Kilgore Trout
Misanthropic Humanist
Telling someone you think they are wrong on the internet is novel?
One small step for man...
You being wrong on the internet sure isn't.
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Telling someone you think they are wrong on the internet is novel?
One small step for man...
What does "human psychopathic tendency is irrational" mean?
The radical atheists believe the human psychopathic tendency is irrational, how does their belief misguide them in thinking that pure rationality is a viable path forward?
What is "radical atheism"?
Scientific progress is not connected to any given ideology. Science is value neutral.
I should have been more specific, we've never seen a modern moral viewpoint without Christian influence.
As for the answer: humanist values arise from observing the reality of human motivation, human behavior, and its consequences.
Christianity at its best allows itself to do likewise and to incorporate those learnings into its own doctrine. So does any other doctrine, to the extent that they allow themselves some renewal and moral responsibility.
Then I guess it falls to you to show why anyone would have to perceive humanism as the offspring of Christianity. It is a claim that comes out of thin air, far as I am concerned, and just as unjustified as that suggests.
The demographic success of Christianity in certain times and places does not entitle it to claim authorship of everything of any worth that arises in those times and places, you know.
Imo it's time to move on from the idea that humanism, including secular humanism was and still is separate from positive religious influence in a tunnelvisioned us vs. them mindset. Not only does secular humanism exist due to religious individuals, and Christian valuesets, but humanism is still populated by a lot of them. Both Christian and otherwise. Give Christian humanism or religious humanism a spin on Google and you might be surprised. Neither secularism nor humanism are unique to atheists nor historically and socially dependent on atheism.And modern automobiles were influenced by the steam engines that came before them.
ADA and @Augustus - I'm more than happy to acknowledge that in the past religion has sometimes had positives influences on today's best thinking. In the past. Time to move on, IMO.
Largely value neutral but not entirely. In the case of humanism, scientific progress lends credence to the idea that we can solve our own problems.
1 - Imo it's time to move on from the idea that secular humanism was and still is separate from positive religious influence in a tunnelvisioned us vs. them mindset.
2 -Not only does secular humanism exist due to religious individuals, and Christian valuesets, but is still populated by a lot of them. Both Christian and otherwise.
3 - Give Christian secular humanism or religioud secular humanism a spin on Google and you might be surprised. Neither secularism nor humanism are unique to atheists nor historically and socially dependent on them.
Nah, that's just myth. It's certainly not an evidence based (scientific) view.
false choice? your evidence for your "myth" claim?
The entirety of human history. People were saying the same things at the start of the 20th C, that we had progressed to a stage where major wars were a thing of the past and humans could unite in a spirit of internationalism and humanistic progress.
But maybe next time eh?
It seems that you're trying to make black and white that which is gray. No claims of perfect solutions are on the table here. Only claims of increasingly better solutions. Has humanity solved all of its problems? Of course not! But as an example, our sense of morality HAS progressed from where it was 2000 years ago or 1400 years ago. That is not to say it's now perfect, but there has been progress.
radical atheists are against the established negotiated morality.
What's a radical atheist?
Educate me, how has morality evolved? "The past is not dead it is not even the past." William Faulkner....no response, no response.