of the self.
By itself this fact would not be important. It is however, with outmost importance because atheism without explanation presenting the whole picture is accepted as no more of one more faith.
Further more, atheism, despite being the truth, without providing the whole picture and thus an alternative "faith", is quite dangerous. All religions provide some level of moral guidance. This moral guidance, provides a framework based on which human beings can maintain societies in which people can have some level of enjoyable life experience.
Since the reality of thoughts and actions by human beings are potentially limitless, lack of guidelines as provided by religions, is critically dangerous.
Please consider this issue. I see atheism as potential for literally, saving our planet however as an incomplete alternative it may lead to world level disaster.
-Michael
Posted by: MichaelH | December 29, 2006 10:48 AM
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I just read in a Myers-Briggs personality book that roughly 2/3 of the world consists of extraverts, who glean their energy, comfort and validation from external sources, which religion dishes out in spades (herds of people validating one another, the beneficience and approval of a Giant Daddy in the Sky, etc). Conversely, introverts tend to derive their comfort and energy from within, so maybe don't need that external validation, and perhaps are less inclined to join the flock. In fact, don't NEED the flock.
My question: Do you think there's a larger number of introverts who are atheists (vs. extraverts?). Religion is so social. How many of you consider yourselves introverts/extraverts?
Posted by: Patti | December 29, 2006 10:43 AM
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Bruce Burleson:
Read "The Jesus Puzzle", by Earl Doherty... that should vanquish your delusions.
Posted by: DuckPhup | December 29, 2006 10:35 AM
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I will comment on only one issue - the resurrection of Jesus. My entire faith is based upon that event. If that event actually occurred, everything that I believe about God follows from it. If that event did not occur, everything that I believe about God fails. My objective evidence for the physical resurrection of Jesus comes from the New Testament accounts of that event, in which it is clearly stated that Jesus rose from the dead and was seen by certain witnesses. Some of these witnesses were willing to suffer death rather than deny this event. You may choose not to believe these accounts, just as a jury may choose not to believe an eyewitness account in a trial. But no one can truthfully say that there is "no evidence" of the resurrection of Jesus. Will any non-believer at least be honest enough to admit that there is "some evidence" of the resurrection of Jesus, whether you believe that evidence or not?
I believe the objective evidence from the biblical account because of my own personal subjective experience, not because of dogma that has been taught to me. Much like a jury member who has to determine whether or not an eyewitness account is true, I have chosen to accept this evidence because of subjective impressions that I have about the story itself, about the writers who have written about it, and about the subject of the story - Jesus. I can go into these subjective experiences in more detail if anyone is interested (I doubt that many are). But my point is that I have both an objective and a subjective basis for believing in that event - the resurrection of Jesus. We make decisions on this basis daily - through the combination of objective evidence and subjective experience. So far, I am satisfied in my own life that my faith is correct. I acknowledge many of the problems with religion that Mr. Harris has so articulately pointed out. However, no one can honestly state that there is "no evidence" of the resurrection of Jesus, whether or not you choose to accept that evidence.
Posted by: Bruce Burleson | December 29, 2006 10:31 AM
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Here it is folks... further proof that religion is sending the world to hell in a handbasket. And this is the mentality that rules all the known world. Scary, no? How will we ever pull back from this lip of insanity before mutual destruction overcomes even the unwilling.
"Stability in Iraq ultimately depends on spreading the message of Jesus Christ, the message of peace on earth, good will towards
men. Everything depends on everyone learning about the birth of the Savior."
-- NC Congressman Robin Hayes
Posted by: Brian O'Dea | December 29, 2006 9:52 AM
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Hey Marcos!
Inherit the Wind is a grrreat film. Favorite quote from Hornbeck (Gene Kelly)
"I may be rancid butter, but I'm on you're side of the bread."
Posted by: Shemp | December 29, 2006 9:47 AM
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I have a lot friends and and relatives (in their 50s and above in age) who are religious. No matter how elegant Sam and Richard Dawkins are, I cannot fathom them abandoning their faith. They have, after all, a lot of emotional investment in their faith and they have expended considerable effort to display their religiosity through the years, especially in their Christmas missives sent out with cards. (I groan every year knowing what lies inside the envelope bearing their Christmas card.) I think it would be very difficult psychologically for them to say, all of a sudden, "nevermind--I was wrong. More I was completely wrong". Religion has worked for them and it's part of their lifestyle. Religion makes them feel good about themselves and they believe it is the only source of moral rules. I hold out little hope that they will ever turn their back on religion.
Perhaps younger people with less of an emotional investment in their religion will be more open to reason and rationality. I say this knowing that a lot of younger people (here and abroad) are inculcated with religious dogma early on (see the documentary "Jesus Camp").
Posted by: Don | December 29, 2006 9:38 AM
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I wish some of these anti-science lunatics would actually stop being such total hypocrites and try living without science, in a cave, away from us and away from computers. We would see how well they would fare. We need more people like Sam, who are injecting a nice dose of reason and logic into culture.
People like Elton John who are willing to criticise religion in the mainstream media. We need to write to our TV channels and demand that movies like 'The Handmaid's Tale' and 'Inherit the Wind' and others critical of religion get shown on TV instead of crap like the slew of Jesus movies that we always see on Xmas. Call your radio stations and ask for songs like 'Dear God' by XTC or 'Atheist Peace' by Bad Religion get played. Until atheism becomes a popular movement we're doomed to live in a 'Christian' nation.
And I agree with the post that Islam is a danger to the world today, but I'd like to add that so is Christianity. Our laws are getting changed, women are having their reproductive rights taken away, children are no longer receiving sex education, and gays are being persecuted.
We desperately need an end to all this religious nonsense, religious dogma has haunted us for millenia and it needs to end now, before it destroys us all.
Posted by: Marcos Carvalho | December 29, 2006 9:37 AM
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Let the Age of Reason finally begin! Thomas Paine would be proud of you, Sam. Some points from your books have been quite useful in breaking down those annoying mental walls. I offer a few for the enlightened to enjoy.
"It is time we admitted, from kings and presidents on down, that there is no evidence that any of our books was authored by the Creator of the universe. The Bible and Koran, it seems certain, was the work of sand-strewn men who thought the earth was flat and for whom a wheelbarrow would have been a breathtaking example of emerging technology. To rely on such a document as the basis for our worldview -however heroic the efforts of redactors - is to repudiate 2,000 years of civilizing insights that the human mind has only just begun to inscribe itself.
"Imagine a world in which generations of human beings come to believe that certain films or that specific software was made by God. Imagine a future in which millions of our descendants murder each other over rival interpretations of Star Wars or Windows 98. Could anything, ANYTHING, be more ridiculous? And yet, this would be no more ridiculous than the world we are living in right now."
Use The Force Luke,
And the power of Reason, Dude!
Science rocks!
Posted by: Shemp | December 29, 2006 9:20 AM
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------
Jason Bradfield:
Science has its place in a Christian philosophy, an important place. But science is never to be seen as a means of learning truth. Truth is found in the Scriptures alone; the Bible has a monopoly on truth. It is God’s Word that must be believed, not the experiments of men. As Robbins has said: "Science is false, and must always be false. Scripture is true and must always be true. The issue is as clear, and as simple, as that."
-----
This terrifying paragraph illustrates all of Sam's points. It also negates all of Jason's ideas. If you can't know anything, you can't know the Bible is either true or false. And a line like "science is false and must always be false" typed with a computer and posted on the world wide web is the most PERFECT irony!
Posted by: Susan Brassfield Cogan | December 29, 2006 9:14 AM
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Thank you Mr. Harris.
I'd like to add something else to the "Religion is Useful" category -- it has certainly been mentioned before by Mr. Harris and others, but not yet directly in this discussion.
One of the arguments I hear over and over is that religion is necessary and useful because it provides the moral compass to our society. (Go back to RB's raving co-worker saying that the 10 Commandments are the key to everybody behaving as they should, etc.)
My counter to that argument goes like this:
Believer: We need the Commandments posted in every classroom! Every courtroom! Without the Bible's teachings, we are morally bankrupt and our nation will wither and die!
Me: So the Bible teaches the height of morality?
Believer: Oh yes, absolutely.
Me: Wow, I'm surprised you'd say that. I thought that as a people we had grown up past what the Bible teaches.
Believer: No, the Bible is the ultimate authority.
Me: Well, the Bible not only says that slavery is OK, it advocates keeping slaves. (Colossians 3:22-24, etc). It says that women may never speak in church (1 Corinthians 14:33-35). And it says that disobedient children and adulterers and others should be stoned (Deuteronomy 21:18-21, etc.) But you don't see us keeping slaves anymore, or keeping women completely silent, or stoning our children. That's abhorrent to us as a people. Do you think that slavery should be allowed? Do you think that women contribute to your church? What are your thoughts on stoning children?
This always leaves them thinking. It opens the door to discussion of where our morality comes from, or at the very least establishes doubt in their minds that their own morality comes completely from the bible. It shatters the "Religion is Useful" arguement utterly.
Posted by: Cindy | December 29, 2006 9:13 AM
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Our Socrates Group suggested that we should separate faith from religion. In general, the group questioned the value of religion depended upon the local leadership.
I welcome any thoughts on this.
Posted by: Sam B | December 29, 2006 9:07 AM
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Thanks Sam for all you do. Thanks to all of Sam's, Dawkin's, et al, supporters. Happy Theodrivel-free New Year!
Posted by: Steve M | December 29, 2006 9:04 AM
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Sam is so good at hitting the nail on the head. Thanks Mr. Wolfe for your comment. I have spent over 30 years in my off and on studies of religion and I have seen the simple reality that thought created and invented all the religions of the world and all of their gods. This is a simple fact that withstands any open minded and intelligent dialog.
I do not call myself an “atheist” because I feel that all of the labels such as “atheist”, “agnostic”, and “believer” are all opposite sides of the same coin. Although some of my friends and associates are “atheist”, but they also do not dispose of the mystery of this unknown energy in our universe. Most people in my corrupt Christian town of Canton, Georgia consider me to be an “atheist”, and the government by way of the legal system falsely arrested me for a crime I did not commit and then committed back to back felonies in their attempt to manufacture my guilt. This is a town that has the Ten Commandments posted in our courthouse, with a description from the Code of Hammurabi underneath it, conveying “an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth”. I fought them head on during this over four year long nightmare and won the battle, but not before I lost a half million dollar custom home that I designed and built with my own hands on a beautiful lot at the corner of Lake Allatoona and the Etowah River and everything else I had to my name, and my dear, sweet mother died under the pressure and stress of this insanity. And here my late father had fought in WWII for my freedom.
Among other things, I'm a skydiving instructor with the United States Parachute Association, and, although there are all forms of different belief systems held by those in the sport, there are a number of hard core "Atheists”. Now, by this I mean that they are people that have no since of the unknown, or no since of wonder, and believe me I have seen many evil acts committed by a few of these people that call themselves “Atheist”.
One fellow bought a puppy and brought it to the drop zone and the owner of the airport had three dogs that were not being all too friendly with his puppy. He simply laced some juicy beef stakes with antifreeze and took care of them. Even though he was looked into for having done this act, he was never formally charged. I have also seen a beautiful little girl that was very apprehensive about her first skydive and this same fellow took her out for her first skydive with no concern for her apprehension, and he didn’t bother to make sure she had a good spot, and she landed off the drop zone and was severely injured, yet this guy had no since of conscience about what he had done. This same fellow pulled my pilot shut on my rig as I exited the plane on a low altitude “hop and pop” and I was intending to do as many flips as possible after exit. I sensed something was wrong upon exit and immediately stopped flipping, and I was very fortunate that I was not killed. I could go on about more wrongs committed by these hard-core “atheists” in the sport, but I think you get the point.
I just wonder what kind of world we would have if it contained nothing but people with no sense of wonder about this unknown and mysterious energy behind all life, and behind this universe, and that had this conscience of apathy and superficiality about everything they did. The lack of intelligence and love, and the lack of respect for others are not monopolized by those that believe in organized religion.
In my studies I have communicated with some of the best minds in the field of evolution and paleontology, religion, history, science and on and on. Yet I have emailed Sam several times and have never gotten a response from him or anyone associated with him. My point is, is he too self-centered and too involved in his own world of ambition to respond?
If anyone is interested put in “Kerry Walker Story” in a search and learn about what happened to me in this “Great Country” and be sure to click on “Articles” and look up my latest post called “The Natural State of Spirituality”. Although it is not listed in the "Articles" section, you will find it in the list of post on the blog in "Open Diary". You may be pleasantly surprised by what you read. I feel that we are all naturally good people if we can come to understand the power of conditioning and the problems created by culture and heritage, and simply understand who we are and simply be human beings. Organized religion is certainly the biggest contributor to the ignorance of mankind, but I think it may just go even deeper than that.
Posted by: Kerry Craig Walker | December 29, 2006 8:51 AM
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Hey Jason Bradfield,
Jesus loves you.
But everyone else thinks you are long winded and a complete idiot.
Posted by: Shemp | December 29, 2006 8:48 AM
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Jason Bradfield wrote: "(2) All scientific experiments commit the fallacy of asserting the consequent. In syllogistic form this is expressed as: "If p, then q. q; therefore, p." Bertrand Russell, certainly no friend of Christianity, stated it this way." and based a lot of turgid hogwash on it.
But it is simply wrong, as Russell would have immediately pointed out (if he could have been bothered).
The logical sequence is
if p then q
NOT q therefore NOT p
Given 'if p then q' q can be true and p false (and is often the case). As anyone outside the lunatic fringe is aware.
Assume "If it is Sunday then I go to church" is true. Then the fact that I am going to church today does not prove it is Sunday. However, if I am NOT going to church today then it can NOT be Sunday.
Posted by: Graham Cleverley | December 29, 2006 8:40 AM
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Beautiful piece of writing. Ofcourse nothing less is expected from you. Only thing is that you forgot to edit it in one place. You wrote " If legions of astrologers sought to bend our public policy to their pseudo-science, we wouldn’t need to dub ourselves “non-astrologers” to put them in their place."
This should read as -- If legions of astrologers had not sought to bend our.........
Posted by: Prof. V.N.K.Kumar ( India ) | December 29, 2006 8:35 AM
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Duckphup:
Excellent points. "Believers" hold irrrational beliefs, but (for most) only in this one arena of discourse. They demand rational arguments and behavior from other in all other areas all the time.
For example, a fundie would be outraged if they bought a package labeled "pork sausage" that turned out to contain sawdust pressed into patties. If the grocer told him: "I believe it tastes like pork and contains the same nutrients," the fundie would demand a refund. Fundies act rationally all the time. They count their change -- they don't trust that God does it for them. They apply the brakes before slamming into the rear of the next car -- they don't trust that God will prevent the potential collision. Well maybe some will say they believe this, but their actions belie their words, everyday, all the time.
The approach that Sam Harris, Richard Dawkins, et al., are currently taking is to point out -- especially to religious "moderates" -- the inherent contradiction between their rational thoughts and behavior in every other area of their lives versus their irrationality when it comes to religion.
Harris and Dawkins are focusing on "moderates" because their tolerance for irrational religious beliefs provide cover for the fundamentalists, who are fewer in number. Take away this tolerance -- held by many -- and isolate the few.
Yep, talking to fundies seems like talking to an alien species, one with brain damage. Still, they eat and drink something every day, most don't walk around with a pile of crap in their pants (in their heads, yes), and some even wear sunglass and refuse to stare at the sun.
So they do act rationally, and it's a lot of fun to point this out to them.

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