KWED
Scratching head, scratching knee
Some gods, perhaps, but certainly not the big ones.God does have a plan for you. He wants you to be happy, joyous and free, and to love your fellows.
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Some gods, perhaps, but certainly not the big ones.God does have a plan for you. He wants you to be happy, joyous and free, and to love your fellows.
It is implied by the construction of your sentence.
"The problem is that many atheists are ignorant of the fact their own ideology is also a crutch."
If you meant that whatever ideology an person who happens to be an atheist follows is a crutch you should have said something like...
"The problem is that many atheists are ignorant of the fact their own ideologies are also crutches."
No, it says "an atheist's ideology is a crutch".
Anywho, glad you have finally admitted that atheism isn't an ideology.
BTW, ideologies don't have to be crutches, so you were wrong there as well.
Speak for yourself.
I don't see a plan there, just a hope. If there's a God, I hope the same for Him. It's in His interest and ours that He be happy and love his fellows, the ones He made. But I also don't have a plan for that - just a wish.
I have the same wish for my wife. I have an actual plan to facilitate that. I give her latitude, praise, and support. I have a different plan to effect that in my dogs. We don't strike them, we praise them, we give them toys and bones, and like this morning, we take them on walks in the park. I had such hopes for my children as well, and a plan to go with them that included encouragement and education. Those are plans. And that is support.
I have found happiness, but by my own plan for myself (and luck). My plan was to work hard and save, retire to a life of leisure relatively young, be the kind of person who is liked and respected and lives relatively guilt- and shame-free by being a person of integrity and a friend, to find and earn love, and finally, to relocate to a beautiful and tranquil place with happy people and good weather to live out my days slowly surrounded by music and art and making a difference in some lives (mostly children and animals). I never saw God's plan.
Oh dear. And I thought we'd made so much progress. Now you are not only claiming that atheism is an ideology, but that it is also a myth!
Forgive me, I'm a simple uneducated man after all, but it occurred to me that if that were true, how would you know it? I mean it seems like a paradox to me? Have I said that right, a paradox?We are incapable of seeing the world as it is
Touché.Forgive me, I'm a simple uneducated man after all, but it occurred to me that if that were true, how would you know it? I mean it seems like a paradox to me? Have I said that right, a paradox?
Some gods, perhaps, but certainly not the big ones.
Forgive me, I'm a simple uneducated man after all, but it occurred to me that if that were true, how would you know it?
I mean it seems like a paradox to me? Have I said that right, a paradox?
Same way we know many other things: the sciences
You said it right, yes. It's not actually a paradox, but you did say it right.
Forgive me, I'm a simple uneducated man after all, but it occurred to me that if that were true, how would you know it? I mean it seems like a paradox to me? Have I said that right, a paradox?
I don't agree. I don't see any intrinsic meaning to events. When I attribute meaning to an event, I am aware that the meaning is coming from me.
I am pretty sure that as social animals that the activities and attitudes required for socialization are part of our base nature. Just like all the other social animals.
Sure, but they are not random. Those values are pretty well defined by a bell curve; hence normative behaviors.I tend to view morality as ethologists do. That social animals are born with the attributes of the values of fairness, empathy, reciprocity and cooperation. Expressed differently in different species, but as a normative distribution in every species. And that is good enough for nature.
No doubt. But this would be the case even if we had a method to measure Absolute Truth.
I don't think that moral systems has a truth value. While I am not much of a Harris fan, I do think that he is correct in that our implicit goals comport with well being - in various scopes.
The reason that I do not like religious moral systems is that 1) they are not systems, but merely codes, and 2) as such they demonize change in light of new information. I have no doubt that any given secular humanist will be resistant to change, but a doctrine of immutability supporting that resistance is expressly denied by the system. Which is a step forward.
No doubt. But even if we had access to absolute truth, we would still do that.
It’s the only logical conclusion that can possibly be drawn from the truism that we are in the world looking out at it, while simultaneously holding an image or idealisation of it in our minds. Our perception is always a function of perspective, the subjective paradigm by which we harmonise our inner and outer realities.
Further, it is quite impossible for us to observe the world neutrally, as it would appear were we not observing it; the act of observation is itself an interaction, making the observer an integral part of the observed phenomenon. Quantum physicists call this the measurement problem.
That doesn't mean we should abandon all attempts to square our subjective perception with reality, and just believe what cheers us up.
Subjective or objective are not binary conditions, they are more like a scale, with any claim or belief starting from entirely unevidenced subjective opinion at the bottom, and rising from there with whatever objective evidence can be demonstrated to support it.
The status scientist self idolisation egotism of just humans as men brothers was first. I know everything existed before he practiced his theism.And for the 20th time: I fully accept that that is an accurate statement of your belief.
Seeing as you failed to grasp this simple point the last 19 times, let's try another example.
Bob thinks he has directly experienced God and that this is good evidence God exists.
Sheldon believes that Bob has experienced some kind of unusual cognitive state (or uncharitably, a delusion) that can be explained rationally and scientifically and does necessitate the existence of God.
Sheldon can accept that Bob thinks he experienced God, without agreeing that he actually experienced God. Sheldon doesn't think Bob is lying, he has a different perspective on the cognitive science of mystical experiences.
What we disagree on is the cognitive science of belief (or perhaps the cognitive science of lacking a belief) and whether it is actually possible to have a 'lack of belief' regarding a concept we can comprehend. I have presented peer-reviewed scientific evidence in support of this position which you always ignore in favour of your trusty strawman.
If you don't agree, make a case against the science that supports my view, or if the scientific arguments don't interest you then just agree to disagree, rather than repeating the same inane strawman ad nauseam
Of course we shouldn’t abandon our efforts to improve our understanding of objective reality, if such a thing can reasonably be said to exist. Our unconscious minds will in any case always find ways to reconcile our inner world with the outer. But ultimately, questions about how we conceptualise the world, how we decide what is real, and what we believe, will be decided on the basis of what works.
In truth, we see very little of what surrounds us. Half way in scale between the atoms and the stars, we play out the drama of our lives. We have access only to the limited amount of information, even from our immediate physical environment, that our senses have access to, and that our brains are capable of interpreting.
@Augustus observation that we are incapable of seeing the world as it is, is therefore logically irrefutable.
Same way we know many other things: the sciences
Well it's reasonable to assert that the sciences have outstripped all other methods in that regard.
Without methods like science, yes.
Again without methods like the sciences that does seem to be our nature, but luckily we have created those methods. As of course Augustus also said, when I questioned how we know there is more to reality than we perceive.
So we know there is more to reality than what we perceive because the sciences enable this.
So we know there is more to reality than what we perceive because the sciences enable this.
Not infallible methods, obviously, but given their successes, one might be justified in saying they are the most successful we have in perceiving reality?
An aspect of being partly agnostic.I got that but plugging a leak has me feeling alarmed
God does have a plan for you. He wants you to be happy, joyous and free, and to love your fellows.
If i choose not to perceive there's a rockIt’s the only logical conclusion that can possibly be drawn from the truism that we are in the world looking out at it, while simultaneously holding an image or idealisation of it in our minds. Our perception is always a function of perspective, the subjective paradigm by which we harmonise our inner and outer realities.
Further, it is quite impossible for us to observe the world neutrally, as it would appear were we not observing it; the act of observation is itself an interaction, making the observer an integral part of the observed phenomenon. Quantum physicists call this the measurement problem.