Because I have concluded from the available evidence that such a stance is better than the alternatives.
(...)Compassion is no reason to mislead others, and this situation does not at all strike me as being somehow an exception.
No, I did not mean it as you took it. Compassion is Compassion, it cannot be used to mislead others because then that means that one is misleading oneself knowingly. If you are true to yourself how can you be untrue to someone else when you see them as yourself?
I am sorry to find myself duty-bound to tell you that you are wrong about that. It is possible and frequent for misguided compassion to lead people into misleading themselves and others. An example that springs to mind are situations when children with terminal diseases are lied to outright in order to believe that they will recover, denying them the chance to make proper use of their remaining time.
There is no good reason I can think of to imply theism where there is none.
Can you see your own circular thinking bias? We all have them, opinions, prejudices, etc. Why would you imply a theism when you do not believe in it? Those that believe in theism will imply it. Neither is right, neither is wrong; both are right, both are wrong; both are neither right nor wrong.
Aoji, you are so very mistaken. You are treating this whole matter of whether a god exists as if it
were something that belongs to the field of objective truth. As if it were
possible that it would turn out that there is a creator god and some people such as me are simply failing or refusing to accept it.
That is not only not the case, but it is
intentionally not the case. The very concept of god is utterly insuitable for matters of literal existence.
That is why it survives and spreads in the first place. Its use springs from its vagueness and, to a lesser extent, from its adaptability to a very few people's individual religious practice. But mostly it is just an useful tool for sociological manipulation.
Gods, when properly used, are simply religious practice tools. Tools that have unfortunately become wildly abused and become tools of repression and violence.
I beg to differ. It does matter a lot to me. I do not want to be mistaken for a theist, nor for an encourager of theism.
Again, you mistook what I said. If you are in a cycle of not-knowing, how could you know that you were in a cycle of not-knowing? Your not knowing that your consciousness is evolving is not a concern to you because you ARE that consciousness which does not know that it is evolving. We say that we are the same, but are we really? We know that we went through the stages of being a baby, a child, a teenager, a young adult, a middle age adult, an old adult. How (or rather "what") you think now is not likely to be the same as how ("what") you will think decades from now; how and what you thought decades ago is not likely to be the same as how and what you think today. All experiences change us. The consciousness we identify with is always changing but seems always the same. We go to sleep "knowing" who we are, we forget who we are in deep sleep, we wake up and when we wake up we start to think, and what we think about is what we went through the previous day, so it seems like a continuous consciousness. But sometimes we have nightmares and we wake up screaming and in that moment we don't know where or who or when we are.
That is basic Buddhist doctrine, but it is no reason to even consider believing in a soul, Atman or deity.
I don't know if you noticed but somehow the discussion of "soul" magically changed to "God" in the article, if not in the thread. The author is taking for granted that everyone agrees that if there is a soul then there must be a God.
That is probably because the idea that there is a soul or atman is difficult to propose without also implying or stating that there is a powerful God that somehow protects those personal essences from their otherwise obvious vulnerability to circunstances, which would make their very existence very dubious (as they indeed are).
Does someone having "visions" of demons and angels mean that there is a God?
Obviously no. Why do you ask?
No matter what is said, the reader interposes his own prejudices, his own understanding colors what is being tried to be conveyed. It can't be helped for most of us. It definitely cannot be conveyed because words are concepts and how we understand certain words clouds what the other person is saying when he uses the same words. Logic has the same failings.
That is true to an extent, but you really overselling the case. You make it appear unavoidable, and it really isn't. It is, for instance possible to realize how marginal and unnecessary certain dogmas and beliefs are. Among them those of soul and god.
What do you make of this?:
Buddhism does not totally deny the existence of a personality in an empirical sense. It only attempts to show that it does not exist in an ultimate sense. The Buddhist philosophical term for an individual is santana, i.e., a flux or a continuity. It includes the mental and physical elements as well. The kammic force of each individual binds the elements together. This uninterrupted flux or continuity of psycho-physical phenomenon, which is conditioned by kamma, and not limited only to the present life, but having its source in the beginningless past and its continuation in the future — is the Buddhist substitute for the permanent ego or the immortal soul of other religions.
If you understand this, why are you having such a hard time accepting atheism and anatta?
I wonder if taking an atheist stance is as intellectually dishonest as any theist stance. Basically, both sides offer solutions that are only broadly implied and inconclusive.
I am surprised that you are even able of making such a question, Gary, because it is so blatantly at odds with reality.
Atheism offers no solutions at all. It just refuses distractions that get in the way of seeking them.
Theism, too, offers no solutions as such. It does sometimes connect with specific people in ways that offer constructive motivation and inspiration. Much more often it just becomes a distraction that is confused with a solution, or a social control tool.
I have seen Richard Dawkins dismiss peer reviewed and published studies that he himself admits he has never read. That is the pinnacle of intellectual dishonesty.
No. That pinnacle is actually
presenting fraudulent studies as if they were true. I would refrain from commenting on what Dawkins may be dismissing mainly because I am not aware of how accurate your description is and how much indirect evidence about their quality he has (and yes, it is
very much legitimate to use indirect reviews, as well as a practical necessity due to time constraints), but even taking for granted that he was arrogant and negligent (which I doubt, but let's run with it for a while) that is simply not nearly as harmful, even potentially, as it can be to carelessly take into consideration mystically-oriented wishful thinking and call it science.
(...)
As for what I believe, well, I believe that neither of us has a clue, and this intellectual honesty. And when we refuse to explore other ideas, well, I think that's hiding.
"Hiding" is a very loaded, unsuitable word to use here. Unless we have switched subjects without me noticing, that is. It is just odd to accuse anyone of bein "hiding" from god beliefs.