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AlexReynard
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"I Love Having My Beliefs Challenged"

Kanada, Poe & Alex Name Them Pokémons
ilovehavingmybeliefschallenged.txt
Keywords science 2158, religion 845, evolution 651, argument 385, darwin 159, christianity 115, alex reynard 87, debate 39, theory 29
"I Love Having My Beliefs Challenged."
Several conversations about religion featuring Alex Reynard

The following is a transcript of various conversations that took place on one of my Inkbunny journals. Out of fairness and respect for privacy, I will not use the participants' real usernames here. All names besides mine will be aliases. However, since the conversations themselves were posted where anyone could read them, there should be no problem with me reprinting them. I have not edited the content of anyone's posts, though spelling errors have been corrected for readability's sake. I will attempt to arrange conversations chronologically, but I will make allowances for clarity.


*****

INDIGO
Like I said. I HATE those kind of religious people. They give a bad name to anyone with faith, and turn religion into a virus that causes death and destruction, and only seems to exist to spread and infest.

~~~

GREEN to INDIGO
Kudos to you, good sir. Religion in of itself is no bad thing. The core of almost all religions, no matter the particular faith actually does boil down to the golden rule. "Love thy neighbor as thyself". Yet the depravity of man has perverted this good, wholesome concept into a vessel for hatred.


*****


AlexReynard to INDIGO
>They give a bad name to anyone with faith

No, faith gives itself a bad name. Believing without need of evidence has always been a bad idea, and treating it as a virtue has always been a worse one.

>and turn religion into a virus that causes death and destruction, and only seems to exist to spread and infest.

Religion is a virus, religion has always been a virus, religion will always be a virus. It is part of its very structure. In Christianity, one of the core ideas is that if you believe, we will give you a 'get out of death free' card. But if you doubt, you will suffer God's wrath. Just by itself, that is a powerful mechanism for ensuring people keep on believing even against their better judgement. Ever heard of Pascal's wager?

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
If you add in the words 'Institutionalized and Organized before calling 'religion' a virus, then i'll agree with you. Organized, Institutionalized religion has been set up by man for the material benefit of man rather than for any spiritual gain. It is used by man as an excuse for all manner of evil, they hide behind it, cower in it's shadow and try to justify the most perverted depravity as being part of their 'religion'.

True religion on the other hand, is a star marker for how to instantly stop all wars, all hatred, all suffering and turn this world into paradise. At their very core, ALL religions have but one rule. Man has added things to it, taken things away and tried so very hard to twist it into something more profitable, but that core component still stands.

True religion is this; "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God, thou shalt love thy Neighbor as thyself." Nothing more, nothing less.

Even if you follow no God or gods, but if every man obeyed the second part of this statement then this world would be perfect. No one could deny that and I say that anyone who thinks religion is ANYTHING other than that core command has no concept or understanding of what the real meaning of Religion is.

True religion does not say "Thou shalt use guns and bombs to slaughter the innocent." It doesn't say "Thy priests shall molest little kiddies". It doesn't say any of the hundreds of sick things 'religion' is accused of. It is the evil desires of man and man alone responsible for all the wrong in this world, Not God and not religion.

~~~

LAVENDER to GREEN
I'm going to have to disagree with that. All Religions have always pushed their own superiority over others. No religion has been made that ever mentioned anything loving others without a twist. The twist being that the love others only applies to others of your faith. Most if not all have murder, death, and pain written into their base, especially of outsiders. Christianity at it's core has the rules of " Believe completely with only faith in god no matter what." and that's followed by " and suffer not the presence of others aka convert them and if they don't convert.. exile or kill them.. smash them with stones."

Religion has always been about control. Early on it was also a way to explain the world around them. But its at its core about control. If you doubt that death has been a focus about religion being focused on death. Well think about all the religions that involve sacrifice, especially that of "virgins" or young women. Religion completely is nothing but a way to control others via fear of death and its results. After all. All religions have an afterlife where those who are "true believers" are sent to their version of paradise, and those who aren't are the enemy and end up very often being targets for their wrath or claimed to to be sent to their version of endless torment.

What it boils down to in Christianity is simple.
"Put your absolute faith in our god, or you are the enemy to be assimilated or be sent to eternal suffering. And if they wont believe like we tell them to.. Hasten their trip to hell"

I'd also like to make a side note that this is a group who have altered the image of their hell thanks to Dante's inferno (hell was frozen before that book) and made a habit of stealing other groups holidays in order to help convert them. And killed entire CULTURES just because they had their own gods and did not want to join. I don't see a reason to put faith into a group whose history includes a long spree of murder and death and destruction and rape all over the world in the name of their their god and some yellow metal. (gold). If you doubt me, ask the Aztecs.

And on a side note. There have been more wars over religion then any other subject in recorded history.

~~~

GREEN to LAVENDER
Which is why I make the distinction between Institutionalized and Organized religion, how it is seen now and has been portrayed for many long years and of which you give the examples of in your post and True Religion, those who follow the Golden rule as I stated in my last post.

For clarification, let me give you an example of what I mean. An atheist who is a good family man, a loving husband and father, who works hard yet always has time for his friends, who donates to charities and will spare anyone a dollar and who takes joy in seeing others happy and healthy even when they cannot benefit him in any way, this man has more Religion and Christian spirit in him than a hundred bible thumping extremists preaching intolerance and hate.

~~~

LAVENDER to GREEN
You're not explaining religion in your example. You're just explaining a good person. An Exceptionally good person.

That has nothing to do with religion. And why must it be Christian spirit? In your example all you've shown is a good guy. No one needs Christianity to be good. And if you're not a Christian it's not Christian spirit. It's just being a good person. Hate to break it to you, but Christian spirit has always been a one sided attitude. From the beginning its been "Us or Them".

I'm not meaning to sound mean in any way here. But you don't need to tack on "christian" to make someone a good moral person. And even then Morals are more an opinion of what you deem good. (excluding obvious extremes) After all, back in the day it was moral for people to throw rocks at the non believers till they were dead.

I'd prefer you use the term "humanist" then christian spirit. God is not necessary for people to be ether good, evil, or both. (and even then, good and evil are all based on opinions)

~~~

GREEN to LAVENDER
To me, being religious and being a 'good person' cannot be a separate thing if a person is claiming to be religious. If a person is not similar in mannerisms to the example I listed yet claims to be 'religious', if they spout litanies of hatred and intolerance towards any man on grounds of his beliefs or sexuality, then that person is not religious and has no concept of what religion is.

A person who is not religious can be said to be a humanitarian, as you noted. But if a person claims to be Christian or Muslim or a follower of any religion yet is not a true humanitarian, then they are not religious.

That is what I believe.

~~~

LAVENDER to GREEN
It's a nice ideal for your religion. Sadly from its core it teaches the opposite.. It would have been nice if you'd set up the rules. But as long as they have the "get out of hell free card" of confessionals.. it provides far to many outs.

~~~

GREEN to LAVENDER
This is why I say the organized, institutionalized modern religion, the religion you see and are talking about, the one everyone sees and knows, and the religion I speak of are two separate entities.

Yes, my views on religion are idealistic, yet I see it as the truth of religion. To me, any other theology or practice contrary to the golden rule is not religion or religious in any way.


*****


AlexReynard to GREEN
>True religion on the other hand, is a star marker for how to instantly stop all wars, all hatred, all suffering and turn this world into paradise.

Funny then, how it's never worked. Or has there just never been a 'true' religion?

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
I will re-iterate what I said. True religion is this; "Love the Lord thy God, Love thy neighbor as thyself." Nothing more, nothing less.

ANYTHING, any practices, customs, beliefs or doctrines contrary to this are not religious in any way, shape or form but created by man for the benefit of man to the detriment of his brother.

It irks me to no end when people look at all the evil of this world, wars, hatred, intolerance and worse, point the finger and say "Religion is the cause of all this" when it is not. Such things are caused by man perverting the concept of religion and using it as an excuse for his depravity.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>I will reiterate what I said. True religion is this; "Love the Lord thy God, Love thy neighbor as thyself." Nothing more, nothing less.

Here's my problem with that: Imagine a can of soda. The instructions on top of it say, "To open can, pull tab while shouting the word 'OPEN!'" Now imagine a world of people who have all grown up shouting at cans. Then someone like me stops to notice, "Wait a minute. The can opens up when I pull the tab whether I shout anything or not. Maybe I don't need to shout. Maybe no one needs to."

You have just demonstrated why religion is 100% unnecessary. You can love your neighbors, and not love the Lord, and yet the exact same outcome will result. You can simply have 'love thy neighbor' as a moral teaching without adding anything else.

>ANYTHING, any practices, customs, beliefs or doctrines contrary to this are not religious in any way, shape or form but created by man for the benefit of man to the detriment of his brother.

Wait... under whose authority are you declaring that?

>It irks me to no end when people look at all the evil of this world, wars, hatred, intolerance and worse, point the finger and say "Religion is the cause of all this" when it is not. Such things are caused by man perverting the concept of religion and using it as an excuse for his depravity.

I'm reminded of the NRA's slogan: Guns don't kill people, people kill people. And while that's entirely true, they selectively ignore the fact that a gun is a tool made to facilitate killing people. Similarly, a religion is a way to feel justified in doing whatever the voice of God (aka your own inner voice) tells you to. No one should be surprised when both good and bad people use faith as justification.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
To some people, no, Religion is not 'necessary'. To others, it is the only truth. It is, like most things in this word, a choice left up to the individual person. The free will to choose to follow God, or not. I chose to follow God and become a religious person by upholding the golden rule to the best of my ability. This does not make me any more or less of a human being than an atheist.

As to the authority I make said declaration, I would like to think such authority stems from God. It could also be my disgruntled view of modern institutionalized, organised 'religion' and how it has been so twisted out of proportion by mankind into a tool for control and violence rather than a simple personal lifestyle choice. XD

And finally, no. It comes as no surprise that 'religion' is used by good and bad men for their own ends. There is one thing I would say to that though. God is Love. So if religion is to follow God (or at least this is my understanding of the meaning of real religion) and God is love, anything that does not promote love for one's fellow man and is instead used to facilitate hatred and intolerance, then it stands to reason that it is not truly religious.

This is what I believe.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>To some people, no, Religion is not 'necessary'. To others, it is the only truth.

'To some people, racism is not 'necessary'. To others, it is the only truth.' You could plug any noun into that quote. It's not an argument.

>I chose to follow God and become a religious person by upholding the golden rule to the best of my ability. This does not make me any more or less of a human being than an atheist.

No, but it does mean you give credit to something that you actually deserve yourself. And why isn't following the Golden Rule for the sake of your fellow man enough?

>As to the authority I make said declaration, I would like to think such authority stems from God.

You can think that, but still, you can only make that declaration for yourself. To define something in a way that most people on Earth would disagree with, both from a personal and historical perspective... it's a little mind-boggling.

>It could also be my disgruntled view of modern institutionalized, organised 'religion' and how it has been so twisted out of proportion by mankind into a tool for control and violence rather than a simple personal lifestyle choice. XD

To say that something has been 'twisted out of proportion' implies that it started out differently. Religion has always been used as 1) a way to understand the world before the scientific method was discovered, 2) a way to impose order on people, and 3) a justification for war against the other tribe.

>And finally, no. It comes as no surprise that 'religion' is used by good and bad men for their own ends. There is one thing I would say to that though. God is Love. So if religion is to follow God (or at least this is my understanding of the meaning of real religion) and God is love, anything that does not promote love for one's fellow man and is instead used to facilitate hatred and intolerance, then it stands to reason that it is not truly religious.

Again, you are inventing your own definitions. Your definitions only reflect how YOU feel. They can't win an argument.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
I wasn't even aware this was an argument. I merely state my beliefs as you state yours, it doesn't mean what I believe is any more or less valid than what you believe.

I simply believe that if people followed the Golden Rule as stated in the Bible and, what I believe is the core point of any religion, this world would be perfect. Nowhere have I said that it is 100% necessary for a person to be religious to be a 'good person' but rather, if you clam to be religious then you should by definition, be a good person. Of course, this is not often the case.

Now, you have heard and I have stated what my definition of religion is. You have attempted to convince me that my definition is wrong by stating various reasons. Everything you have said, when applied to modern institutionalized, organised 'religion' I can pretty much agree with.

I do not enjoy what I see in the modern definition of religion, it's practices and how it is seen by the world yet I still choose to follow God. So I choose to define what religion means to me on a personal level, just as every man, including your good self does.

Does it all not simply come down to a matter of personal belief and the choice and free will to believe what you choose, provided your 'beliefs' do not advocate or cause harm to another human life (such as racism)? Any by my own definition, things that do cause such harm have nothing to do with religion.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>I wasn't even aware this was an argument. I merely state my beliefs as you state yours, it doesn't mean what I believe is any more or less valid than what you believe.

Well, that does depend on when we're discussing provable fact and not just personal opinions. I'll agree that everyone has the right to their beliefs and opinions, but I can't allow that people have the right to knowingly hold onto a lie.

>I simply believe that if people followed the Golden Rule as stated in the Bible and, what I believe is the core point of any religion, this world would be perfect.

Where in the Bible is the Golden Rule, BTW? I've been curious about that, since I wanted to see what context it appears in and what emphasis is put on it. Also, I've heard it predates the Bible by quite a lot.

>Now, you have heard and I have stated what my definition of religion is. You have attempted to convince me that my definition is wrong by stating various reasons.

No; I have attempted to convince you that your definition of religion is YOURS ONLY. As a personal belief, it sounds fine to me. But it's not most other people's definition.

>I do not enjoy what I see in the modern definition of religion

I do have to corect you there, because the definition you have? THAT'S the modern one. Tolerance for others is a relatively new thing in the history of humanity. The Muslims who believe in Jihad? That's closer to the 'traditional' ways religion was practiced.

>Does it all not simply come down to a matter of personal belief and the choice and free will to believe what you choose, provided your 'beliefs' do not advocate or cause harm to another human life (such as racism)? Any by my own definition, things that do cause such harm have nothing to do with religion.

You are preventing religion from accepting any responsibility, by redefining its accountability away.

'By my definition, homelessness has nothing to do with poverty. People aren't homeless because they're broke, they're homeless because they just don't want to work.'

See how that's not okay?

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
"Allow people to knowingly hold on to a lie" You can't determine that for someone unless you can prove what they believe is utterly wrong by showing them irrefutable proof. Somewhere in this world is a man who believes that mankind was seeded on earth by the fargarble pod people of bloopnod 4. You and I can choose to *believe* he is wrong and we can state our own beliefs as contrary to his, but you cannot under any circumstances say to this man 'You are wrong and your beliefs are a lie' and state it as fact unless you have the power to scan every single planet in this universe and prove that this race does not exist.

The golden rule. Luke 10 : 27 Jesus also follows this with a parable stating that after a man was robbed and bashed, a priest and a levite passed him by yet a samaritan tended to his wounds. Thus the samaritan was more neighbor to the victim than either of these supposed holy men.

I know that what I believe isn't shared by others. I wish it was.

By modern definition, I mean the way people focus on the extremists and fanatics and the hate and harm they cause, yet totally overlooking all the good that religion also does such as charities, soup kitchens, care for the homeless and so on.

Then let me explain yet again my concept of religion. The religion you continually bring up is what my Mother termed 'The religion of man' created by man for his own ends. This is what I have a problem with. I cannot accept that all that hatred and damage caused by such an entity comes from God.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>"Allow people to knowingly hold on to a lie" You can't determine that for someone unless you can prove what they believe is utterly wrong by showing them irrefutable proof.

No, actually. Like I just got done saying, you might not be able to prove them wrong, but you can prove that their belief is harmful or useless. Can a cult deprogrammer PROVE that there is no Great Juju in the sky, waiting to take his believers to paradise? No. But he can prove that isolating yourself from your family, starving yourself and giving up all your money to a religious organization are harmful to someone's quality of life.

>Somewhere in this world is a man who believes that mankind was seeded on earth by the fargarble pod people of bloopnod 4. You and I can choose to *believe* he is wrong and we can state our own beliefs as contrary to his, but you cannot under any circumstances say to this man 'You are wrong and your beliefs are a lie' and state it as fact unless you have the power to scan every single planet in this universe and prove that this race does not exist.

If he simply believes this, and his belief does not cause him or anyone else harm, then there is no reason for me to disprove it to him. If he tries to convince ME of it however, then I will use every weapon in my figurative arsenal against him. (Also, panspermia is a far more plausible belief than an omnipotent being creating everything from nothing.)

>The golden rule. Luke 10 : 27

"And he answering said, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind; and thy neighbour as thyself." Strange how the golden rule itself is just thrown in, almost as an afterthought, after making sure you're giving God all the love you can possibly give. He seems a bit jealous.

>Jesus also follows this with a parable stating that after a man was robbed and bashed, a priest and a levite passed him by yet a samaritan tended to his wounds. Thus the samaritan was more neighbor to the victim than either of these supposed holy men.

Perfectly fine with that.

>By modern definition, I mean the way people focus on the extremists and fanatics and the hate and harm they cause, yet totally overlooking all the good that religion also does such as charities, soup kitchens, care for the homeless and so on.

That is absolutely not the context you were using that phrase in before.

>Then let me explain yet again my concept of religion. The religion you continually bring up is what my Mother termed 'The religion of man' created by man for his own ends. This is what I have a problem with. I cannot accept that all that hatred and damage caused by such an entity comes from God.

So you haven't understood the content of my example.

Did God create man? Did he shape who we are? Even if he gave us free will, he still must have known what kind of beings we were. After all, he made us.

If a man leaves a gun in a room with two children, and one child shoots the other, is the man responsible? Yes, he didn't pull the trigger. But he left something dangerous within reach of two people too curious and naive to understand the consequences of their actions.

Now, explain to me how that is in any way different from the Garden of Eden story.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
This is why I made the point about not having the right to say a man is wrong without proving him so and then giving the example of the space believer who may be a fruitloop, but does no harm. These two things were meant to be taken together and I apologize if it didn't seem that way. Forgive, me I am not used to such lengthy philosophical discussions and tend to get sidetracked.

On topic, if a man tries to convince me he is right, I will explain my views as he explains his. If he pushes the point, I tell him what I believe. Yet without absolute proof to the affirmative or contrary, such discussion will yield very little fruit, even though it may be informative and enlightened.

My apologies, the context was different and in retrospect, it made me facepalm to read it. If you'd care to repeat the question, I'll give you a proper answer instead of dicking about.

As to the Garden of Eden, man was created innocent. Yet man chose to believe the lies of the serpent (devil) over the word of God. Even then, God gave man the free will to make his own choice and when it was made, God then passed judgement. So your analogy is incorrect. It would be more appropriate to say that there was another person in that room telling one of the children that the gun would make a fun toy.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
See response here. [###]


*****


SILVER
Religion: Doing what you're told, no matter what is right.
Morality: Doing what's right, no matter what you're told.

~~~

GREEN to SILVER
To me, the concepts of Religion and Morality should be the same thing. Doing what is right. Unfortunately, I'm one of the few people with this view.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
If they're the same, and morality covers doing what's right, then why have religion at all?

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
The knowledge between good and evil. When you were a child, did you know what was right and wrong? No, you were taught and looked to a higher power for that definition. (your parents and teachers). True Religion is the same thing. A set of ethical guidelines for proper conduct.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
See, that's the thing... the higher powers I looked to? They were real people, who spoke clearly to me, in complete sentences. Kind of a big difference.

Another difference is, I could see the faces of my parents and teachers. I knew who they were. With the Bible, I'm shown a book and am told to believe it's the word of God, so of course I should obey it. Sorry, I don't take instructions from unknown sources.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
And where did the people who spoke to you gain their understanding of right and wrong from so they could impart it to you? Like it or not, go back far enough and you will find the Bible with the basic 'Ten Commandments' that have been adapted into the modern code of laws.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>And where did the people who spoke to you gain their understanding of right and wrong from so they could impart it to you?

OTHER HUMANS.

>Like it or not, go back far enough and you will find the Bible with the basic 'Ten commandments' that have been adapted into the modern code of laws.

Right, because there were never any written laws of conduct before the Ten Commandments.

Also, only TWO of the ten commandments are explicitly part of our law now, while adultery and lying are only illegal in certain situations.

Also, the ten commandments were written BY HUMANS.

Neither the Bible, nor God, have ever contributed to humanity anything unique.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
The ten commandments were not written by humans. They were inscribed by God upon stone tablets as a concrete guideline for his people to follow and to lay the foundations for the modern laws we follow now. As to there being other codes of laws that predate the ten commandments, I am unaware of any documented cases.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>The ten commandments were not written by humans. They were inscribed by God upon stone tablets as a concrete guideline for his people to follow and to lay the foundations for the modern laws we follow now.

Where are these tablets now? Can I go see them in a museum?

Ohhhhh, is this like how Joseph Smith was given golden plates that had the Book Of Mormon inscribed upon them, but was instructed by the angel Moroni to never let anyone else see them?

>As to there being other codes of laws that predate the ten commandments, I am unaware of any documented cases.

Here ya go.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
It was also written in the Bible that when Aaron created the golden calf, Moses was so enraged he broke the tablets over the calf. This symbolized the Israelites had already broken God's most basic of laws even before he (Moses) had finished speaking with God.

I was not aware of the Hammurabi code until you pointed it out. It is intriguing. Also on that wiki page are links to two even older 'code of laws'. It is quite interesting to see how God lays out the foundations of his plans for the Israelites even before they became his people.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>It was also written in the Bible that when Aaron created the golden calf, Moses was so enraged he broke the tablets over the calf. This symbolized the Israelites had already broken Gods most basic of laws even before he (Moses) had finished speaking with God.

How convenient.

Also, if Moses smashed the tablets, how do we know with any certainty what was written on them?

>I was not aware of the Hammurabi code until you pointed it out. It is intriguing. Also on that wiki page are links to two even older 'code of laws'. It is quite interesting to see how God lays out the foundations of his plans for the Israelites even before they became his people.

<winces really hard> Don't do that. What you said was this: "[the ten commandments] were inscribed by God upon stone tablets as a concrete guideline for his people to follow and to lay the foundations for the modern laws we follow now." So you're cheating when you claim one thing, then when it's disproved, you alter your claim so it still fits.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
We know what was written on the tablets as it is recorded as such in the Bible. However, I will concede the point about the age of the ten commandments. The Hammurabi code did precede them, yet they are still the first recorded example of such a code being established for the Israelites. Why is it so difficult to believe that God determined his people needed a concrete set of laws to abide by, written in stone as it were, and therefore no longer open to 'liberal interpretation'? By the same token, it is easy to believe that the Hammurabi code was also given to the King, by God to lay the foundations for his own people.

Of course, you first need to believe in God, as I do.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>We know what was written on the tablets as it is recorded as such in the Bible.

That isn't proof. If it was, then the Golden Fleece and Atlantis must also exist.

>Why is it so difficult to believe that God determined his people needed a concrete set of laws to abide by, written in stone as it were, and therefore no longer open to 'liberal interpretation'?

Because it necessitates first believing in 'God'. Not only that, but a God that intervenes. Not only that, but a God that chooses one group of humans over all the others as his favorites; an unnervingly human behavior.

>By the same token, it is easy to believe that the Hammurabi code was also given to the King, by God to lay the foundations for his own people.

It's much, much easier to believe that Hammurabi just wrote them himself.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
It is irrefutable proof to me. I have no opinion on the golden fleece or Atlantis but I'm sure there are some people who also believe that the Harry Potter books or Star Wars movies are based on factual events, or even a few silly people who believe that the Origin of Species is anything more than a fairy tale, written by a frightened man to explain and rationalize what he doesn't understand, an idea that is still to this day nothing more than an unproven theory that had been altered, re-written and changed as the years go by, yet people still choose to believe in it based of of little more than anecdotal evidence and *gasp* faith.

Which is ironically what people say about the Bible.

I do believe there is a God. I believe he can and does intervene in human lives, yet still allows them their free will. And as to God having an unnervingly human trait.. God made mankind... in his image.

It may be easier to believe Hammurabi wrote it, but people once found it easier to believe the world was flat. Didn't make them right.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>It is irrefutable proof to me. I have no opinion on the golden fleece or Atlantis but I'm sure there are some people who also believe that the Harry Potter books or Star Wars movies are based on factual events

And they have exactly as much evidence for their belief as you do: because someone wrote it down in a book.

>or even a few silly people who believe that the Origin of Species is anything more than a fairy tale, written by a frightened man to explain and rationalize what he doesn't understand, an idea that is still to this day nothing more than an unproven theory that had been altered, re-written and changed as the years go by, yet people still choose to believe in it based of of little more than anecdotal evidence and *gasp* faith.

You are right to call those people "silly" [EDIT: this is me not yet realizing that he's calling people who accept evolution the silly ones], but wrong to say they believe based on 'anecdotal evidence and faith'. People believe in evolution because of the CENTURIES OF EXPERIMENTATION AND OBSERVATION BY THOUSANDS OF DIFFERENT SCIENTISTS ALL OVER THE PLANET, ALL OF IT LEADING TO THE SAME CONCLUSION.

>Which is ironically what people say about the Bible.

There is no comparison. If thousands of archaeologists had been testing the Bible's theories for centuries, with all of them coming to the conclusion that the Bible was a source of historical fact, only then would it be equal to Darwin's book.

>I do believe there is a God. I believe he can and does intervene in human lives, yet still allows them their free will.

Those two things are mutually exclusive. Does a Sims character have free will? Even if you could program him to be a full A.I., the fact that you can still click on things and alter his behavior means he is not free.

>And as to God having an unnervingly human trait.. God made mankind... in his image.

It is far easier to believe that mankind made God... in his image.

>It may be easier to believe Hammurabi wrote it, but people once found it easier to believe the world was flat. Didn't make them right.

That was only true in ancient times. Now, in the 21st century, it is easier to believe that Hammurabi wrote his Code himself, than to believe that powerful, unseen, animal-headed beings existed to write it for him. And it is harder to believe the world is flat, because you first have to rationalize away tons of scientific fact.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
The Bible is an eye witness account of historical facts and events as told by hundreds of people that personally experienced them *going back thousands upon of thousands of years*, Taken from their writings and experiences and consolidated into one book. See the context I put it in here? No different from how you described Darwinism. It all depends on who looks at it as to whether it is factual evidence or fake.

To me, The Theory of evolution is just that. A fallacious, unproven theory based on anecdotal evidence created by man to attempt to prove there is no God due to the fact man is too arrogant to admit that there is a being out there better than him in every respect.

Why does free will and God's guidance need to be mutually exclusive? God is an omnipotent being. A man has the free will to try and do anything he wishes, yet why should God not determine how he fares? Be it running in the olympics, researching a cure for disease or committing genocide. Can you honestly say you can instruct God how he should watch and guide the future of HIS universe? If the man did not try in the first place, God would have nothing to judge upon.

Is it easier to believe? Really? For you, perhaps.

The 'that was then this is now' argument is a very narrow minded view. Whats to say in another 500 years the entire viewpoint of everything man knows now hasn't shifted yet again to a new set of 'truths'? Man will always believe what they want to believe, be it wrong or right.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
See response here. [###]


*****


SKYBLUE
It disappoints me, really, to see how the religion that I was born into is suffering like this. No, their people aren't suffering, no, slash that, they are. Suffering from stupidity and ignorance. I still call myself Christian, despite not going to any churches. It's not that I dislike it at all...but I've seen so many problems and hypocrites. I can't stand it. In the end, finding the truth is the right thing, and these people are way messin' it all up.

In the same breath these people say "God is Love" will say "Get rid of people we believe are wrong." When the truest mission of a Christian is supposed to be spreading the word and bringing people in, they go around, spitting venom and turning people away from it. All because of these people that fear change, people that believe what they're told and not what they learn or teach themselves.

In fact...'bible thumpers' are the ones that piss me off the most, in the end. One that believes that the 'bible' itself is the infallible word of God, when...it simply isn't. It's the condensed, abridged, omitted, and edited-by-human beings book that had been handed around, when much of the word has been messed with. The moment things have been changed, it stopped being His word and became the word of man, and to me, is pretty invalid. But of course, no fundamentalist Christians would ever believe me if I told them.

My point is, it isn't Religion, nor is it Christianity that's the problem, it's the idiots that think that they're right and only choose to work with the things that seem right to them...they are the problem, and it's disgusting...as...hell.

That's how I see things. From a non-bias standpoint. Sad when I can sit around and shake my head as a Christian foxy, laugh at the stupid stuff that I see, and say "no wonder there are so many atheists."

~~~

AlexReynard to SKYBLUE
>In the end, finding the truth is the right thing, and these people are way messin' it all up.

I hate to say this, but the people are not what's messing it up. They never have been. Religion doesn't create anything good; it can only take credit for the good that comes from humanity's inborn morality.

I can understand the allure of staying loyal to a tradition you grew up with. But I would ask you to search your heart and ask yourself what does your religion do for you?

>All because of these people that fear change, people that believe what they're told and not what they learn or teach themselves.

Maybe that's because, at the heart of faith is the idea that people should believe what God tells them to, regardless of any earthly evidence. And of course, the voice of 'God' is simply what your own conscience tells you to do. So if you have a good heart, 'God' will tell you to do good things. But if you have a shriveled, mean, petty, hateful heart, then God will tell you that all your most bigoted impulses are sanctified. Religion is a way for anyone to believe anything they want to believe, and feel 100% justified.

>One that believes that the 'bible' itself is the infallible word of God, when...it simply isn't. It's the condensed, abridged, omitted, and edited-by-human beings book that had been handed around, when much of the word has been messed with. The moment things have been changed, it stopped being His word and became the word of man, and to me, is pretty invalid.

All that is dead-on true. But if you can use your own reason to figure out that the Bible is not a source of morals, why not go the extra step and accept that the only true source of morals is YOU?

>My point is. It isn't Religion, nor is it Christianity that's the problem, it's the idiots that think that they're right and only choose to work with the things that seem right to them...they are the problem, and it's disgusting...as...hell.

<applause> I wholeheartedly agree. Religion may be a set of wrong ideas, but it can't do anything on it's own. It's as neutral as a tool. A hammer can be used by a person to pound in nails, or to pound in skulls.

>That's how I see things. From a non-bias standpoint. Sad when I can sit around and shake my head as a Christian foxy, laugh at the stupid stuff that I see, and say "no wonder there are so many atheists."

I'm sorry if you feel like I'm putting you on the spot, but I have to ask: why do you feel the need to identify yourself as a Christian? That's a real question, because I don't understand why someone would.

For example, I like Star Trek. I've watched most episodes of most series. I'll quote it. I have episodes saved on my hard drive. But I don't call myself a Trekkie. It's simply a show I like, not something that defines who I am. So why can't Christians be Bible fans without labeling themselves Christians?

It seems to me like people in our culture are pressured to feel like they have to define themselves by a faith, even if that faith isn't a big part of their lives. I see moderate Christians who've never read the Bible and who never go to church, yet still call themselves Christians. That's like having a gym membership and never going there. Why? Is it just a way to have something in common with other people? Like, the way Trekkies gather at conventions: you have an instant friend because they're in the same group as you. Is it the same way with religions? I really don't understand that, because I have a bunch of friends and labels mean nothing to us. They all play lots of video games; I don't. They have fetishes I don't share; none of us minds. About the only thing that ties us together is being furry, but it's not like we'd stop being friends if one of us wasn't anymore. Sorry if I'm rambling. I just honestly do not see what unique benefit religion brings to anyone's life.


*****


RED
From what I've seen, especially with fanatics, faith is to willpower as guns are to people- those who have strong wills on their own have it, sure, but those who are normally weak willed rely heavily on faith to give them willpower. In and of itself, this is not really a bad thing, the problem being that those with weak wills and fanatics tend to have fucked up interpretations of their religion. Seriously, there was a preacher that said we should put all the homosexuals into fenced in concentration camps and let them die off since they can't reproduce- you know, because only homosexuals produce homosexual offspring. Then, there was another recently that admitted he would like to see homosexuals actually killed, though he also realized that it would be wrong to do so.

~~~

AlexReynard to RED
>faith is to willpower as guns are to people

WELL SAID. <applause>

>those who have strong wills on their own have it, sure, but those who are normally weak willed rely heavily on faith to give them willpower.

I just read yesterday about how pro athletes have a term for when fans in the stands yell threats at them that they'd never carry out face-to-face. They call it 'beer muscles'. Sounds to me an awful lot like the strength faith imparts.

>Seriously, there was a preacher that said we should put all the homosexuals into fenced in concentration camps and let them die off since they can't reproduce-

I am totally agin' that. ;)

>Then, there was another recently that admitted he would like to see homosexuals actually killed, though he also realized that it would be wrong to do so.

Poor bigots. They have to walk such a thin line between what their religion will allow them to get away with saying, and what'll cause moral outrage. I guess it's okay to hate the gays, and say they'll burn forever in fiery agony, but threatening them with death directly is still a no-no.

~~~

RED to AlexReynard
No idea why, but your approval and agreement made me feel better than is explicable. Maybe it's just the realization that there are people that actually get it and all hope isn't lost yet.

~~~

AlexReynard to RED
That does feel nice, dunnit? I'm really glad to be able to pass that feeling on. ^__^


*****


[At this point, I had another conversation with the user GREY, in which he argued that Christianity is only Christ's teachings, and that Jesus never advocated violence. I counterargued that he seemed to be saying the entire Old Testament was irrelevant to Christianity, and that I thought most Christians would disagree rather strongly. Also, I pointed out Jesus' parable of the ten minas in Luke 19, which might not explicitly endorse violence, but still seems pretty sketchy to me.]

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
Anyone with true knowledge of God's word knows that he has established a new covenant with his chosen since the time of the old testament. "Now there is neither jew, nor greek, slave nor free, male nor female...." He has done way with the old and established the new. The old testament as it stands is an historical record. You'd be surprised as to how many 'Christians' selectively overlook that fact.

As for the parable, it is a tale with a meaning. A story told to impart knowledge. The words Jesus spoke there were the words of the Nobleman in the parable. It is *not* a direct quotation of his own feelings.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>The old testament as it stands is an historical record. You'd be surprised as to how many 'Christians' selectively overlook that fact.

Maybe it's because Jesus said this:
"Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them. For truly I tell you, until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen, will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is accomplished. Therefore anyone who sets aside one of the least of these commands and teaches others accordingly will be called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever practices and teaches these commands will be called great in the kingdom of heaven."

Sorry to burst your bubble, but I think I've proven the Bible (once again) is sending mixed messages, at least.

>As for the parable, it is a tale with a meaning. A story told to impart knowledge. The words Jesus spoke there were the words of the Nobleman in the parable. It is *not* a direct quotation of his own feelings.

That I know. But from what I read of the parable, Jesus seems to be on the Nobleman's side. That seems confusing to me.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
Key word there is 'Law'. The law that still exists to this day and that all right thinking people obey. That is, murder is illegal (thou shalt not murder) and such. When he abolished the old to establish the new, the Lord spoke of religious practices and customs. That is, that things such as sacrificial offerings, circumcisions and the like are no longer necessary. Such things have been rendered obsolete with the coming of Christ. Yet these modern so-called 'Christians' ignore this fact and seek to use the old testament and it's outdated methods as an excuse for their extremism.

Thus, these people are neither religious nor Christian and it irritates me to see them called either.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>Yet these modern so-called 'Christians' ignore this fact and seek to use the old testament and it's outdated methods as an excuse for their extremism.

Interesting thought: Does that mean the Jews should still be practicing animal sacrifices?

>Thus, these people are neither religious nor Christian and it irritates me to see them called either.

I can understand that, much as I've been busting your chops. And that is a pretty substantial reason against their BS.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
The Bible states, "There is neither Jew nor Greek... slave nor free... male nor female...." The Bible also states "It is impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sins.."

As for our little discussion, I'd hardly call it 'busting my chops' XD . It's both refreshing and enjoyable to find someone willing to debate their beliefs and points of view in a rational, enlightened manner without name calling or random insults.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>The Bible states, "There is neither Jew nor Greek... slave nor free... male nor female...." The Bible also states "It is impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sins.."

Okey dokey, I'll trust that you've proven this point well enough. It does rather amuse me though; millions of Christians and Jews directly disobeying their holy books while still convinced they're devout.

>As for our little discussion, I'd hardly call it 'busting my chops' xD . It's both refreshing and enjoyable to find someone willing to debate their beliefs and points of view in a rational, enlightened manner without name calling or random insults.

Insults are for rude people. I will brutally attack a bad idea, but I'll always restrict my fury to the idea itself if the person saying it is polite enough to do the same for me. :)

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
Indeed. :3 I've been enjoying myself no end. Unlike many 'religious' people, I love having my beliefs challenged.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>Unlike many 'religious' people, I love having my beliefs challenged.

I do respect that. However, I'm noticing an uncomfortable trend in your arguments. You don't really allow your beliefs to be challenged. You keep them so amorphous that my arguments are simply deflected away. If you keep redefining your terms in a way that lets you always continue to believe the way you do, that's not real arguing.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
This is where we differ. I was simply exchanging what I believe, with what you believe. One opinion for another. it does not mean that what I believe is any more or less a valid view that what you, or any member of this planet believes. I accept that you believe what you believe as the absolute truth and expect the same in return.

The only way I would try to 'argue' with you is if I could give you absolute proof that God exists and thus prove to you 100% that you are wrong. I cannot. I could point out any number of scriptures and personal experiences as evidence, yet without being able to physically opening a door to heaven and showing you, I cannot prove without question that God exists.

By the same token, I have asked many people to give me absolute, unquestionable proof that God does not exist. To this day, no one has managed to do so.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>it does not mean that what I believe is any more or less a valid view that what you, or any member of this planet believes. I accept that you believe what you believe as the absolute truth and expect the same in return.

You will not get that in return. I cannot in good conscience agree to that. Because I detest this idea that 'all beliefs deserve equal consideration'. Of course they don't. It's that kind of thinking that leads civilized people to be silent about another culture's barbaric behaviors, all because 'it's wrong to say one culture is better than another'. Insanity. Even if something cannot be proven to a perfect certainty, there is almost always some way to test if one culture, or one belief, is better than another. We can test if one culture results in happier, healthier, more prosperous citizens. We can test if one belief is more useful, if it leads to more positive results. Or we can look at the behavior of the people who believe in a certain idea. Are more of them happy? Depressed? Criminal? Even if we can't prove truthfulness, there are many ways to test the practical value of keeping an idea around.

H.L. Mencken said it beautifully: "We must respect the other fellow's religion, but only in the sense and to the extent that we respect his theory that his wife is beautiful and his children smart."

>By the same token, I have asked many people to give me absolute, unquestionable proof that God does not exist. To this day, no one has managed to do so.

Click here. It takes a while for him to build up steam, but this guy, Joe Lyles, puts forth the best argument I have ever heard that it is a virtual certainty that we do not have a God who intervenes. And so, if God does not have a presence in our lives, then whether or not he exists is a moot question.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
You cannot in good conscience accept it and cite silence and complacency in the face of 'barbarous practices' yet have I not also stated that 'A person is free to believe what he wants so long as it advocates no harm to another man'. So in essence I agree with you on this.

Yet he does not and can not prove that there *Is No God*. Nor can he state that God never intervenes. Ever heard of modern miracles? A terminal cancer patient whom modern medicine cannot help yet recovers through the power of faith and prayer, for instance.
http://www.healingcancernaturally.com/terminal-stomach-cancer-miracle-healing.html

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>You cannot in good conscience accept it and cite silence and complacency in the face of 'barbarous practices' yet have I not also stated that 'A person is free to believe what he wants so long as it advocates no harm to another man'. So in essence I agree with you on this.

There you go again, redefining things to get out of conceding a point. You DO NOT agree with me on this. What I cannot accept is the idea that 'all beliefs are equally worthy of respect'. That was my point. You and I do agree on 'as it harm none, do as ye will', but we absolutely do not agree on the point I was just discussing.

>Yet he does not and can not prove that there *Is No God*.

You could not possibly have listened to that hour-long podcast so quickly. And even if you had, you completely missed his point that 'does God exist?' is the wrong question to care about.

>A terminal cancer patient whom modern medicine cannot help yet recovers through the power of faith and prayer, for instance.

In that example you just sent me, the person's cancer returned two years after his 'miraculous' healing.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
I have said, multiple times, that a man is free to believe what he wants and his beliefs are no more or less valid than mine providing he does no harm. I will respect what he believes, even if I don't agree with it personally. I would not say I have 're-defined' this view. I try to clarify what I mean.

If he cannot prove that God does not exist, anything else he might have to say is meaningless. If he is asking 'why do we need God'? That's something left up to the choice of the individual person.

Yes, his cancer did return. Yet he was given two years of extra life when his prognosis was mere weeks.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
See response here. [###]


*****


[###] AlexReynard to GREEN
To GREEN:

>I would not say I have 're-defined' this view. I try to clarify what I mean.

By 'redefine' I mean that you changed the terms of the argument. I said that we disagreed on point A and you tried to prove that we actually agreed by bringing up point B.

>If he cannot prove that God does not exist, anything else he might have to say is meaningless.

That is as closed-minded as it gets. You're saying that if he can't give you a yes or no to your question, nothing else he might say matters. I wince when I remember you saying "I love having my beliefs challenged."

>If he is asking 'why do we need God'? That's something left up to the choice of the individual person.

No, he isn't asking that. I already summarized what his point actually is.

>Yes, his cancer did return. Yet he was given two years of extra life when his prognosis was mere weeks.

That sounds like a pretty weak miracle to me. Was the cancer stronger than God's will? Or did God intentionally only give that man two more years?

BTW, since you didn't listen to it, Joe's example pointed out a moment in history when literally millions of lives could have been saved if God had simply moved someone's foot a few inches. If he had, a plot to kill Hitler would have succeeded and World War 2 would have ended years earlier. If God couldn't have been bothered to intervene there, what makes anyone think he would intervene in their daily lives?

>This is why I made the point about not having the right to say a man is wrong without proving him so and then giving the example of the space believer who may be a fruitloop, but does no harm. These two things were meant to be taken together and I apologize if it didn't seem that way.

No; I understood your point. I'm just saying that it doesn't apply. When I said I don't think people have the right to hold onto a lie, I admit that's a personal belief. And to clarify, I mean that if someone presents me with an idea I believe is a lie, I will argue against it. Even if it gives them comfort. Because I have a lot of reasons to believe that nothing good can grow from a lie, and any comfort a false belief gives is unsustainable. I have worked my ass off to scrub myself of as much dishonesty as I possibly can, and it has been so beneficial to me that I want to share it with everyone. I want to show people how corrosive and unnecessary self-denial is. You could call me an missionary of Truth.

>Forgive, me I am not used to such lengthy philosophical discussions and tend to get sidetracked.

I don't mean for this to sound snarky, but I can tell. You argue like someone who has never truly had their beliefs challenged before.

>Yet without absolute proof to the affirmative or contrary, such discussion will yield very little fruit, even though it may be informative and enlightened.

You keep bringing up this concept of absolute proof as if it's possible. Maybe in math, okay. But in all other things, asking for absolute proof is essentially a way of putting an impossible task in front of someone who's trying to change your belief. No matter how much they prove their point, you can always say that they haven't proven it absolutely. It's a cheap way of deflecting evidence, not a real argument.

>My apologies, the context was different and in retrospect, it made me facepalm to read it. If you'd care to repeat the question, i'll give you a proper answer instead of dicking about.

You can go back and read it again.

>As to the Garden of Eden, man was created innocent. Yet man chose to believe the lies of the serpent (devil) over the word of God. Even then, God gave man the free will to make his own choice and when it was made, God then passed judgement. So your analogy is incorrect. It would be more appropriate to say that there was another person in that room telling one of the children that the gun would make a fun toy.

That still doesn't let God off the hook for LEAVING THE GUN THERE IN THE FIRST PLACE.

Also, what if I had two children and one day they got into the cookie jar after I told them not to. So to punish them, I cast them out of my house forever and made them live in the backyard. Is that how a good parent acts? Does a good parent give their children permanent punishments, with no chance to learn, repent, or be forgiven? Or is that how an abusively controlling parent acts?

>The Bible is an eye witness account of historical facts and events as told by hundreds of people that personally experienced them *going back thousands upon of thousands of years*, Taken from their writings and experiences and consolidated into one book. See the context I put it in here? No different from how you described Darwinism.

Completely wrong.

For starters, eyewitness accounts? From what I understand, most of the stuff in the Bible wasn't written about until LONG after it had actually happened. For instance, the Gospels weren't written until forty years after Christ's death. That doesn't sound like an eyewitness account. Now, it has been a while since I heard this, so I might be wrong on the numbers. But I do know that archeologists have discovered contemporary sources that conflict with the Bible. Such as the fact that the Egyptians were very good at recording their history, and nowhere is it ever mentioned that they kept Hebrew slaves.

Secondly, you've completely missed my point. The GARGANTUAN DIFFERENCE between how you described the Bible and how I described Darwinism, is that I pointed out how thousands of people have all tested and retested and REtested Darwin's theories and the results have come out the same. And even when they didn't, it has been over minor issues that, once understood, led to new discoveries that have added strength to the theory, not the other way around. Simply put, the more people who test evolution, the more certain we are of its trustworthiness. The more people who test the Bible, the LESS certain we are of its trustworthiness.

>It all depends on who looks at it as to whether it is factual evidence or fake.

And in this case, primitive nomadic tribesmen, vs. almost all the scientists in the world. It does indeed matter who looks at it.

>Why does free will and God's guidance need to be mutually exclusive? God is an omnipotent being. A man has the free will to try and do anything he wishes, yet why should God not determine how he fares?

BECAUSE IF GOD DETERMINES HOW HE FARES, THE MAN IS NOT FREE AND NEVER HAS BEEN. If someone tells you to make a free choice about what number he is about to say, and he is actually planning to change his answer to make sure you cannot ever get it right, then you never had a free choice in the first place. This is really, really simple.

>The 'that was then this is now' argument is a very narrow minded view. Whats to say in another 500 years the entire viewpoint of everything man knows now hasn't shifted yet again to a new set of 'truths'?

That may happen. But right now, all we have is the present. And judging by the evidence we have available in the present, for all practical purposes, it is usually better to believe a simpler explanation that fits all the facts, unless compelling evidence comes along to strengthen a more complicated theory.

>To me, The Theory of evolution is just that. A fallacious, unproven theory based on anecdotal evidence created by man to attempt to prove there is no God due to the fact man is too arrogant to admit that there is a being out there better than him in every respect.

I saved this till last because reading it was like being punched in the ribs. I read that just before heading to bed, and I literally could not get to sleep because I could not fathom how it's possible for you, a person who is eloquent and obviously intelligent, to believe something so immeasurably wrong.

For starters, I hate the fact that I actually have to explain to you that, in scientific terms, a 'theory' is the word used when an idea has been proven so thoroughly that, for all practical purposes, it can be relied on as a fact.

Secondly, evolution is unproven? No. If you think that, then all you've proven is that you can't, or won't, look at the evidence. SCIENTISTS KNOW MORE ABOUT EVOLUTION THAN THEY DO ABOUT GRAVITY. Evolution is possibly the most thoroughly credible scientific idea there is. It is observable in every species that exists or has ever existed. For crying out loud, you can see it for yourself if you watch any nature program about the relationship between predators and prey. You can see how both species changed to adapt to one another. (Also, if evolution isn't true, then why do doctors keep having to update their flu vaccines?)

Thirdly, I cannot wrap my brain around how you could possibly think people invented evolution to disprove God. Even if they did, it doesn't disprove God! The two things have nothing to do with each other! Do you have any idea how many Christians accept evolution? How many of them have no problem whatsoever accepting that, even if God did create us, that evolution was his method? If you believe you are God's creation, then you are spitting on his work to deny the self-evident truth of it. Can you even imagine how rude it would be, to walk up to an artist, point at his painting and say, 'You didn't really paint every one of those tiny brushstrokes! You just brought it into existence with magic!'

Fourthly, arrogance? ARROGANCE!? You tell me that you know better than everyone alive who accepts evolution, you tell me that you know the real motives of the people who put together the theory, you insult the intelligence of practically every scientist on Earth, and you have the gall to say, without irony, that EVERYONE ELSE is arrogant!?

You are a citizen of the 21st century; act like it. Not accepting evolution is as stupid as not believing in the sun. It is as primitive as practicing ritual animal sacrifices. It is as shameful as denying the Holocaust. It is UNACCEPTABLE, and you should be ashamed of yourself.

On top of all that, you were the one who told me "True religion is this; "Love the Lord thy God, Love thy neighbor as thyself." Nothing more, nothing less." There is absolutely nothing in that to justify denying a thoroughly-researched and thoroughly confirmed scientific truth, simply because you're ignorant about what it is. You liar. You hypocrite. You can't even be true to yourself.


~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
Everything you have said up to this point is still personal beliefs and supposition and I have maintained my stance that I can respect your beliefs. Yet you think you can call me a liar and a hypocrite in a baseless, childish personal attack just because I ruffled your pretty little feathers with an uncomfortable truth? Time to set you straight.

1 .Theory and it's meaning.

the·o·ry
noun /ˈTHÄ“É™rÄ“/  /ˈTHi(É™)rÄ“/
theories, plural

A supposition or a system of ideas intended to explain something, esp. one based on general principles independent of the thing to be explained
- Darwin's theory of evolution

If evolution was Proven scientific fact it would be called that. It is not. It is called the theory of evolution because no matter how much 'evidence' is concocted, dug up or hypothesized about, or how much a part of the scientific community may want to believe it, it CANNOT be proven as there are NO examples of true evolution in nature. I have heard accounts of fish, moths and other species' so called evolution that also have perfectly plausible explanations for their 'evolutions' that have nothing to do with Darwin's erroneous theory. It all depends on whom you choose to believe. You know, that funny concept of freedom of choice and free will.

If creatures or man *evolved* we would see foxes with wings, capable of flying to catch pigeons in flight, or a man with eyes in the back of his head to counter the obvious flaw of not having 360 degree vision and not just one single random 'mutation' but the entire species would change. Ever since Darwin formulated his theory and as long as natural records have been kept there has not been one single documented account of true evolution that cannot be explained away by other means. Evidence that the evolutionary scientific community chooses to ignore. "Oh evolution takes millions of years". This smacks of the same kind of convenient excuse you accuse the Bible of.

Next, the Bible tells us exactly how the universe was created. Read Genesis. There's your explanation. You think it's ludicrous to believe in an omnipotent entity creating life on earth? What about how stupid evolution is with all it's variables and inconsistencies? To me, 'evolution' is as likely as a tornado blowing through a scrapyard and leaving behind a fully functioning jumbo jet. The ONLY reason to say 'God didn't do this' is to try and prove he does not exist or has no power over the world. For a Christian to say he believes in evolution when such a notion is clearly anathema to GOD'S OWN WORD, such a person is in serious need of re-evaluating his faith.

As to arrogance, if you and the scientific 'community' can presume to 'know better' than the BILLIONS of people who believe in God, or Allah or ANY deity, as well as the other half of the scientific community, Creation Scientists every bit as learned and intelligent as your evolutionists, then I can stand up and say without shame or fear that 'Evolution is GARBAGE.'

>You are a citizen of the 21st century; act like it. Not accepting evolution is as stupid as not believing in the sun. It is as primitive as practicing ritual animal sacrifices. It is as shameful as denying the Holocaust. It is UNACCEPTABLE, and you should be ashamed of yourself.<

Who gave you the authority to say that? By who's definition is not believing in evolution 'unacceptable'? I should be *ashamed* of myself for believing in the word of my God over the LIES of mankind as do BILLIONS of other people on this planet including many eminent, learned scientists who ALSO believe in Creation over evolution?!

"True religion is this; "Love the Lord thy God, Love thy neighbor as thyself." Nothing more, nothing less." How is believing in an a theory written by a mere man that is contrary to God's own words and an attempt to destroy everything the Bible tells us about God's power and wisdom by saying that God did not create the world in seven days "Loving the Lord thy God?" I learned about evolution even before I knew about salvation. Even as a child, evolution was a joke to me. A laughably bad joke, so claiming I am 'ignorant' of the subject without knowing the slightest thing about me only displays your own 'ignorance'.

You call me Liar and hypocrite? I am true to myself, to my beliefs and to my God. You are true to nothing but empty words.

So I say to you, read Matthew 7, 1-6.

"Do not judge, so that you may not be judged. For with the judgement you make you will be judged and the measure you give will be the measure you get. Why do you see the speck in your neighbors eye but do not notice the log in your own eye? Or how can you say to your neighbor 'Let me remove the speck from your eye' whilst the log is on your own eye? You hypocrite, first take the log from your own eye, and then you will see clearly to take the speck out of your neighbors eye."

Verse six is a favorite of mine.

"Do not give what is holy to dogs; and do not throw your pearls before swine, or they will trample them underfoot and turn to maul you."

Take that how you will and I bid you good day, Sir!

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
I'd thought that maybe I could shame you into waking up. Instead, you chose to defend the indefensible.

I want you to understand the scope of how wrong you are. You are in the exact same position as someone who believes in a flat earth, or a geocentric universe. No matter what you have been told by other creationists, there is no debate in the scientific community about the basic truth of evolution. No debate. None. There may be disagreements about details, but as I said, scientists know more about evolution than they do about gravity. The only debate comes from creationists trying to force one in. I want you to understand your place in this argument.

>Everything you have said up to this point is still personal beliefs and supposition

I'm afraid you fail at understanding the difference between 'personal belief' and 'objective truth'. That is the central difference between us. You think that you can change reality by choosing to believe a more comforting belief. You think your perceptions shape reality, not the other way around. Whereas I believe in something greater than myself: Truth. The kind of truth that never changes, no matter how many human beings believe in it. I am humble enough to accept that I can never change the truth just by wishing for it. When I'm confronted with a truth I don't like, I swallow my embarrassment and accept it. When confronted with a truth you don't like, you find ways to twist it into something you can dismiss.

With this attitude, you will never be any smarter than you are right now. That is a tragedy.

>I have maintained my stance that I can respect your beliefs.

I don't need your respect.

>Yet you think you can call me a liar and a hypocrite in a baseless, childish personal attack just because I ruffled your pretty little feathers with an uncomfortable truth?

No; I call you a liar and a hypocrite (and a cheater and a fool) because your own stated beliefs contradict each other.

>Time to set you straight. ... 1 .Theory and it's meaning. ... If evolution was Proven scientific fact it would be called that.

Read it and weep.

>it CANNOT be proven as there are NO examples of true evolution in nature.

I just gave you TWO in my last post. The fact that you chose to ignore them says everything I need to know about your honor and how much you "love" to have your beliefs challenged.

Consider this also. Do you believe in dog breeding? That humans can selectively breed in characteristics they like and breed out ones they don't like? How do you think dogs' genetic code allows that to happen? Maybe because we are utilizing a process that developed naturally?

Also, I dare you to read this article all the way to the end. It is not only a good example of observed evolution, but also how a scientific idea is attacked, how scientists accept what was wrong with the original experiment, and how they perform new ones to get to the real truth.

>I have heard accounts of fish, moths and other species so called evolution that also have perfectly plausible explanations for their 'evolutions' that have nothing to do with Darwin's erroneous theory.

Please, tell me these perfectly plausible theories.

>If creatures or man *evolved* we would see foxes with wings, capable of flying to catch pigeons in flight, or a man with eyes in the back of his head to counter the obvious flaw of not having 360 degree vision and not just one single random 'mutation' but the entire species would change.

I wish you could see the look of disbelief on my face, that you could think those are actually good arguments.

All you've just demonstrated is that you are attacking a version of the theory of evolution that doesn't exist. If you actually understood evolution, you would know in a heartbeat why everything you just said is outrageously goofy. You are pointing out the holes in a distorted, fake theory, that's all. You are vigorously attacking a strawman, thinking you're hurting the real thing.

For starters, you could not have picked a worse example of something craaazy that could never happen. Because here's a picture of a fox with wings. They're even called 'flying foxes' for crying out loud.

And before you ask, 'Why do regular foxes not have wings too?', the answer is simple; because they don't need them. Evolution is all about species adapting to their environment in the simplest, most efficient way. Foxes are good enough at catching prey with what they already have, that there is nothing forcing them to adapt or die. Flight takes an incredible amount of energy. Flight is only possible in warm-blooded animals that are small enough to counter gravity easily, or in environments where food is so abundant that they can take in the energy necessary to fly.

Why don't humans have eyes in the back of our heads? Because we don't need them. We evolved from predator species. Predators need 3D vision -forward-facing eyes- to zero in on prey. Have you noticed that most prey mammals have eyes on the sides of their heads, giving them pretty-close-to 360 vision, just like you said? Because being alert and running away are more important to their survival. For predators, catching prey is more important, so they don't starve to death.

Lastly, of course the whole species changes instead of just one random mutation! Every single time two creatures have sex, there's a chance for near-infinite mutations. This happens all the time. Offspring with bad mutations die off, offspring with neutral mutations carry on as normal, and offspring with beneficial mutations have a better chance of surviving long enough to pass on that mutation. That is the SELECTION in natural selection.

That's what evolution actually is. I don't know what you've been told, but you have been misinformed. Of course evolution sounds ridiculous to you, because you've been given a 'funhouse mirror' version of it. Even in high school science classes, it's still not usually explained well enough. I can understand why you're misinformed, but that's no excuse for clinging to the misinformation because you don't want evolution to be true.

That is your ONLY REASON for not believing in it. But what if it were true? Actually ask yourself that. It would mean only that Genesis is a metaphor at best. That's all. Not so horrible, is it?

>Evidence that the evolutionary scientific community chooses to ignore.

What you call 'ignoring' is more likely 'look at, test it, realize it is flawed, and discard'.

>"Oh evolution takes millions of years". This smacks of the same kind of convenient excuse you accuse the Bible of.

If I told you the earth takes 365 days to orbit the sun on a diagonal rotation, would that be a "convenient excuse" for why the seasons happen?

>What about how stupid evolution is with all it's variables and inconsistencies?

It actually hurts my heart that you can't see how that makes evolution the stronger belief.

Imagine two fortresses. In one, they have complete faith that their fortress will last forever. In the other, they are constantly checking for flaws in their walls. The other fortress sees this as a sign of weakness. Yet the second fortress swaps out the cracked bricks they find with better ones. While the first fortress neglects repairs forever, simply believing that the strength of their faith will also apply to their fortress walls.

>To me, 'evolution' is as likely as a tornado blowing through a scrapyard and leaving behind a fully functioning jumbo jet.

Thank you for proving that your beliefs are not your own. You were told this. I have heard the jumbo jet example many times, and I actually groaned in pain to see it again. It betrays your misunderstanding of evolution.

Instead of a tornado blowing through a junkyard, imagine a great big shallow cardboard box filled with tiny puck-shaped magnets. If you shake the box, the magnets will roll around. Eventually, a few will stick together. And if you keep shaking, inevitably you will end up with all the magnets stuck to each other; a formation larger and more complex than any of its individual components.

Your jumbo jet example is lacking an essential component: evolution is random events PLUS selection for beneficial outcomes.

>The ONLY reason to say 'God didn't do this' is to try and prove he does not exist or has no power over the world.

Why do you insist on seeing it that way? Like I said, plenty of Christians believe in evolution and see it as God's paintbrush. They see 'seven days' in Genesis and ask, 'How long is a day to God?' You are seriously trying to say that, if God watched millions of years of life developing, subtly nudging events to happen to produce his desired results, that shows he has NO power!?

>For a Christian to say he believes in evolution when such a notion is clearly anathema to GOD'S OWN WORD

No. The word of MEN. If the Bible was the word of God, then why are there many different versions of it?

The clearest word of God is HIS OWN CREATION. THE NATURAL WORLD. THE ONE YOU SPIT ON BY IGNORING ITS SELF-EVIDENT TRUTHS IN FAVOR OF WORDS WRITTEN BY MEN.

And you were the one who spent so much time decrying "the religion of man".

>Creation Scientists every bit as learned and intelligent as your evolutionists

Name five.

>By who's definition is not believing in evolution 'unacceptable'?

Mine.

>I should be *ashamed* of myself for believing in the word of my God over the LIES of mankind

You don't, and I just proved it.

>including many eminent, learned scientists who ALSO believe in Creation over evolution?!

There is no such thing. Learned, maybe. Eminent? Absolutely not.

>How is believing in an a theory written by a mere man that is contrary to God's own words and an attempt to destroy everything the Bible tells us about God's power and wisdom by saying that God did not create the world in seven days "Loving the Lord thy God?

'Love' does not mean 'believing everything you read about a person without ever questioning it'. The people I truly love? I can challenge them and argue with them and call them wrong, and they will do the same to me, and I will love them more for having the courage to be honest with me.

>I learned about evolution even before I knew about salvation. Even as a child, evolution was a joke to me. A laughably bad joke, so claiming I am 'ignorant' of the subject without knowing the slightest thing about me only displays your own 'ignorance'.

You just admitted that you heard about a complex, often poorly explained theory when you were a child. And rather than trying to understand it further, you declared it a joke and decided you didn't need to know anything more about it. That is what I call the apex of ignorance.

>You call me Liar and hypocrite? I am true to myself, to my beliefs and to my God.

Throughout this discussion, your behavior has shown without doubt that you are true to none of those things. You are dishonest to yourself by ignoring the evidence I give you when you ask for it. You are dishonest to your beliefs by contradicting them with your own words and actions. And you are dishonest to God by believing in a book instead of looking at his creation with your own eyes.

>You are true to nothing but empty words.

I am more loyal to my god; Truth, than you are to yours.

>So I say to you, read Matthew 7, 1-6. "Do not judge, so that you may not be judged. For with the judgement you make you will be judged and the measure you give will be the measure you get.

That is a cowardly belief. I judge others because I don't fear their judgement. I know that being judged only makes me stronger. When my beliefs are challenged, the sharp edges get sharper and the chaff is burned away.

When your beliefs are "challenged" they remain exactly the same afterwards, don't they?

>"Do not give what is holy to dogs; and do not throw your pearls before swine, or they will trample them underfoot and turn to maul you."

You say that, and all I can imagine is your hooves trampling centuries of scientific observation into the mud.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
Yet again I find myself deciding to respond to you rather than simply agreeing to disagree.

Firstly, Newtons Law of Gravity. See that? Newtons LAW of gravity. That is what it is called in modern times. In the article you showed, Newton's law was called a theory in reference to it's history. It is now called Newton's Law of gravity. Evolution is still the Theory of evolution. Unproven supposition . A system of erroneous ideas. Nothing more.

Thank you for posting that article. It proves everything I have ever believed about evolution and was a particular example I was going to use to debunk this tripe. Scientists say 'we got it wrong' Yep. So how much of the rest of their theory is complete hogwash as well? I know, 100%. A few grubby, soot stained moths do not evolution make.

Why is is so difficult to believe, or even countenance that God simply created the world as it is today? The heavens, the earth, the sky, the seas, man, plants and animals as they are now? You explained evolution to me exactly as I understand it. I still consider it false. Take the mammary gland for an example of why I can't see evolution as even being remotely plausible.

Now, mammals had to evolve this gland in order to feed their young. What happened in the meantime? Why are their any breast milk feeding mammals still alive on this earth if the process took millions of years? Obviously, before mammary glands evolved, mammals found an alternate method of feeding their young. It's only logical to assume this. By Darwin's own law then, these new mammary glands serve no purpose what-so-ever and would be rejected as an unfavorable mutation long before they even had the chance to finish evolving. Not the boobies!! Almost every evolutionary process has this similar flaw.

Before you say 'that's not how evolution works', That is exactly how evolution works as I was taught in school and college and for the past 20 years. Hmmm? Whats that you say now? Evolution has been re-written and re-defined in modern times? You mean in the exact same way the Bible has been re-written and re-defined? If evolution is the absolute truth, then why are there all these different versions of it?

As to my beliefs not being my own... you also believe what others have told you. What evolutionists have told you. You weighed up what they said with what you knew and found it favorable. I weighed up what evolutionists said with what the Bible said and yes, with what other Christians said and I sided with God. My beliefs are as much my own as yours are.

>The clearest word of God is HIS OWN CREATION. THE NATURAL WORLD. THE ONE YOU SPIT ON BY IGNORING ITS SELF-EVIDENT TRUTHS IN FAVOR OF WORDS WRITTEN BY MEN.<

How.... can you even say this with a straight face? Please tell me you aren't serious. God's own CREATION. HE created this world in seven days. It did not 'evolve'. Why should I ignore the self-evident truth of the Bible in favor of.. words written by MEN?!

http://creation.com/creation-scientists <-- Creation scientists, past and present. I've heard of more of these than any of your evolutionists.

I looked at God. I looked at what I knew of God and of the world. I believe God created heaven and earth in seven days. As to 'ignoring evidence' I have refuted your 'evidence' and posed my own. Evidence you have 'ignored'. You don't think it's evidence? It's plenty compelling evidence to me. Again, read Genesis. There's your evidence. The word of God as written down by men, yes. It is still the word of God. Has not the Theory of evolution been changed since it's conception, to make it more accessible to the common man and help with his understanding? So has the Bible been translated.

>I am more loyal to my god; Truth, than you are to yours.< When your 'truth' is founded in a lie? By who's definition? Mine.

I'm simply going to agree to disagree with you on this whole subject. I would still like to take the time to thank you for sharing your opinion even if I cannot, in good conscience, agree with you as you cannot agree with me.

But I will ask you one last thing.

Let us suppose for one minute that you are correct. We evolved from monkeys, God did not create us. Then what does it matter in the end? You live your life in the knowledge your truth is real, you live a happy and healthy person, as do billions of others.. I live my life as a happy, healthy person secure in the knowledge that what I believe is true, as do billions of others. We both die. That's it. Game over. Neither of us will care any more. We're dead.

Now let us suppose for a minute what happens if you are wrong and I am right. Think about it.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
I judge you as much by the points you responded to as the ones you chose to ignore: The difference between personal belief and objective truth. My three different examples showing evolution. Proving that you contradict your own beliefs. Your refusal to give me the 'perfectly plausible' alternate theories you said existed. The flying fox. Why humans have forward facing eyes. What would happen if evolution was true. My example about a "convenient excuse". My metaphor about the two fortresses. My obliteration of your jumbo jet example. Why you can't believe that God uses evolution as a tool. My definition of love. Your apex of ignorance. The three ways you're dishonest. And my fear of not being judged. Since you didn't even bother to acknowledge those points, I'm just going to conclude victory in all of them. You just keep circling around to the few points you're comfortable arguing about. Anyone else reading this can see it.

>Yet again I find myself deciding to respond to you rather than simply agreeing to disagree.

Of course you did! Because, just like everyone else who argues like you, you always lie when you say you're going to leave. "I bid you good day, Sir!" I knew you wouldn't. I knew you couldn't.

>Evolution is still the Theory of evolution. Unproven supposition . A system of erroneous ideas. Nothing more.

So you're trying to convince me of the definition of the word 'theory', yet you still persist in defining it incorrectly as 'something which hasn't been proven 100% correct, therefore it is 100% false'. I try not to think in absolutes.

Also, once and for all, this explains it better than I could. A scientific law is not "better" or "more accurate" than a scientific theory. A law explains what will happen under certain circumstances, while a theory explains how it happens.

>Thank you for posting that article. It proves everything I have ever believed about evolution and was a particular example I was going to use to debunk this tripe. Scientists say 'we got it wrong'

Thank you for proving you selectively ignored whatever parts of that article you didn't want to acknowledge, because that is literally the only way you could come to that conclusion. What you concluded is the opposite of what actually happened.

>So how much of the rest of their theory is complete hogwash as well? I know, 100%.

I can't understand why creationists only think in black and white. They think evolution is a house of cards; prove one detail wrong and everything tumbles. No. You would have to prove literally hundreds upon hundreds of examples wrong before evolution as an idea would be imperiled at all. That's like visiting the the Eiffel Tower and thinking, 'If I pull out this one loose bolt I found, the whole thing will come crashing down!'

>A few grubby, soot stained moths do not evolution make.

Wow. You don't even realize that the moths were soot-colored. Yeah, you really understand what you're talking about.

>Why is is so difficult to believe, or even countenance that God simply created the world as it is today?

Because why would a being powerful enough to create life from nothing, create a world so horrifyingly flawed? There are a million and one things in space which could wipe out all life on this planet. Birth defects kill millions of babies every year. All life can only exist by harming, killing, or stealing from other life forms: we are all in constant conflict. We breathe, talk and eat all through the same hole, which means humans choke to death every day. Viruses exist. Parasites exist. Humans have instincts that prevent them from livingpeacefully with one another. These are only a FEW examples.

It would be much easier for me to believe that God made this world if it were BETTER.

>You explained evolution to me exactly as I understand it.

No, I didn't. I pointed out multiple places where your own words proved you were attacking a strawman.

>Now, mammals had to evolve this gland in order to feed their young. What happened in the meantime? Why are their any breast milk feeding mammals still alive on this earth if the process took millions of years? Obviously, before mammary glands evolved, mammals found an alternate method of feeding their young. It's only logical to assume this. By Darwin's own law then, these new mammary glands serve no purpose what-so-ever and would be rejected as an unfavorable mutation long before they even had the chance to finish evolving. Not the boobies!! Almost every evolutionary process has this similar flaw.

You are thinking in black and white terms again. Either something works perfectly in the form we see now, or it's completely useless.

I already told you about neutral mutations. Thank you for proving you aren't really listening.

If a mutation pops up that neither hinders or benefits an organism, there is nothing to make it go away except chance. If it happens to catch on in the species, it may change to something harmful or beneficial later. I admit, I don't know much about mammary glands. But I'm betting that there was an earlier form of them that served some kind of other purpose (possibly sweat glands), until it happened that babies who lapped the fluids from these glands gained a tiny edge over babies that didn't, and natural selection eventually led to more developed glands over many years and many different species. This is also how the eye evolved, in case you were about to bring that up as the next example of the empty theory of Irreducible Complexity.

Think of a mousetrap. Take away the trigger and it no longer functions as a mousetrap. Ah, but you could still use it as a tie clasp or a tiny clipboard. THAT is the fatal flaw of irreducible complexity: just because a simpler form of a complex structure couldn't do what it does now, doesn't mean it couldn't do something else.

>That is exactly how evolution works as I was taught in school and college and for the past 20 years.

Then you had shitty teachers. And hey, I did too. In my high school science class, my teacher told me that humans would all lose our wisdom teeth in a few generations because we no longer need them. That is a catastrophic misunderstanding of the theory she was teaching. To understand evolution as well as I do, I have had to do it mostly through my own research. So, again I can understand why you're misinformed, but it doesn't excuse holding onto that misinformation.

>Evolution has been re-written and re-defined in modern times? You mean in the exact same way the Bible has been re-written and re-defined? If evolution is the absolute truth, then why are there all these different versions of it?

Evolution, a scientific theory, is meant to be discussed, debated and changed, like all scientific theories. Your Bible is supposedly the eternal word of God. ETERNAL. Yet it isn't. That's a far bigger problem for you than me.

>As to my beliefs not being my own... you also believe what others have told you. What evolutionists have told you. You weighed up what they said with what you knew and found it favorable. I weighed up what evolutionists said with what the Bible said and yes, with what other Christians said and I sided with God. My beliefs are as much my own as yours are.

Fair. I will concede that one point.

>How.... can you even say this with a straight face? Please tell me you aren't serious. God's own CREATION. HE created this world in seven days. It did not 'evolve'. Why should I ignore the self-evident truth of the Bible in favor of.. words written by MEN?!

Because the Bible IS words written by men.

Like I already said, when an artist creates a painting, does he will it into existence out of nothing? Or does he painstakingly add every individual brushstroke? And when he does, isn't it still called a creation?

Literally, the only source of your information about the creation is the Bible. Words in a book. Where is your proof that these are the words of God? And where in Genesis does it say HOW God created the world? Does it say explicitly he simply poofed everything into being? Or could he have created it slowly, like an artist does?

Again I ask, how do you know how long a day is to God?

>http://creation.com/creation-scientists <-- Creation scientists, past and present. I've heard of more of these than any of your evolutionists.

Creation scientists. Listed on a creationism site. Absolutely unimpressive. Find me a list of creation scientists on a neutral website, whose work on creationism is peer-reviewed and found to be worthy of consideration.

Also, I'm unimpressed that scientists before Darwin didn't believe in evolution, because if they did, it would mean they were psychic.

Also, you might find this amusing. It's about a list of scientists who accept evolution. But it's limited only to scientists named Steve. And yet that list is still longer than any list of scientists who believe in creationism. While the number of believers doesn't prove a belief is true, it should at least make you wonder why so few scientists are on your side.

>I looked at God.

How? Did he show his face to you? Did he speak words to you? Or did you look in your own heart and go with what it said to you?

>I believe God created heaven and earth in seven days.

If you had never heard of the Bible, would you have come to that same conclusion from observing the world?

>As to 'ignoring evidence' I have refuted your 'evidence' and posed my own.

You have acknowledged only a very small amount of my points, and you have refuted exactly one.

>You don't think it's evidence? It's plenty compelling evidence to me.

That's because you want to believe in it, not because the evidence itself is compelling.

>Again, read Genesis. There's your evidence.

Which creation story am I supposed to read again? The one that starts on Genesis 1:1, where animals are made before man, or the one that starts on Genesis 2:4, where man is created before animals?

>The word of God as written down by men, yes. It is still the word of God.

How do you know? Where is your proof? What if I claimed my words were dictated to me by God, would that make them all true?

>Has not the Theory of evolution been changed since it's conception, to make it more accessible to the common man and help with his understanding?

No. It has been explained differently, but the theory itself has not changed.

>I'm simply going to agree to disagree with you on this whole subject.

That's awfully convenient for you. You get to just walk away, as if we're on equal ground and merely arguing about opinions.

>I would still like to take the time to thank you for sharing your opinion even if I cannot, in good conscience, agree with you as you cannot agree with me.

I am not disagreeing with you because of my conscience. That is the fundamental difference between us, as I already explained. What I want to be true has absolutely no bearing on the truth itself. There have been times when I've had to lie for the benefit of myself or others. Even though what I was doing overall was good, I was still lying. The truth didn't change just because it would have been better for me if it did.

>Let us suppose for one minute that you are correct. We evolved from monkeys, God did not create us.

Or, God used evolution to create us. You're still thinking in binary.

(BTW, we did not evolve from monkeys. Both humans and monkeys come from a common ancestor. That is literally the most common mistake people make about evolution.)

>Then what does it matter in the end? You live your life in the knowledge your truth is real, you live a happy and healthy person, as do billions of others.. I live my life as a happy, healthy person secure in the knowledge that what I believe is true, as do billions of others. We both die. That's it. Game over. Neither of us will care any more. We're dead.

What does it matter? I will have a better life than you. Devoting myself to an objective truth outside myself has been one of the best decisions of my life. I am saner since deciding not to bullshit myself anymore. My relationships are stronger, because they are grounded in honesty. I have already become smarter than I ever dreamed I could be. Not because I'm special. Simply because I listen to people smarter than I am. I am always looking for ways to cut out bad ideas and add in new ones. I don't put myself through the stress of whining and deflecting when I'm proven wrong. I accept it gladly. I let myself grow from it.

I allow myself to grow, while you keep yourself permanently stuck where you are.

>Now let us suppose for a minute what happens if you are wrong and I am right. Think about it.

If I am wrong and you are right? Nothing happens. The world itself will not change based on what we believe. Only we will.

But let's say I get called before God, and he asks me why I didn't believe he willed the world into existence in a poof of magic. I tell him, 'the only evidence that you did was in a book, and the evidence of evolution was literally everywhere else in the world'. Now, if he is a just and loving God, he will forgive me. Maybe he will even be proud of me for being curious and inquisitive, as he made me to be. But if he punishes me for doubting, then he will have proven himself a petty bully, not worthy of my worship or anyone else's. Like I said, real love is never unquestioning.

And if everyone on earth is wrong about evolution, what then? Then me and every true scientist in the world will rejoice. Because the only thing that could ever prove evolution wrong would be a stronger theory that better explains life on earth. A theory like that would be immeasurably useful. Our understanding would expand.

That's what a mature person does when they're proven wrong: they are grateful.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
BTW, if you think an evolution FAQ isn't a reliable source of information about what a scientific theory is, will this do? "Scientific theories are the most reliable, rigorous, and comprehensive form of scientific knowledge. This is significantly different from the word "theory" in common usage, which implies that something is unproven or speculative."

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
You win. I've finally found someone more stubborn than I am. I didn't think it was possible.

You, and men like you can not and will never acknowledge the truth of God no matter what is put before you. You simply can not do so. Your nature and beliefs will not allow it, just as my own beliefs will never allow me to countenance what you call your 'truth', no matter how long you speak.

You claim your life will be better than mine. Perhaps it will be, yet in all the ways you mentioned you have grown as a person? I have also grown in the same way through the knowledge of the Love of God.

*However* You have managed to do one little thing. Since I've started talking to you, I've stopped looking at the world in simple black and white terms. 'Thinking in binary" as you put it.

Has my opinion changed on evolution and God? No. Do I still believe God created heaven and earth in seven days? Yes. Do I believe my views on how the world works and functions and the beliefs of man remain the same? No. You managed to dissect out a portion of my mind I never thought I'd be rid of, that I thought was an integral part of me, that I'd never even realized I had and wanted to be rid of until you came along and said 'Why does it have to be that way?"

It hit me... yesterday I think, that the entire way I thought about things was changing. My views were the same, but the way I viewed it was not. I was thinking objectively and had stopped 'bullshitting myself' as you put it.

As astounding as it may seem, No-one has ever said to me before 'It doesn't need to be like that, you don't have to think that way, think for yourself " *and had the conviction to back it up* enough to get the point across to me. If that was your objective all along then you are one sly, sly fox and I take my hat off to you.

For that *truth* at least, I am grateful, more than you will ever know.

Thank you.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
I'm very happy that you've had an epiphany and I'll get to that in a moment. But first there are some things I need to correct.

>You win. I've finally found someone more stubborn than I am. I didn't think it was possible. You, and men like you can not and will never acknowledge the truth of God no matter what is put before you. You simply can not do so. Your nature and beliefs will not allow it, just as my own beliefs will never allow me to countenance what you call your 'truth', no matter how long you speak.

First off, I don't feel like I won anything.

Secondly, I'm not the stubborn one here. To be stubborn, I'd need something to resist against.

I try my best to be a good skeptic. Skepticism is not automatically debunking everything that seems a little spooky. That's just stupid. True skepticism is this: I will believe ABSOLUTELY ANYTHING you tell me, so long as you can prove it.

I don't believe your side of things because you simply haven't given me any reason to. Not even a little one. Frankly, your arguments have been terrible. There's been nitpicking, semantics, strawmen, and arguments I've heard from dozens of other creationists, which are so thoroughly debunked by now that no one but a creationist could be swayed by them anymore. The one thing you said that gave me pause was the example about the mammary glands. But even then, it was not a solid point. It was just a question that I, personally, couldn't answer after researching it for only a few minutes. That is literally the best you could do. The greatest difficulty I have had in this 'debate' was when you'd said something so wrong that it took me a while to figure out where to start unraveling it.

I would have no problem giving up my belief in evolution if you could give me a better theory to take it's place. You haven't offered me anything except, 'Believe me because I say so.' You are insulting me when you say that I'm the one who can't change my beliefs.

Do you know what it would take to get me to believe in God? For him to ask me to. Simple as that. Just one unambiguous sign that I could not easily explain otherwise. It would take as little as him saying, "I AM," inside my head, in a voice that was clearly not mine. (I don't honestly know if the knowledge of his presence would change my behavior any, but I'd believe he was there.)

You are the stubborn one. Because you are the one who has been pushing back. You ask a question; I give you my best answer; you shove it away unexamined. Your position has always been, 'I believe in this, and I'm frustrated because you won't believe it too.' Or maybe, 'and I'm frustrated because you won't make it easy on me to keep believing this way.'

>You claim your life will be better than mine. Perhaps it will be, yet in all the ways you mentioned you have grown as a person? I have also grown in the same way through the knowledge of the Love of God.

If that's true, then I'm happy for you. You, specifically, may not be my enemy. But your mindset is.

The person who thinks, 'I must deny evidence because my God needs me to' is the same kind of person who is capable of thinking, 'I must deny evidence because my political party needs me to' or 'I must deny evidence because my preacher needs me to' or 'I must deny evidence because my favorite talk radio host needs me to' or 'I must deny evidence because my race needs me to'.

You prioritize authority over evidence. That is dangerous. Again, I am not saying that, you, specifically are. But people who think like you are the cause of a lot of human misery. A person who believes that whatever their leader says must be the truth, because he's their leader, is the kind of person who can be made to believe literally anything. The kind of person who can perform terrible atrocities while believing their conscience is clean. Keep in mind that no one detonates a bomb strapped to their chest while on a bus full of innocent men, women and children unless they believe wholeheartedly that what they are doing is an act of purest good. Because someone else told them it was. I consider it my duty to do whatever I can to make sure there are less people like that in the world by the time I leave it.

>As astounding as it may seem, No-one has ever said to me before 'It doesn't need to be like that, you don't have to think that way, think for yourself " *and had the conviction to back it up* enough to get the point across to me. If that was your objective all along then you are one sly, sly fox and I take my hat off to you.

It doesn't astound me at all. In fact, it saddens me that I sometimes feel so lonely saying these kinds of things. I wish my teachers had. I wish my therapists had. I wish my parents had. I wish anyone had, instead of me being forced to piece it together for myself over the years.

I am glad you've had an epiphany, even if I'm a bit unclear on what you say has changed. But that's beside the point.

I want you to imagine me reading these last paragraphs in a voice of sad, tired disappointment. That is what I feel.

I don't want your thanks. I am not your friend. I will never be your friend. And the reason is simple. I want all my friendships to be rooted in honesty and respect. I can't be friends with someone who will ignore what I say rather than face it. You haven't been rude in this discussion, I will freely give you that, but you have ducked out of answering so many of my points, always returning to only the arguments you're comfortable with making, that I can't respect you. I can't respect a person who says they "love" having their beliefs challenged, and will then say anything they can think of to make sure that never happens.

I am a firm believer that choices should come with consequences. Your choice to prioritize authority over evidence has cost you a connection to another human being. Permanently. It is not because you believe in god. It is not even because you don't believe in evolution. It is because of the way you argue with dishonesty and dishonor. I don't like being lied to, and I don't allow people to lie to me without consequences.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
As you wish. I can't dissuade you from that line of thought. However, to lie to you firstly I would need to believe that what I was saying was a lie. I do not. I still believe in the word of God. I still do not believe in Darwin's evolution. However, things such as selective breeding are a part of the natural order. It is idiotic to say otherwise as you so patiently pointed out.

As to ignoring what you said, Yes, I did. I had a 'deaf ear' mentality, and have had one for most of my life. That will change soon enough.

Am I happy the way I am now, as I said? Hell no. Explained in the journal below.

And finally, as to prioritizing authority over evidence... [A link to one of his journals, which I will not include as to preserve his anonymity] If I can break my own vicious cycle of 'authority', the rest will surely follow.

This is, in part, your doing simply for standing up and asking 'Why?' when no one else I've ever known has had the courage to do so.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>I still do not believe in Darwin's evolution. However, things such as selective breeding are a part of the natural order.

I wasn't planning on replying much, but those two sentences are staggering. "I still do not believe in Darwin's evolution. However, things such as selective breeding are a part of the natural order."

You just basically said that you believe in the idea, but not when it's called by a certain name. That is the most amazing example of compartmentalization I have ever seen.

>And Finally, as to prioritizing authority over evidence...If I can break my own vicious cycle of 'authority', the rest will surely follow.

I'm happy to hear that. Friends or not, I'm always glad to see when someone has a desire to better themselves. If we don't want to be more than what we are, why bother being alive?

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
>I wasn't planning on replying much, but those two sentences are staggering. "I still do not believe in Darwin's evolution. However, things such as selective breeding are a part of the natural order." You just basically said that you believe in the idea, but not when it's called by a certain name. That is the most amazing example of compartmentalization I have ever seen.<

Again I fail to clarify. >.< My apologies. Something such as selective breeding is or inherited traits is clearly visible in the natural world. However the idea that man and monkey evolved from a common ancestor, rather than God's creation still seems a tad far fetched to me. :3 A bit too much of a stretch right now, if you like. I'll sort myself out first.

~~~

AlexReynard to GREEN
>Something such as selective breeding is or inherited traits is clearly visible in the natural world . However the idea that man and monkey evolved from a common ancestor, rather than God's creation still seems a tad far fetched to me.

Imagine you're immortal, and for whatever reason you've been tasked to draw exactly the same drawing over and over again for the next three hundred and fifty years. Every time you finish a drawing, it is taken away, so you only have your memory of it to go by. Now... is your final drawing going to look anything like your first one?

If you can accept that small changes happen within species, all you need to do then is imagine an uncountable number of small changes happening to an uncountable number of different species over three and a half billion years.

BTW, I am glad to see that you listened to one correction I made. That's commendable progress, and I'm not being sarcastic. Accepting the other person's argument for what it is, is honorable.

~~~

GREEN to AlexReynard
Cheers. :3 I'm going to look at things a little more objectively and take what I'm told with a grain of salt from now on. I prefer my information with a little flavor, though it's an acquired taste, is it not? Glad I was able to sample it, one way or the other.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Bad Boys II: A Point-By-Point Review
Zootopia: Breaking Bellwether
This conversation could have been about anything.

It happens to be about Religion, Christianity in particular, and also about evolution. But what I wanted to highlight here was the way my main opponent argues. I have encountered this same person innumerable times. Not this exact same user; but people who argue so similarly that they may as well be clones of each other. I see the same tactics again and again. Always, they start out polite and seemingly eager for a real discussion. Always, many posts later, I realize I am debating someone who will not concede the points I make and will not allow their core beliefs to be challenged. It's tiring.

This exchange is the most quintessential example I have come across. If you find it interesting for the subject matter, that's fine. But I hope you'll also look at how each person here uses their words. Judge for yourself whether you think their tactics are fair or foul, logical or evasive, honorable or dishonest.


(Also, formatting this thing was an unimaginable pain in the ass...)

Keywords
science 2,158, religion 845, evolution 651, argument 385, darwin 159, christianity 115, alex reynard 87, debate 39, theory 29
Details
Type: Writing - Document
Published: 11 years, 9 months ago
Rating: General

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CuriousFerret
11 years, 9 months ago
Ah apologetics, making excuses for a religion based solely on an excuse for bad behavior.

I find them more disappointing then the ones that use religion as an excuse to discriminate against others.

I think apologetics need to make excuses for themselves on why they stayed in discriminatory religions, find some redeeming quality to make up for their original lack of free will and insight.

Excuses are the primary example of a guilty consciousness.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
I'm not even sure that applies here. He's saying that there is only one single-sentence version of religion he considers legitimate, and everyone else is not practicing 'true' religion. I don't know what to call that.
CuriousFerret
11 years, 9 months ago
I think apologetic as they are the ones that clip out and rework the meaning of scripture and passages from various religions to fit their own ideals for modern time even when we know human morality was completely different at the time of the inking.

It might be a over generalization for this one, but I agree its hard to define him when all he's going with is the golden rule and believing in god in some form or another.

Still feels like he's grasping for straws to justified needing religion for good.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>I think apologetic as they are the ones that clip out and rework the meaning of scripture and passages from various religions to fit their own ideals for modern time even when we know human morality was completely different at the time of the inking.

Ah. Kinda reminds me of people who try to defend male genital mutilation using medical arguments, ignoring that there was never a scientific or medical reason for the practice when it was started by the Isrealites or brought to America by masturbation-phobic quacks.

>It might be a over generalization for this one, but I agree its hard to define him when all he's going with is the golden rule and believing in god in some form or another.

Interestingly enough, just yesterday I saw a YouTube video of Christopher Hitchens where he said the Golden Rule isn't enough by itself, and he gave a rather clever example. 'They say do unto others as you would have them do unto you. Well what about Charles Manson? I don't want what's done unto me to be done unto him. I'd like him to be punished at least a little bit.' ;)

>Still feels like he's grasping for straws to justified needing religion for good.

Yes. I have asked and asked, and I have never heard of a single unique thing that religion contributes to humanity. It's like a kid who sits next to you in class and takes credit for half your work while doing none of it.
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
The Golden Rule: How a masochist justifies torturing someone. >:3
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
The Other Golden Rule: "You don't drink YELLOW wee-wee you silly! It's gotta be colorless in order to be safe. You know what they say "yeller and stinky; no drinky"."

And no, I'm not sayin' where I got that quote from. :3
chaosblackwing
11 years, 9 months ago
I don't know what to call that.

That would be a textbook perfect example of the 'No true Scotsman' fallacy.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_true_scotsman
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
Ah, thank you. I'd heard of the fallacy, but didn't know if there was a specific name for people who use it in regards to religion.
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
On fstdt.com I've heard it referred to as "That loud bang I just heard? That was the sonic boom as they moved the goalposts."
randomfox
11 years, 9 months ago
Stupid? I'd call it stupid... well, maybe ignorant. Though I like to go by the definitions I heard from somewhere that "Ignorance is not knowing, stupidity is not wanting to know."
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
I really like that quote.

True: when I went to look it up, the closest source I could find was from a Christian pastor. The irony is so powerful I may cum all over the room...
randomfox
11 years, 9 months ago
Ha. Fun fact: the source was actually a nutritionist lady my mom overheard arguing with a meat head at the gym. He was talking about how all he ever eats is stake and works out constantly, and she was trying to explain how a diet and lifestyle like that would lead to him probably dying of cardiac arrest before he turns 30, to which he replied by flexing homo-erotically.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
LOLOLOL!!

As far as diet goes, I've observed that the only consistently good advice I've seen is to not eat in balance. Don't overindulge in any one food or group of foods. And get outside sometimes.
Autumnringtail
11 years, 9 months ago
Have you ever heard of a book called Siddhartha?
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
Heard of it, yes. Read it, no. Sounds like something I might check out. Admittedly I don't know too much about Buddhism, though that may be due to Buddhists not forcing it down my throat like some other faiths I could mention. Though what I have seen of Buddhism does not impress me much. The Four Noble Truths sound a lot like cutting yourself off from painful situations instead of confronting and embracing them as a part of life. I may be wrong about that, but if so, no one's shown me why so far.

I did read the Tao Te Ching though, and thought it was about one-third good ideas, one-third bad ideas and one third nonsense.
ZephonTsol
11 years, 9 months ago
That's a big read and brainbending at that. I tried once when I was in college (for a course). I eventually BS'd my way through the report.

This was BEFORE Wikipedia came out. Managed a C. Couldn't try again.
paddedfox
11 years, 9 months ago
this is very interesting! i can see your points and some of theirs......

> forcing it down my throat like some other faiths I could mention.
many people feel they must "convert" all people to what they believe, i am lutheren christen, and i truly think people can believe whatever they want. there is a place for all scientific ideas/facts/events etc to co-exist with religious beliefs
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>many people feel they must "convert" all people to what they believe,

True, and it's probably a human universal to feel that way. Heck, I feel that way myself sometimes. And for both selfish and unselfish reasons. Selfish, because I'd enjoy this world so much more if more people prohibited themselves from holding any belief that they could not explain the reasons for. Unselfish, because being so rigorous about my own beliefs has pretty much made my life amazing and I want everyone to be able to share that.

>i am lutheren christen, and i truly think people can believe whatever they want. there is a place for all scientific ideas/facts/events etc to co-exist with religious beliefs

You misspelled Christian. Tee hee. <pokes you good-naturedly>
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
" AlexReynard wrote:
>i am lutheren christen, and i truly think people can believe whatever they want. there is a place for all scientific ideas/facts/events etc to co-exist with religious beliefs

You misspelled Christian. Tee hee. <pokes you good-naturedly>


And Lutheran.
paddedfox
11 years, 9 months ago
oops, sorry folks no one never taught me ta spell ^^
talon1990
11 years, 9 months ago
So wait you actualy made someone that entrenched in his ways learn... anything... bravo sir.
I have a similar problem debateing religion with a very close friend of mine. He onec said that you shouldn't try to apply logic to religion because it would crumble... even though that was my point in the first place. But, thankfully, he is learning, slowly but surely he is.
anyway once agina good job sir Twilight Sparkle would be proud... and I hope you take that as a compliment
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>So wait you actualy made someone that entrenched in his ways learn... anything... bravo sir.

Gracias. However, I'm not sure 'entrenched' is the right word for this guy. I've argued with people who are absolutely welded to their beliefs. With Green, it felt more like he simply accepted what he was told and no one ever seriously called him out on it. Reminds me of how sometimes I'll sit something down on a shelf and then three years later it's still sitting in the same spot, dust covering it, and I don't even notice it there anymore; it's just part of the background.

>He onec said that you shouldn't try to apply logic to religion because it would crumble... even though that was my point in the first place.

Tee hee. 'Don't make me defend my beliefs because in my heart I know I can't!'

I understand how people get like that, but I really try to be the opposite. One of the reason I post so many of my essays/journals/tantrums is that I want my ideas discussed. If anything I've said can be torn down, then it ought to be.

>Twilight Sparkle would be proud... and I hope you take that as a compliment

Indeed I do! And thanks! <blush>
talon1990
11 years, 9 months ago
Your welcome and I can't wait for more of your storys rants and or what ever in the near future. Infact I think I may just have the courage to post a story or two here myself soon... anyway *hoof bump*
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>Infact I think I may just have the courage to post a story or two here myself soon...

Awesome! I love encouraging people. :)
puppylover69
11 years, 9 months ago
Well I believe if in going to hell why not have a fun time before I go
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
> Strange how the golden rule itself is just thrown in, almost as an afterthought, after making sure you're giving God all the love you can possibly give. He seems a bit jealous.

He's a LOT jealous. I mean Jealous:
Exodus 34:14 - For thou shalt worship no other god: for the LORD, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God:
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
Wowwwwwww. I hadn't seen that before. His name is literally Jealous!? That's... How the hell did belief in him catch on!? "Hey wanna go worship a guy so consumed by jealousy he named himself that?"
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
Learning about that tidbit way back when was probably one of the stones tipping the scales into declaring myself no longer Christian.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
I might've mentioned, but I was never really anything as a kid. My mom took me to church-ish things on very rare occasions. We rarely went back more than once, but that was typical for a lot of new things she tried. I casually believed in God and Jesus back then. The fact that it was never important to me probably helped me shed it later on.
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
Similarly, we attended church quite regularly early on, but changed churches several times, and I never understood what the fuss was over differences in denomination. After a while, we stopped going to church altogether--but while my zealotry faded with time and distance from the indoctrination, Mom's faith has stayed firm.

Pa and Susie go to church, but they're a lot more accepting of situations like me and Zephie being a couple and non-Christian. They're Episcopalian now, which they refer to as "Catholic Lite: All the pageantry, 61.6% less guilt!" (I made up the figure myself just to be funny; I think they actually said "half the guilt".)
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
I'd wondered what Episcopalians were. I almost thought it had something to do with fish. ;)
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
Well Christianity has always been big on the whole fish thing, with Jesus's buddies being fishermen, his quip about making them "fishers of men", the miracle with the loaves and fishes, and the fish symbol being used by early Christians as a secret society sign. I dunno if Episcopalians make a particularly big deal about it, but I can see where you get it from with "pisc" being right there in the first few letters of the word.
OsirisPM
11 years, 9 months ago
Hmm. This reminds me of something else I encounter at times (and am guilty of, I think)--Aliens.
What evidence would you say is needed to prove:
1--aliens visit Earth
2--government covers up aliens on Earth
I find it difficult to explain my problems with the above statements, and I do not know what I, personally, would require as proof. Any thoughts?
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>What evidence would you say is needed to prove:
1--aliens visit Earth
2--government covers up aliens on Earth

This is actually a really good question. I love it when I'm actually totally stumped for a second and I really have to think to begin an answer. :)

Omny covered some of the blatant ones, like aliens actually landing or a dead body or a crashed spaceship. I'm trying to think of what the minimum amount of proof would be. A radio signal from space displaying a mathematical pattern impossible in nature? A clear, detailed video of a spacecraft that passes several tests by video analysts? Maybe even a field that has evidence of a landing site, with, like, scorchmarks caused by no known propulsion? I know none of those would be conclusive proof, but any one of them might grant a higher degree of plausibility to the idea.

For number two, one thing that came to mind is if someone like Bob Lazar turned up, but the details of his story actually checked out. Especially if he had photos, audio or video to corroborate.
tiac
11 years, 9 months ago
> I'm afraid you fail at understanding the difference between 'personal belief' and 'objective truth'. That is the central difference between us. You think that you can change reality by choosing to believe a more comforting belief. You think your perceptions shape reality, not the other way around.
 A well written and funny story about this point is The Simple Truth
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
Read that. Loved it. A perfect illustration of how a simple idea can become a trainwreck if you throw enough bad questions at it.

I watched a debate between William Lane Craig and Christopher Hitchens, and I was surprised that Hitch wasn't nearly as much of a bulldog as he usually is (though he did get in some searing points at the end). I would love to debate an 'emminent' Christian speaker like 'Dr.' Craig. I would intentionally come unprepared. And instead of dicking around over his every point, I would just keep hammering at the fact that he's basing conclusions off of unproven assumptions. Really, none of the arguments he made in the debate I saw couldn't be swept away by a small amount of common sense. His only weapon is that he knows how to lie confidently enough that he sounds impressive.
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
> But I don't call myself a Trekkie. It's simply a show I like, not something that defines who I am.

Same here. Also, I like My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic, but I don't call myself a brony. I'm even going to Everfree Northwest and I don't call myself a brony. I'm a FOX. >:3
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
<narrows eyes at you> If you know the full lyrics to any four songs from the show, not including the theme, you are a brony.
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
Yeah that qualifies me right there. Not to mention having literally every single one of them (except the just-prereleased ones from Season 3) on my portable music player.

It doesn't make a difference in my case, but... do you count songs less than half a minute long? I'm talking "Hop, Skip, and Jump" and "Cupcakes" length here.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>It doesn't make a difference in my case, but... do you count songs less than half a minute long? I'm talking "Hop, Skip, and Jump" and "Cupcakes" length here.

The fact that you asked that probably qualifies you for superbrony status. ;)
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
That and super music nerd. Over the years I've learned and practiced the lyrics to tons of songs I like, and My Little Pony songs are kinda just the latest to enter the collection in my memory. >:3

But yeah, to be honest I tend to avoid the label only out of respect for Zephie, who is adamant about disliking bronies in general even though he's perfectly fine with each of us who he actually KNOWS.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
Oh, Zephie just lets himself get het up about things that are popular that he doesn't share an interest in. If you wanna be a brony, you can be one in your heart.

Also, I Wanna Be The Brony would be an interesting video game...
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
Oh good grief now I am imagining an 8-bit pony platformer OH WAIT http://www.hubworld.com/hubworld/specials/mlp8bit/
(code to enter is HUBMLP8BIT)
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
I am not in the slightest bit surprised that this exists.
talon1990
11 years, 9 months ago
Whelp guess im bucked right up the flanks cuz I know most of them inculdeing the extend intro as well as knowing the names of most everypony who has one
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
There's an extended intro?
talon1990
11 years, 9 months ago
Yep it was released on the friendship express dvd as a sing along and is basicly the intro+
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
It's on Youtube somewhere. I almost said "it's probably on Youtube" ...but we all know the chances of absolutely nopony uploading it are about as good as [insert finitely improbable thing here].
ZephonTsol
11 years, 9 months ago
People like that are dangerous, like you said. I'm glad he stopped blindly following and stopped to LOOK for a second at what he was saying. Parroting lines and quips doesn't support your belief...it supports *someone else's*. You merely say it to feel good about yourself because if they're happy, well you can be too just by saying the same thing and believing it.

I once had an argument with my friend Kridder about evolution. He wouldn't concede anything, claiming that we didn't evolve, we were created as we stand today. When I asked him how it was that technology could predate soil to millions of years ago when the Bible says the Earth came into being no more than 10,000 years ago, he flailed for an answer. I didn't take solace in watching him squirm. Just...felt bad that I'd thrown some horribly unmovable logic into his way that he couldn't think of an answer to.

I've heard the answer, though. "Scientists are lying." It's...just heartbreaking that it comes from grown men and women, instead of gradeschoolers. It's shattering to know that the argument is so pervasive that the splash of logic thrown in that says "What you believe may not be right" just washes off them. My mother was like this once.

She and I have been discussing God recently. She's okay with me not knowing enough to make a belief or to believe fully IN God. She knows I can't. She knows I have to have the proof and until men/women stop using God as a catch-all for absolving themselves of horrible crimes against humanity (women's rights most recently, the Middle East as a whole long-term), I can't say that the God we've been told about is loving if he's allowing these people to claim victory in his name. It's unconscionable. And others who say "Oh, but that's a BAD religion. MY religion doesn't do that," are running from the truth that maybe it really *does*.

<sighs> The overwhelming factor in this is that 90% of the people who support a label (Christianity, Political, Racial, etc.) are decent people. They really are. They just...don't stop to think about what comes out of their mouths. That in pointing the finger at someone and saying "YOU'RE BAD", there are three more *pointing back*. The labels absolve them. Make them feel secure that they're on the winning team. A radio show I listen to when I drive home is a huge supporter of this. The host throws around slander and derogatory comments towards 'Republicons' (as he calls them), stating that it's only fair since THEY do it, he should give them their own medicine! And that he won't shill for a president or for the candidate, but he WILL shill for a man who is just as bad at making real points and actually providing evidence he can do anything to fix the country. When brought up on this, he sputters and makes excuses and then changes the subject.

I honestly and genuinely wish that we'd stop the bullshit. All of us. Me. You. Everyone. Take a good long look at our actions in life. Where we have been, where we're going. And to understand that we have to stop destroying ourselves like this or we'll never have flying cars or teleporters or nullified disease or anything. Because someone will claim a moral superiority, a higher god says NO, and that will be the end of it because SOMEONE WASN'T HAPPY.

FOR FUCKS SAKES. NO ONE IS GOING TO BE HAPPY ALL THE TIME! There will always be someone upset at you for just being you. So be you anyways and do good things. But make sure they're good. Make sure you think them through. Make sure that you know that in the end you're not going to disrupt lives or cost health or anything...then you ARE doing something positive.

Then you can claim to be a good person. Not a godly one. A good person.

Fuck. That went on, didn't it? Zzz...
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>Parroting lines and quips doesn't support your belief...it supports *someone else's*.

I saw an article a while ago that was of the hair-standing-up, 'I-hope-this-isn't-true' variety. Basically, they hooked people up to brain-measurin' machines and asked them thinky stuff. When people cited a fact from an authority, the part of their brains that examines their own ideas shut off. Basically, when you use someone else as a source of your beliefs, you are literally not thinking about what you're saying. <chills 'n goosebumps>

>I didn't take solace in watching him squirm. Just...felt bad that I'd thrown some horribly unmovable logic into his way that he couldn't think of an answer to.

<nod> I will take delight in destroying someone's arguments if they are being a rude bastard, or if we are mutually enjoying an aggressive debate. But such wasn't the case here. It felt more like a duty than anything. Like, 'This person is wrong. Not because I say so, but because objective fact does. For my sake, for his, and for the truth's, I have to point out what's right.'

And yeah, Green not believing in evolution might not have any negative consequences in his life at all. But then again it might. I know that if you can accept any cognitive dissonance, you can accept more. And when that applies to relationships with yourself or others, it leads to misery.

>I've heard the answer, though. "Scientists are lying." It's...just heartbreaking that it comes from grown men and women, instead of gradeschoolers.

Agreed. Reminds me of the fable about the fox and the sour grapes. 'I can't understand something, or choose not to, so the idea much be baloney anyway.'

>The overwhelming factor in this is that 90% of the people who support a label (Christianity, Political, Racial, etc.) are decent people. They really are. They just...don't stop to think about what comes out of their mouths.

Very agreed. Here, I do not think Green is a bad person. I don't think he's stupid either. I think he was given bad information and never a reason to question it.

>'Republicons' (as he calls them)

[insert Transformers joke here]

>stating that it's only fair since THEY do it, he should give them their own medicine!

Yeah, that shit ain't cool. I hate going on YouTube and seeing atheists throw viciously insulting comments are religious people. I saw one video called "God Is For Idiots". Pissed me off. That's the sort of simplistic bullshit that we don't like about them, and nothing's gonna change if we engage in it too!! <seethe>

>Because someone will claim a moral superiority, a higher god says NO, and that will be the end of it because SOMEONE WASN'T HAPPY.

<applause>

>FOR FUCKS SAKES. NO ONE IS GOING TO BE HAPPY ALL THE TIME!

<lots more applause>

>Fuck. That went on, didn't it? Zzz...

Hee hee. As if I don't? ;)
PrysmTKitsune
11 years, 9 months ago
...i've only read the first few posts and im reminded why i hate getting into argument's and debates with zealots...its like trying to sand stone with a wet silk cloth...you may be able to do it, but its going to take you for frekin ever and the cloth may wear out before you get even an inch smooth.

you want to know what causes 90 percent of the wars, violence, hatred, and stupidity in the world...this is it people, i call it 'enforced ignorance'

its when a person can see evidence, undeniable proof beyond any reasonable doubt that there beliefs are wrong...and not only ignore it, but ignore it and go off and fabricate something, then after having made it themselves and knowing full well its fake, tout it as holy truth and actually BELIEVE what there saying!!!

this goes beyond even calling them delusional...are we as a race, an intelligent species...the apparent height of evolution on this ball of rock, who's very species name means 'wise man' really so fucking STUPID!!!

the sad answer....yes...yes we are

*sighs and goes to hide under a rock*
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>i've only read the first few posts and im reminded why i hate getting into argument's and debates with zealots...its like trying to sand stone with a wet silk cloth...you may be able to do it, but its going to take you for frekin ever and the cloth may wear out before you get even an inch smooth.

I find it's worth it. Sometimes because it means I can put on a good show for anyone reading. Sometimes because my own beliefs get sharper when I have to condense and reconfigure them to explain them to someone else. and sometimes I even reach the other person. For me, the secret is not expecting anything from my opponent. I know I cannot force them to change. If I do, that's great. Even if I don't though, the experience is worth it for other reasons.

>this goes beyond even calling them delusional...are we as a race, an intelligent species...the apparent height of evolution on this ball of rock, who's very species name means 'wise man' really so fucking STUPID!!!

I totally understand the frustration. But I'm a lot more optimistic about the situation. We're this way because we simply haven't evolved enough. Rational thought is so new on the evolutionary timescale. We've barely begun to actually think about stuff instead of just instinctively reacting to it. And it made sense back in caveman days: the guy who stopped and thought about an imminent threat tended to get killed by it.

So, yeah, humans are bad at thinking. But we're getting better with every generation. Every ten years they have to recalibrate the IQ tests, because the average intelligence keeps rising. I know it seems impossible. But the truth is, mankind is getting progressively more intelligent and peaceful. The problem is, our communications technolkogy keeps advancing, so while stupid bullshit may be decreasing overall, if someone six states away does something ludicrously retarded, you're sure to hear about it. ;)
PrysmTKitsune
11 years, 9 months ago
well your half right about the intelligence level...however i think were experiencing an evolutionary split on the same level as neanderthal/homo sapians waaaaaaay back when...yes a chunk of our population seems to be getting progresivly more intelligent but at the same time theres an opposite group thats getting dumber and more violent with each generation...and they BREED faster then us smart folks seem to...and the stupid ones seem to like politics more then the smart folks too...
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>yes a chunk of our population seems to be getting progresivly more intelligent but at the same time theres an opposite group thats getting dumber and more violent with each generation...and they BREED faster then us smart folks seem to...and the stupid ones seem to like politics more then the smart folks too...

P'shaw. It only seems that way. Politics comes in cycles, but looking at it from a larger picture, the trend has consistently been towards smartiness over the long term. Picture a graph with a line that does waver, yet steadily goes up and up.
drakiskier
11 years, 9 months ago
fffffffff...   lost my post because i hit the wrong button...

I find it interesting that this conversation is only focusing on the MAINSTREAM religions.     the ones that are all rewritings and retranslations of the same original book that was written about a guy who lives a hundred years before the book was written.

I see aliens were mentioned there - Why do people think that creationism and evolution are mutually exclusive?    simple breeding of dogs has shown how evolution works over time, yet who is to say that someone didnt pop in and intentially create humans?    it its not hard to believe that something more powerful than us came in and made humans in its own image, using a template of a creature that was already close in design already...  IE primates.    whether it was 'god' or 'aliens' doesnt really matter...  because any aliens with that ability WOULD be essentially gods.

also, [impossible odds] x [infinite chances] = we are not the only planet in the universe with self aware life.     given how we have gone from nothing to space exploration in 2000 years, theres a strong likelyhood that some of those other possible self aware life forms have also ventured into space.

golden rule - so many people seem to have troubles with this one...    treat others how you want to be treated.     that is all it is.   as soon as you add the word god in there, then it is no longer about others, it is about your god and others.   it comes back to a saying i see alot.
" Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing? Then why call him God?


bible is written down facts?  -  its written down tales and anecdotes that people told other people who told other people untile finally someone wrote it down so the story wouldnt change any further.    didnt you ever play the game where you whisper something to someone, and they pass it on, and you see how much changed from the original when it gets to the other side?   there may be gems of truth left in there, but there is still alot of exaggeration and retellings to make things more exciting, like all stories.


god exists / doesnt exist - That is a doozy, and it depends entirely on what 'god' is defined as.    this relates to my above quote, but at the same time it goes further.    is 'god' a race of aliens who genetically engineered humans in their own image?   is 'god' some omnipotant being with no form and made of pure energy?   is 'god' the paradox that created energy with the big bang, seeing as science says energy cannot be created or destroied?    this list of possible definitions for 'god' goes on forever.

 cancer prognosis was wrong - doctors are human.  they can be wrong.    at 14 my mother was told she would live to see 20.   at 20 they told her is she made it to 40, she would be in a wheelchair and permanantly needing an oxygen mask.    shes 50 now, walks normally, doesnt have problems breathing despite having a lung colapse 20 years ago, and having both athsma and emphazema for the last 25 years.  and she is not any of the mainstream religions, she does not follow 'god' or anything else.   she has her own beliefs and views on the world and existance, and does not let any books that are full of half truths and twisted tales tell her how to think or who to blame.

mammory glands - you do know that a mammory gland is no different than a sweat gland?   it just produces a different combination of chemicals.  both give off fat and water, its just the ratios and what else is in it.  some marsupials dont have proper teats/nipples for their young to drink from, they just 'sweat' it out inside the pouch for the young to lick up.  evolution kept the mammory gland around because it formed an easy way to get nutritious food for the young, not because it was required.  birds and reptiles dont have them, but they still evolve
drakiskier
11 years, 9 months ago
ack!   filled the 4000 char buffer, and i was only at page 72!

theories - if you ask most scientists, they would say creationism is a THEORY.    just because enough people believe it, doesnt mean it is right.    at the say time you mention that gravity is LAW.    it is law because we have concrete evidence of its effects and can catergorize and quantify every part of it, and even compare it to the quantified result of gravity on other heavenly bodies.     but just because we can catergorize and quantify something, doesnt mean we understand HOW it works or what causes it.   magnetism is another principal that scientists have trouble with.    it can be measured, it can be detected, it can be created...  but nobody can tell you what a magnetic field is made of, what is in those magnetic flux lines, only that they exist.

word of god vs word of man - the bible is the word of god?   did her personally write each and every letter in the book himself, and only for each and every copy printed that is for your religion only and nobody else?     every other book is a rip off of his personal handwriting in your specific bible?       would god allow that to happen?               no.      maybe god did write _THE ORIGINAL_ book, but he gave it to man, who then translated it into other languages, and then translated it back, changing a word here and there to make a better story.   as soon as that happens, then it is no longer 'THE word of god' it is 'MAN'S word of god.'

seven days - see, this is one of those mistranslations.   anywhere back along the line of retranslations, this word could have been cycles.   i take this article, and reinterpret it to read like this:
" In the first cycle, <Paradox> created <energy> and <matter>
In the second cycle, the <matter> condensed to form <spheres> of many layers.   superheated rock and water.
In the thrid cycle, the <matter> cooled and solidified, forming land, with which water could condense and flow, and allowed microscopic <plants> to grow, both inside and outside the water.  The sky also became clear of the clouds of water, as it had all condensed.
In the forth cycle, with the sky now clear, <energy> was able to shine on the surface.  seasons developed with the <plants>, where they would grow, reproduce, and die, only to be replaced with more of the same.
In the fifth cycle, <plants> found it nutritious to reingest the remains of other <plants> and thus <creatures> of the sea developed to feast on the <plants>
In the sixth cycle, <creatures> moved onto land and began to reproduce themselves, not only eating the <plants>, but themselves as well.
In the seventh cycle, <creatures> and <plants> found balance and harmony, (up until one species became too clever and began to destroy the world)

and with this interpretation, one can see the planet develop the same way that science says planets form, only its not in days, but many many years per cycle.

lies - The truth is always the truth, and a lie is always a lie.    your beliefs on which is which do not change the underlying fact of those two things.       if someone tells you that they saw a red car, when it was actually a blue car, they are lying.    if you believe them that it was a blue car, and you tell someone else that the other person saw a blue car, then you are still lying that it was a blue car, even though you are unaware of it.    being unaware that it is a lie for not change the fact that it is a lie, it just means you did not know otherwise.

and im finally at the end.       you know Alex...    about half way through i got the distinct impression that mr green was just a troll...   but i hope that the way it ended, he was sincere, and not just trying to get out of things.

im going to bed now.
ScottySkunk
11 years, 9 months ago
Not ignoring your vastly detailed post.. But the reason for it being on Mainstream Religion.... Its the ones we deal with the most and the ones who barks the loudest..  Though Scientology is pretty loud too..
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>I find it interesting that this conversation is only focusing on the MAINSTREAM religions.

I'm like Batman: Focus on the most prominent threats first, then take on the weaker ones later if they make it necessary. ;)

>it its not hard to believe that something more powerful than us came in and made humans in its own image

That's basically the central idea of Prometheus (if I understand it correctly).

Yeah, panspermia is a surprisingly plausible concept. One still does need to explain where the very first organic life came from, but if it turns out it couldn't have evolved here, that's absolutely not proof it was created intentionally. A passing alien could have used a crater here to poop in for all we know.

>given how we have gone from nothing to space exploration in 2000 years, theres a strong likelyhood that some of those other possible self aware life forms have also ventured into space.

Yep. This picture says it best: http://i.imgur.com/MRb7q.png

>it comes back to a saying i see alot.

Looooooove me some Epicurus' riddle. I have never heard an answer to it that wasn't either a dodge, a callous defense of evil itself, or just people saying, 'We can't know God's plan'. Well, I might not know the grand design of the universe, but if I'm suffering, I tend to want it to stop. And if someone thinks my suffering is good, but won't explain to me why, then fuck them. I feel I can freely ignore anyone who wants something from me but can't be bothered to ask for it clearly.

>there may be gems of truth left in there, but there is still alot of exaggeration and retellings to make things more exciting, like all stories.

That's a damn excellent point.

>god exists / doesnt exist - That is a doozy, and it depends entirely on what 'god' is defined as.

My personal attitude is, if I can never know the answer to a question, I shrug and don't let it bother me.

>cancer prognosis was wrong

Actually, in this case the prognosis made by doctors was correct; the people who called it a 'miracle healing' were celebrating prematurely. ;)

> she has her own beliefs and views on the world and existance, and does not let any books that are full of half truths and twisted tales tell her how to think or who to blame.

Sounds like a badass mom. :)

>you do know that a mammory gland is no different than a sweat gland?

I kinda guessed, but wasn't sure.

>and with this interpretation, one can see the planet develop the same way that science says planets form, only its not in days, but many many years per cycle.

Nicely done. Still, the first creation tale in Genesis can never be taken as anything more than an educated guess, and the second creation tale in Genesis just poops all over the timeline by saying God made the other animals to cheer up Adam.

>The truth is always the truth, and a lie is always a lie.

That's a good, succinct way of putting it.

>being unaware that it is a lie for not change the fact that it is a lie, it just means you did not know otherwise.

Well said!

>you know Alex...    about half way through i got the distinct impression that mr green was just a troll...   but i hope that the way it ended, he was sincere, and not just trying to get out of things.

I know how easy it can be to assume the worst of people, especially on the internet. (Ever heard of Hanlon's Razor?) So I try to counteract that and assume the best of people at the outset. I assume that a rude remark was meant a different way. I assume that whatever somone says is what they genuinely believe, unless they show me proof that they're lying. The fact that Green kept up with the debate even when it got unpleasant suggests to me he's sincere. A troll would have either given up way sooner, or they would've gotten ruder and more contrary over time.
drakiskier
11 years, 9 months ago
im glad you enjoied my responses to this topic.   yeah, i was a little long winded...    when you consider im pretty much a lurker in all respects, and barely even fav things, let alone comment...    but i do check my FA/IB twice a day, and you are one of the only people who spark me to talk/debate/comment about things.

and im sorry for the sheer number of spelling/grammar errors in my two posts above, i had gotten home at 11pm, and spent three hours writing those replies up as i read.   and then ended up having to get up at 8am...   and havent slept well at all since.   probally heading to bed again in a few min.

im always up for a good chat if you are.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>and you are one of the only people who spark me to talk/debate/comment about things.

Awwww. <blush>

>and im sorry for the sheer number of spelling/grammar errors in my two posts above

No worries. Typos only piss me off when the content of the comment is stupid.
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
So far I've lived 29 and a half years past a medical prediction of my demise. I'm 29 and a half years old and I had a 95% chance of not surviving my first week.

I rolled a natural 20.

Mom calls it a miracle from God. I say that to give God credit is spitting in the face of the very real doctors who worked their asses off to save BOTH our lives.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>So far I've lived 29 and a half years past a medical prediction of my demise. I'm 29 and a half years old and I had a 95% chance of not surviving my first week.

0.0 Wow, I had no idea you squeaked by against odds like that!

>I rolled a natural 20.

Yay, I've played D&D enough now to appreciate that. :3

>Mom calls it a miracle from God. I say that to give God credit is spitting in the face of the very real doctors who worked their asses off to save BOTH our lives.

HOLY SHIT YES, AMIGO. I get so pissed when I see teevee newspeople throwing around the word 'miracle'. Ninety percent of the time, whatever happened was due to some human beings who put in incredible effort. And to take credit away from them and give it to an imaginary being just enrages me.
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
" AlexReynard wrote:
0.0 Wow, I had no idea you squeaked by against odds like that!


It may be even more--I vaguely recall figures of "1 in 100", "1 in 500", and more recently "1 in 20" being thrown around for my survival chances... possible confounding factors may be a) when the estimate was given, and b) whether the chance was for my survival alone, Mom's survival alone, or both of us surviving (they said her chances of survival would go sharply up if they terminated the pregnancy, and she chose not to).

" AlexReynard wrote:
>I rolled a natural 20.

Yay, I've played D&D enough now to appreciate that. :3


Hooray!

" AlexReynard wrote:
HOLY SHIT YES, AMIGO. I get so pissed when I see teevee newspeople throwing around the word 'miracle'. Ninety percent of the time, whatever happened was due to some human beings who put in incredible effort. And to take credit away from them and give it to an imaginary being just enrages me.


Same here!!!
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>It may be even more--I vaguely recall figures of "1 in 100", "1 in 500", and more recently "1 in 20" being thrown around for my survival chances... possible confounding factors may be a) when the estimate was given, and b) whether the chance was for my survival alone, Mom's survival alone, or both of us surviving (they said her chances of survival would go sharply up if they terminated the pregnancy, and she chose not to).

I'd hug her regularly for that. :)
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
I do. Whenever we're in the same state, that is. Despite the fallings-out we have sometimes had, I have never ceased to love her.
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
> SCIENTISTS KNOW MORE ABOUT EVOLUTION THAN THEY DO ABOUT GRAVITY. Evolution is possibly the most thoroughly credible scientific idea there is.

And I bet that's because religious types keep claiming there's not enough evidence, so scientists keep coming up with new ways to prove them wrong. Whereas only the real loonies seriously challenge the fact that gravity exists.
Relee
11 years, 9 months ago
There are some interesting arguments involving gravity, suggesting it's a push rather than a pull, or that it's an emergent phenomenon rather than a physical force.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>And I bet that's because religious types keep claiming there's not enough evidence, so scientists keep coming up with new ways to prove them wrong. Whereas only the real loonies seriously challenge the fact that gravity exists.

<blink> I'd never thought of it that way before, but there's probably a buncha truth to that. I mean, if there are any holes in evolutionary theory, some creationist's gonna point it out. That's bizarre; they're almost helpful in a way!
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
Kind of like how having the Cold War rivalry between the U.S.A. and the U.S.S.R. drove the space race.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
Yup. I've said somewhere else before that I don't want a world where religion is wiped out completely. Atheists are always going to need them as a foil. And ideology, no matter how benign, tends to turn arrogant and vicious if it goes long enough without anyone opposing it.
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
I'd kind of like a world where ORGANIZED megachurches and major religions as a significant financial and political power get wiped out completely. A single church, a buncha people a couple hundred strong getting together to sing songs and discuss their beliefs, that's not a problem. It's a great source of community interaction. It's when they start getting all evangelical and demanding that the rest of the world live according to their rules, that things get out of hand.

In Germany, a court ruled that circumcision constituted child abuse, and the Jews and Muslims threw a HUGE hissy fit even after the court backed down and said that religious exemptions could be made.

To which I argue, if a particular church regards wheelchairs as sacred and demands every church member have their legs chopped off at birth, would you allow that? Mutilation of children should NEVER be tolerated, regardless of religious bullshit.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>I'd kind of like a world where ORGANIZED megachurches and major religions as a significant financial and political power get wiped out completely. A single church, a buncha people a couple hundred strong getting together to sing songs and discuss their beliefs, that's not a problem. It's a great source of community interaction. It's when they start getting all evangelical and demanding that the rest of the world live according to their rules, that things get out of hand.

Very, very, very agreed. I've said before that I'd love to see a world where all churches are taxed based on seating capacity.

>In Germany, a court ruled that circumcision constituted child abuse

FUCK YEAH, GERMANY!!!

>and the Jews and Muslims threw a HUGE hissy fit even after the court backed down and said that religious exemptions could be made.

GERMANY, YOU BUNCH OF PUSSIES!!!

>To which I argue, if a particular church regards wheelchairs as sacred and demands every church member have their legs chopped off at birth, would you allow that? Mutilation of children should NEVER be tolerated, regardless of religious bullshit.

I agree completely, and the fact that more people don't continues to stun me.
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
> Imagine two fortresses. In one, they have complete faith that their fortress will last forever. In the other, they are constantly checking for flaws in their walls. The other fortress sees this as a sign of weakness. Yet the second fortress swaps out the cracked bricks they find with better ones. While the first fortress neglects repairs forever, simply believing that the strength of their faith will also apply to their fortress walls.

And on the battlements, snipers exchange impossibly accurate potshots. >:3
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
That's some shonky business right there.
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
I've gotten a few naming and description tags for my sniper weapons and decorations, since I've been having a blast playing as that class. For example:

My "Vintage Jarate", which is literally a mason jar filled with urine (the "Vintage" part refers to the fact that I acquired it before the microtransaction store opened up) has a description that is just a haiku about it having been aged in a dirty diaper. >:3

My "Sydney Sleeper", which applies the Jarate debuff on a successful hit that doesn't immediately kill the target, I've named the "Pee-Pee Gun".

My "Master's Yellow Belt", a yellow bandana, initially had the description that it was once white, now stained yellow from the rigors of a harsh Jarate training regimen. I renamed it the "Used Diaper" and gave it a description something like "Instructions: Squeeze into empty jar for emergency Jarate."

So yeah. Also? Since I'm pretty good with the Sydney Sleeper I mean Pee-Pee Gun, and a lot of players decry it as a "noob's weapon", there is endless raging about how I'm "not a real sniper" from the very people I'm sniping rather successfully. Muwa ha ha. >:3
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>Also? Since I'm pretty good with the Sydney Sleeper I mean Pee-Pee Gun, and a lot of players decry it as a "noob's weapon", there is endless raging about how I'm "not a real sniper" from the very people I'm sniping rather successfully. Muwa ha ha. >:3

Tee hee. If it does the job, it does the job. That's apples, mate.
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
Which reminds me, one of these days I gotta get the sniper hat that is an apple (with optional worm or arrow).
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
Does he jump instead every time he tries to describe it?
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
*jumps with the space bar to answer your question*
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
> Like I said, plenty of Christians believe in evolution and see it as God's paintbrush. They see 'seven days' in Genesis and ask, 'How long is a day to God?'

2 Peter 3:8 - But, beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing, that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day.

True, seven thousand years is still vastly shorter than 4.5 billion. But honestly, if "seven days" can be metaphor for a seven-step process of creation, why not "a thousand years" as a metaphor for "a really long period of time no one living man can accurately comprehend"?
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>True, seven thousand years is still vastly shorter than 4.5 billion. But honestly, if "seven days" can be metaphor for a seven-step process of creation, why not "a thousand years" as a metaphor for "a really long period of time no one living man can accurately comprehend"?

Because that would require the ability to admit to being incorrect. Something that is likely missing in anyone who becomes a Biblical literalist. ;)
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
I've been surprised before by how much biblical apologists can try to wriggle out of by claiming that one passage or another was meant as metaphor, but the rest is solid. XD
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
EVERYTHING I DON'T LIKE ABOUT MY RULEBOOK IS MEANT TO BE OPEN TO INTERPRETATION!

Quoth the Church Lady, "How convieeeeenient."
EmmetEarwax
11 years, 7 months ago
Blundered upon your arguments here.
OK. I can demonstrate that the earth is old, on the order of some 4.51+ billion years. (By year, I mean the current year length and not the possibly wildly different ones of earlier aeons.).
Radioactive half-lives that can not altered by any force known by science (so we can't fix Chernobyl) . Natural radio-isotopes (not just created by nuclear experiments) have half-lives well over 6000 yrs. Uranium is 4.5 billion years. ALL bismuth is radio-active .ALL. But the half-life is far older than the universe is,and may extend into the heat-death age. There are half-lives way longer yet. The only exceptions are radio-isotopes created by a radioactive substance re-assorbing its own radiation and producing trans-uranium elements all the way up to element 100 !
At work, during slack times, I oft read a scientific encyclopedia . Trouble is: while its mathematical formulae are eternal and unchanging (I even have at home a nearly 200 year old book on trig, and its formulae and proofs are eternal.), this book is dated in biological, medical ,astronomy and radio-physical data. It's way off in the data on an asteroid smash into what is now South Africa, as well as one into what is now England. Both occured before there was life on land !
AlexReynard
11 years, 7 months ago
I can prove that the Earth is very old by the fact that there are nine Hellraiser films. And six Leprechauns.
Humbug
11 years, 9 months ago
I can't remember if I'd recommended these books to you before or not, but..."Sins of Scripture" and "Jesus for the Non-Religious" by Bishop John Shelby Spong. Despite his title, he's very much on the same page as you and I. The only reason he's a Christian, and he freely admits this, is because it gives him a good frame of reference to conceptualize a humanist approach to life. But the reason I recommend those two books in particular (despite a bit of overlap in some of the ideas written about) is because they provide an incredible historical context and interpretation for how certain well-known passages came to enter the Bible, written by a guy who has studied the religion and the book with a critical eye his entire life.

Also, I'm really damn impressed you managed to cause such a shift in thinking with that guy. That, in itself, should make the whole correspondence worth it. Because while he may not change his religious beliefs now, or even possibly ever, you knocked something out of place that could potentially shift his entire way of thinking about the world. That is no small feat, especially considering this person is likely a full-grown adult, which doesn't lend itself well to mind-changing. Ya' done good, sir.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>Bishop John Shelby Spong.

HAHAHAHAHAAA!!! That's so effing British I'll bet he shits bangers and mash! :D

>they provide an incredible historical context and interpretation for how certain well-known passages came to enter the Bible, written by a guy who has studied the religion and the book with a critical eye his entire life.

Interesting, but it's the sort of thing I likely wouldn't actively seek out. I'm not really interested in the history of the Bible or Christianity. At least, not any more than any other aspect of history. I really don't care to know more about the subject than I need to to effectively argue against their ideas. It's not like I loathe the idea, I just don't care. In the same way I don't feel a need to exhaustively research wicker furniture manufacturing or small airplane engine repair.

>That is no small feat, especially considering this person is likely a full-grown adult, which doesn't lend itself well to mind-changing. Ya' done good, sir.

Thanks very much. In debates like this, I honestly do not expect to reach my opponent. That helps to keep me from getting emotionally involved (which tends to lead to bad arguments). If anything, I hope to reach people who might be reading the conversation. That's why I arranged and posted this. I thought it was worthy of an audience.

I also tried to make it fair for the other guy in how I presented it. I mean, people are gonna know I'm biased anyway, but that doesn't mean I have to be like, "Look at THIS douchenozzle! Let's all laugh at him!" For one, just because someone disagrees with me does not make them a douchenozzle. And also, I'm confident enough that my arguments can speak for themselves.
Humbug
11 years, 9 months ago
> Interesting, but it's the sort of thing I likely wouldn't actively seek out. I'm not really interested in the history of the Bible or Christianity. At least, not any more than any other aspect of history. I really don't care to know more about the subject than I need to to effectively argue against their ideas. It's not like I loathe the idea, I just don't care. In the same way I don't feel a need to exhaustively research wicker furniture manufacturing or small airplane engine repair.

Except that you already -have- taken an interest in Christianity, and not in wicker furniture, given how often you argue it. To me at least, knowing the history of a set of beliefs is just as important in discounting them as knowing the beliefs themselves. It gives you a context for how and why they were written, and why they're now irrelevant, which is precisely what Mr. British argues. It also helps you understand how the other side thinks, which is supremely important in arguments.


>Thanks very much. In debates like this, I honestly do not expect to reach my opponent. That helps to keep me from getting emotionally involved (which tends to lead to bad arguments). If anything, I hope to reach people who might be reading the conversation. That's why I arranged and posted this. I thought it was worthy of an audience.
I also tried to make it fair for the other guy in how I presented it. I mean, people are gonna know I'm biased anyway, but that doesn't mean I have to be like, "Look at THIS douchenozzle! Let's all laugh at him!" For one, just because someone disagrees with me does not make them a douchenozzle. And also, I'm confident enough that my arguments can speak for themselves.

Right. I think both of those are the correct approach. If your message is strong enough, you shouldn't have to point at it and say, "Look how strong my message is!" That's why all the lying in politics baffles me: If you're so sure of your beliefs, why do you need to straw man the other person's?
And yes, I don't expect those I argue with to come over to my side either, although it's less for my own mental wellbeing and more because our culture has created an atmosphere where you find your niche, hunker down and fortify, and defend your position at all costs regardless of truth or intent.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>To me at least, knowing the history of a set of beliefs is just as important in discounting them as knowing the beliefs themselves. It gives you a context for how and why they were written, and why they're now irrelevant, which is precisely what Mr. British argues.

The book would probably be beneficial, sure, but I already know a decent amount about the book's history. So far, I've noticed that it's largely irrelevant to debating Christians. It's not the sort of thing that does much to de-convince them. Kinda like how Mormons know the history of Joseph Smith and don't give a shit.

>It also helps you understand how the other side thinks, which is supremely important in arguments.

I think I've had enough firsthand experience in that area, laddie. ;)

>That's why all the lying in politics baffles me: If you're so sure of your beliefs, why do you need to straw man the other person's?

You just answered your own question: they know they're bullshitting.

>and more because our culture has created an atmosphere where you find your niche, hunker down and fortify, and defend your position at all costs regardless of truth or intent.

Yeah, it pretty much disgusts me to no end that we consider that 'winning' a debate.
Humbug
11 years, 9 months ago
>The book would probably be beneficial, sure, but I already know a decent amount about the book's history. So far, I've noticed that it's largely irrelevant to debating Christians. It's not the sort of thing that does much to de-convince them. Kinda like how Mormons know the history of Joseph Smith and don't give a shit.

Well, no point in forcing it on you I s'pose.

> I think I've had enough firsthand experience in that area, laddie. ;)

I -would- argue that listening to people's arguments for things to tear down and actually understanding the other side are two different things, but I think you already know and practice that. You're one of the few people I know of who do this.

>> That's why all the lying in politics baffles me: If you're so sure of your beliefs, why do you need to straw man the other person's?
>You just answered your own question: they know they're bullshitting.

Gotta love cognitive dissonance.

>> and more because our culture has created an atmosphere where you find your niche, hunker down and fortify, and defend your position at all costs regardless of truth or intent.
>Yeah, it pretty much disgusts me to no end that we consider that 'winning' a debate.

Ugh. Yeah. Don't know how many people I've called out on that line of faulty reasoning. Too many.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>Well, no point in forcing it on you I s'pose.

It's the sorta thing I'd read if I came 'pon it in the library, but wouldn't order it from Amazon.

>I -would- argue that listening to people's arguments for things to tear down and actually understanding the other side are two different things, but I think you already know and practice that. You're one of the few people I know of who do this.

<humble nod> Thank you. and yes, it's really important to genuinely listen to one's opponent, on the off chance that they might be completely right and it's you who needs to change.

>Gotta love cognitive dissonance.

...and simultaneously hate it. <rimshot>
Humbug
11 years, 9 months ago
> ...and simultaneously hate it. <rimshot>

Die in a fire. D:<

lol
AlexReynard
11 years, 8 months ago
Oh, you. :)
tiac
11 years, 9 months ago
" AlexReynard wrote:
I really don't care to know more about the subject than I need to to effectively argue against their ideas. It's not like I loathe the idea, I just don't care. In the same way I don't feel a need to exhaustively research wicker furniture manufacturing or small airplane engine repair.

But how will you survive without encyclopedic knowledge of underwater basket weaving?!?!!!1!?/!one!
*faints*
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>But how will you survive without encyclopedic knowledge of underwater basket weaving?!?!!!1!?/!one!

I'll fake it.
tiac
11 years, 9 months ago
Well, don't come crying to me when the squid people of the Grand Duchy of Atlantis come looking for their baskety tribute and end up sentencing you to 20 years of hard labor in the Nuttella mines of Montana for your failure.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
BAH WUNGAAAAA!!!
CookieFritz
11 years, 9 months ago
If only other debates went this nicely.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
I do what I can to keep 'em that way. I keep in mind, 'This is another person on the other side of the screen. Not just some words I do not like.' I try to keep it clear that I'm attacking ideas not people. If people feel attacked, they respond defensively, and that's not conducive to honest exchange of ideas.

Basically, just, 'Don't start out treating the other guy like an idiot or an asshole'. I do wish that was standard etiquette for internet arguments.
unsent
11 years, 9 months ago
TL;DR. To all the comments too.

All I saw were colours.
ScottySkunk
11 years, 9 months ago
Not to be mean or anything.. But i do wonder why do people post that.
Why put in effort to post if you have nothing really to add.  Just...
To long, didn't read. Seems like a waste of hitting keys. XD
unsent
11 years, 9 months ago
I want to see how fast someone posts a comment like yours. x3
ScottySkunk
11 years, 9 months ago
* pours cheese on you* silly
unsent
11 years, 9 months ago
CHEESE! MY ONLY WEAKNESS! *eats self*
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
But if you don't read it, you'll miss out on all the, like, IDEAS and shit!!
unsent
11 years, 9 months ago
I saw colours.
>.>
ScottySkunk
11 years, 9 months ago
I remember this. You have amazing staying power in the face of much stubbornness
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
Gracias. If there's one trait I'm glad I inherited from my wacked-out mother, it's her tenacity. She could hold onto not accepting blame for something for hours on end. Eventually, I learned to outlast her. This patience has served me well in both outlasting internet opponents, and waiting on eBay auctions. ;)
ScottySkunk
11 years, 9 months ago
lol the lord of the snipers XD
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
Yep. In fact, just last week I managed to get a bid in on a Renamon with two seconds left!
ScottySkunk
11 years, 9 months ago
Grats. Renamon is a worthy prize
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
ScottySkunk
11 years, 9 months ago
coolness =D
blayze
11 years, 9 months ago
To be fair, not ALL religions include belief in a hell, a god, or a need to spread the religion to other people. Granted, those religions don't make the news very often because they aren't usually dramatic enough. :p
ScottySkunk
11 years, 9 months ago
you can safely be sure that this is mostly about the loud power mongering and fear mongering ones.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
Exactly. And for the most part, if a group of believers is keeping mostly to themselves and not doing horrible things to anyone, I'm not likely to have a big problem with them.

For instance, Jainism. I hardly know anything about Jains, because they haven't forced me to need to know about them in order to stop them from taking over my country's laws. ;)
tiac
11 years, 9 months ago
Based on my limited knowledge of Jainism, the only thing I would know to expect them pushing for is legalized public nudity. I rather doubt you would have a problem with that.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
INDEED, I WOULD NOT! :)
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
> I learned about evolution even before I knew about salvation. Even as a child, evolution was a joke to me.

Ah irony. I grew up Christian, and learned about evolution from an antagonistic standpoint. To me, it was a case of "know thy enemy." But my thirst for scientific knowledge gradually resulted in the understanding that evolutionary theory was no different from gravitational theory in how rigorous and respected it was. The final straw was learning more about the origins of the Bible, and finally coming to the realization that it was a silly thing to believe in and trust over mountains of scientific evidence.

When I think of how much I could've been enjoying high school biology instead of resenting it, I grow angry at religion for doing that to me.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>When I think of how much I could've been enjoying high school biology instead of resenting it, I grow angry at religion for doing that to me.

I was never much of anything one way or another as a kid when it came to spirituality, but I can still fully understand that frustration.
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
> You win. I've finally found someone more stubborn than I am

Wait... wasn't this AFTER he said to "agree to disagree" and effectively left the argument?! He keeps coming back!!
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
They Always Do. Seriously, I couldn't even hope to count the number of times someone has made a dramatic exit from an argument, only to have to come back after my reply.
Relee
11 years, 9 months ago
What is proof? Proof isn't a sure thing. Proof is having enough evidence towards something that it is the most likely outcome out of all of the possibilities. The proof of one thing outweighs the proof of the others. Something being proven doesn't make anything else impossible, it just says 'This is the most certain truth, to the best of our ability to figure out and observe.'

You can never have absolute certainty while remaining sane, but you can be pretty darn sure if the evidence for something is great enough. There's a lot of proof of evolution. Not much proof of the Christian God. There may be some conjectural proof of a God, but if a miracle happens it seems only normal to assume it was YOUR God who did it.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>Proof is having enough evidence towards something that it is the most likely outcome out of all of the possibilities.

Yes, yes, yes, yes. Very well said. I hate when I'm in an argument and someone starts talking about absolute proof as if it's possible.

I fully understand that our brains instinctively crave certainty. We want to get to a point where everything's settled and we can just relax forever. But life doesn't work like that. Life is a walk across a neverending balance beam. You have to keep walking forward to progress. And it's difficult, but it's necessary. Sometimes you just want to sit down for a while to rest, but if you do you don't get anywhere. And if you relax too much, you fall off.

It just occurred to me how much I would like to see 'Instincts and How To Handle Them' taught in grade school. Teach the kids the stuff their brains will tell them and what of that is bad ideas. Like, 'You will never be perfectly safe. You will never know as much as you need to know. You will never be satisfied. And that all might sound horrible at first, but you can choose to look at it this way: the challenge is worth it. It keeps you going. And you can take comfort in knowing that there will always, always, always be something new to reach for.'

>You can never have absolute certainty while remaining sane, but you can be pretty darn sure if the evidence for something is great enough. There's a lot of proof of evolution. Not much proof of the Christian God. There may be some conjectural proof of a God, but if a miracle happens it seems only normal to assume it was YOUR God who did it.

I do think that a 100% skeptical view of the world is just as useless as a 100% credible one. Being open to impossible ideas helps you recognize them when they actually happen to be true. And I do think that there's enough sheer oddness to this life that the possibility of there being 'more' to it isn't low. The difference between me and a religious person is, I can think that something may be possible, or plausible, without believing in it to an absolute certainty. I think of it as assigning a percentage of likelihood to all the stuff in my head. Like, everything I know has a little tag hanging off it with how likely I think it is to be true. And I try my best to keep the 100% and 0% tags to a minimum.
Relee
11 years, 9 months ago
Most hardcore religious folks I've known got that way after personally experiencing a miracle, usually a failed suicide attempt. In one shocking example, a guy I know failed to kill himself, then his television turned on to a televised sermon in the midst of someone saying 'I am sending someone to you right now!' and then there was a knock at the door, a door-to-door evangelist. That was pretty darn messed up, but I guess that's what happens if you try to off yourself on a Sunday...

Of course, even as exciting as that may seem for 'proof', it only raises further questions. Why is that kind of divine intervention so rare? Tons of people successfully kill themselves every year. Why does God play favorites, especially when it comes to people who don't believe in him untill afterwards?

Even your Green guy mentions the 'miracle' of their relative's cancer remission, giving three more years of life, as part of the reason for their faith.
AlexReynard
11 years, 8 months ago
>Most hardcore religious folks I've known got that way after personally experiencing a miracle

Or, of course, years of parental indoctrination. ;)

But yeah, sometimes when I hear about miracles I wince real hard at how anyone could cling so desperately to an obvious bit of confirmation bias. That suicide story you mentioned, if all that actually happened, then I would not begrudge him his belief. There's a threshold where I'll call bullshit. I might ask him about the actual events, but in that particular instance, 'miracle' is as reasonable a conclusion as 'coincidence'.

>Of course, even as exciting as that may seem for 'proof', it only raises further questions. Why is that kind of divine intervention so rare?

I've heard a lot of Christians try to square this with the idea of God's omnipotence, and their answers are always the sourest kind of bullshit, where even they know they're reaching. The only answer I think that could be plausible is that if there's a God, he simply can't or doesn't pay attention to everything all the time. Like, just because someone has cable TV doesn't mean they can know what's on every channel all the time.
Relee
11 years, 8 months ago
>>Most hardcore religious folks I've known got that way after personally experiencing a miracle

>Or, of course, years of parental indoctrination. ;)

>But yeah, sometimes when I hear about miracles I wince real hard at how anyone could cling so desperately to an obvious bit of confirmation bias. That suicide story you mentioned, if all that actually happened, then I would not begrudge him his belief. There's a threshold where I'll call bullshit. I might ask him about the actual events, but in that particular instance, 'miracle' is as reasonable a conclusion as 'coincidence'.


Yeah, that's pretty much just it. Confirmation Bias. The worst kind is when you use that as further evidence of a tertiary hypothesis. You sense spirits therefore spirits exist therefore everything is explained by spirits. When it's partially supported by real evidence and partially by your own made up ideas, then it becomes more easy to fool people.


>>Of course, even as exciting as that may seem for 'proof', it only raises further questions. Why is that kind of divine intervention so rare?

>I've heard a lot of Christians try to square this with the idea of God's omnipotence, and their answers are always the sourest kind of bullshit, where even they know they're reaching. The only answer I think that could be plausible is that if there's a God, he simply can't or doesn't pay attention to everything all the time. Like, just because someone has cable TV doesn't mean they can know what's on every channel all the time.


It's also possible that if miracles are happening intentionally, it's not 'god' that is doing them, it's some other force, but they prefer to structure it in the framework of their religion than to question the means. It doesn't help that it often seems to frame ITSELF in their religion either, and we still don't know for sure if it's really happening or if it's just a convenient coincidence, and without supporting evidence we're forced to conclude it's fantasy.

Of course, when you're dealing with an intelligent force, they could intentionally be trying to fool you in ways you can't predict, making good scientific observations difficult or impossible. It's not like observing physical phenomenon where you can reproduce test results. Imagine doing census research on an actively aggressive group of people; you won't be able to get any hard data because they'll actively display false data.
AlexReynard
11 years, 8 months ago
>Yeah, that's pretty much just it. Confirmation Bias. The worst kind is when you use that as further evidence of a tertiary hypothesis. You sense spirits therefore spirits exist therefore everything is explained by spirits. When it's partially supported by real evidence and partially by your own made up ideas, then it becomes more easy to fool people.

I have seen that '[bullshit] is true, therefore everything is explained by [bullshit]' in action before. In the suicide story example, I could concede some kinda miracle, but I would also tell him that that doesn't prove anything else. It doesn't even prove God,m because how does he know it wasn't some other cosmic entity just messing with him for shits and giggles?

>Of course, when you're dealing with an intelligent force, they could intentionally be trying to fool you in ways you can't predict, making good scientific observations difficult or impossible. It's not like observing physical phenomenon where you can reproduce test results. Imagine doing census research on an actively aggressive group of people; you won't be able to get any hard data because they'll actively display false data.

I think the Flying Spaghetti Monster operates that way; intentionally erasing any evidence of its existence with "his noodly appendage".
Cyndon
11 years, 9 months ago
Reynard, you deserve as much poutine as you could possibly want. not once did i see a part of your discourse where i didn't agree wholeheartedly with your points, and read each of the pieces of information. not only did this reading amuse and invoke thought in me, it also taught me a few things i hadn't known about things i was fairly certain i understood. i tip my hat to you sir.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>Reynard, you deserve as much poutine as you could possibly want.

Hee hee! That's one of the most fun compliments I've ever gotten. :)

>not once did i see a part of your discourse where i didn't agree wholeheartedly with your points, and read each of the pieces of information. not only did this reading amuse and invoke thought in me, it also taught me a few things i hadn't known about things i was fairly certain i understood. i tip my hat to you sir.

Thank you. It's awesome to know I succeeded in what I set out to do. When I get into an argument like this, I've learned to not expect to convert my opponent. I accept whatever outcome occurs, (this one just happened to be a bit better than usual). My real purpose in these arguments is to test my own beliefs. Make sure they can stand up to attack, and hopefully in explaining them to someone else I end up having greater insight into them. Plus, I always try to put on a good show for any potential audience I may have. I love being educational. :)
LandonFox
11 years, 9 months ago
I haven't finished reading this yet.  I just thought I'd point out that I actually do get very annoyed at skeptics who put all the blame for these horrible things on religion.  This isn't because I have any love for religion.  It's because it's jumping to conclusions.  Religion isn't the problem in and of itself, it is the methods and techniques that religion uses that cause the problem.  ANYONE can use these techniques, and when they do they will become just as much of a problem.  This includes skeptics by the way.  I've seen a few skeptics slip into those same patterns, and they became almost indistinguishable from the religious people they hated.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>I just thought I'd point out that I actually do get very annoyed at skeptics who put all the blame for these horrible things on religion.

Fair 'nuff. I went through the 'Religion is the cause of all evils!!!!' phase, then grew out of it. I realized that religion just exploits bad instincts that are already a part of us. In the same way recreational drugs work because they mimic chemicals already found in our brains, religion works because it knows how to play our deepest desires like a fiddle. But so does anything else that promises us freedom from our fear of death, or perfect safety, or knowledge of absolute certainty, or pleasure that we don't have to work for. Rhonda Byrne's shitty, evil book The Secret may not be a religion, but it's got all the same mechanics.
LandonFox
11 years, 9 months ago
> Fair 'nuff. I went through the 'Religion is the cause of all evils!!!!' phase, then grew out of it.

That's all?  I went through a full on satanist phase myself.  >;3

> I realized that religion just exploits bad instincts that are already a part of us. In the same way recreational drugs work because they mimic chemicals already found in our brains, religion works because it knows how to play our deepest desires like a fiddle.

Yeah, I can see that.  Thing is, there's also something much more simple at work.  If you don't mind me linking...  the time sink...

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/AffablyEvil

In small person to person interactions...   they are perfectly fine.  But when it comes to big-picture questions...  they want something that is NOT good at all.  Either that or they are ignoring the big-picture problems so much that they get a bad ending through neglect.

> But so does anything else that promises us freedom from our fear of death, or perfect safety, or knowledge of absolute certainty, or pleasure that we don't have to work for.

Freedom from fear of death?  Uh...  no.  Trust me, religious people are far more terrified of death than atheists.  That's what all the talk of hellfire and brimstone is.  Get in line or fear death.  And honestly, if your perfect safety is contingent on getting in line, it's not very perfect or very safe.  The absolute certain is more of an escape I think.  It keeps them from having to think too closely about how terrified they are.  

As for pleasure we don't have to work for...  That's easy to find.  All you need is a hand, some hand cream, and some porn.

> Rhonda Byrne's shitty, evil book The Secret may not be a religion, but it's got all the same mechanics.

I think one of the greatest quotes I know of regarding The Secret is actually from a guy who does that kinda metaphysical stuff and also didn't think much of it either.

"Magical thinking isn't magical!"
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
" LandonFox wrote:
As for pleasure we don't have to work for...  That's easy to find.  All you need is a hand, some hand cream, and some porn.


Often enough, I skip the porn and the cream because my imagination and natural mucus work just as well. (that and MEMORIES of having looked at porn.)
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
"Misty watercolor memmmmories... of the porrrrrn I liked..."
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>That's all?  I went through a full on satanist phase myself.  >;3

Well, I did write a story series portraying him quite favorably. ;)

>In small person to person interactions...   they are perfectly fine.  But when it comes to big-picture questions...  they want something that is NOT good at all.  Either that or they are ignoring the big-picture problems so much that they get a bad ending through neglect.

That's a really good summation. I'm thinking of sweet little old ladies who make cupcakes for church bake sales, and if what they believe is true, it means both of us will burn in agony til the end of time.

>Freedom from fear of death?  Uh...  no.  Trust me, religious people are far more terrified of death than atheists.

Just because a product promises something, doesn't mean it delivers. ;)

>As for pleasure we don't have to work for...  That's easy to find.  All you need is a hand, some hand cream, and some porn.

Which is why I think the Church opposes it so much. I've said else where that they want you to come to church and confess, and that's your release. It's essentially sanctified cumming.

>"Magical thinking isn't magical!"

Yep. I have a thing where I believe that I can get basically anything I truly want, and experience has proven me right. But I don't just 'put my positive energy out into the universe'. I make myself believe 100% that my goal is already achieved: I simply have to get myself to the point in time where it happens. And I go after it with the tenacity of a fucking tank. Magical thinking only works if you use it to boost your confidence to near-supernatural levels, then put in the effort to make whatever you want happen.
Kaon
11 years, 9 months ago
Looks like the person you were talking to learned a thing or two.  
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
Hopefully so. That's the outcome I always prefer in these kinds of things. Not necessarily that my opponent agrees with me completely, but that learning happens in either me, them, or whoever's reading along.
LandonFox
11 years, 9 months ago
"If you add in the words 'Institutionalized and Organized before calling 'religion' a virus, then i'll agree with you."

Well what other kind is there?

" True religion is this; "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God, thou shalt love thy Neighbor as thyself." Nothing more, nothing less.
Even if you follow no God or gods, but if every man obeyed the second part of this statement then this world would be perfect."

Really?  So I suppose that overpopulation and competition for scarce resources has absolutely nothing to do with it.

"True religion does not say "Thou shalt use guns and bombs to slaughter the innocent.""

Well, the bible does.  Granted, replace the modern weapons with what the Hebrews had during the old testiment.  They were told by god to slaughter, pillage, and rape.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>Well what other kind is there?

I'm reminded of this poem that got really popular on YouTube a while ago, "I Hate Religion But I Hate Jesus." The guy started out sounding kinda sensible, but it quickly became clear that he was riding the zeitgeist's dislike of religion in general by blaming everything bad about Christianity on 'religion' and giving 'Jesus' credit for everything good. In other words, 'My faith isn't responsible for anything bad that happens because of it.' :/
smitty121325
10 years, 8 months ago
Exactly! You cannot blame someone's faith for tragedies like the Crusades or the Salem witch trials. Just because you do something in the name of God does not make it right. As has been stated, "God is love." Therefore, those who committed these atrocities were not real Christians, but rather used their religion as a means of committed atrocities that they felt were right. There is a difference between truthfully and faithfully following your faith and using religion for your own means.
LandonFox
11 years, 9 months ago
- I'd also like to make a side note that this is a group who have altered the image of their hell thanks to Dante's inferno (hell was frozen before that book) and made a habit of stealing other groups holidays in order to help convert them.

Odd for me to defend the church, but that's not the entire picture here.  When the catholic church was incorporating pagan holidays and practices, it was doing it just after the fall of the roman empire.  This is a time where all of the technology was lost and everyone was living in ruins that were better than anything they could build themselves.  The church was the last surviving roman institution and was doing everything it could to restart the roman system.  This is why it was adopting the current pagan ideas instead of converting them, it was trying to stop the in-fighting.

- A person who is not religious can be said to be a humanitarian, as you noted. But if a person claims to be Christian or Muslim or a follower of any religion yet is not a true humanitarian, then they are not religious.

What a wonderful excuse to NEVER consider the consequences of your actions.  If you act nice, but are creating a situation in which woman will be raped or honor killed, then you are indirectly responsible.  However, according to this logic you get out of the responsibility for your actions by declaring the person who was directly responsible to be not religious.

Grow up.

- This is why I say the organized, institutionalized modern religion, the religion you see and are talking about, the one everyone sees and knows, and the religion I speak of are two separate entities.

No they aren't.  It's just too painful for you to face the facts that your belief system isn't perfect...  that it is as flawed as anything else mankind has made.

Listen, it's really not as painful as it looks.  It's like being afraid of a rollercoaster.  The anticipation is far worse that than the actual act.

- I will re-iterate what I said. True religion is this; "Love the Lord thy God, Love thy neighbor as thyself." Nothing more, nothing less.

Upon what proof do you base this claim?

Gah, the guy isn't responding anyway.  I'm going to stop this.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
>The church was the last surviving roman institution and was doing everything it could to restart the roman system.  This is why it was adopting the current pagan ideas instead of converting them, it was trying to stop the in-fighting.

Interesting. I didn't know that. Of course, I'm not one to say 'EVERYTHING religion does is evil'. I know there's some good benefits. (I do however think that there's nothing religion contributes to humanity that couldn't have come from a secular source.)

>What a wonderful excuse to NEVER consider the consequences of your actions.  If you act nice, but are creating a situation in which woman will be raped or honor killed, then you are indirectly responsible.  However, according to this logic you get out of the responsibility for your actions by declaring the person who was directly responsible to be not religious.

Whenever I see moderates disavowing themselves of fundies, I always remember the time my aunt went on a batshit schizoaffective 'rampage' of sorts. We, her family, could have said, "Look, she's not our responsibility." Except she was. She was part of our family, and no one else had a greater obligation to stop her from running around pestering strangers and getting thrown out of bars.

>Listen, it's really not as painful as it looks.  It's like being afraid of a rollercoaster.  The anticipation is far worse that than the actual act.

Well said.

>Gah, the guy isn't responding anyway.  I'm going to stop this.

Yeah. You made some good points but I don't think he wants to discuss this much anymore. Either that or he just didn't see your comments. <shrug>
NaydrxSpade
11 years, 9 months ago
I will save this for later reading, since this peaks my interests.
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
Lemme know what ya thought of it. :)
NaydrxSpade
11 years, 9 months ago
I'll be sure to harp up my opinions after I have read it.
JessCarrotCake
11 years, 9 months ago
all i have to say is mannnnnnn that is one long argument
AlexReynard
11 years, 9 months ago
That's usually the kind I have. ;)
Alfador
11 years, 9 months ago
I recently got the Civilization V expansion pack on sale. It's "Gods and Kings" but it would be more accurate to call it "Gods and Spies" because religion and espionage are the two big features introduced with it, along with balance tweaks to combat and an expanded tech tree.

You build your own religion based on the in-game effects you want from it, starting from a primitive pantheon and moving to more advanced theology later on. Depending on social policies you pick up, you can purchase Great People other than Prophets with faith points--the Rationalism tree allows you to purchase Great Scientists with faith!

It's exactly like an idea I had a few weeks ago. "Pimpmyreligion.com! Are you falling asleep in church? Visions of the afterlife not up to snuff? Are the same old rituals boring you? Does all that incense make you cough? Then take a browse on over to pimpmyreligion.com! We've got a wide selection of the trendiest beliefs! Customize a faith that's just for YOU! Pick and choose from a list of hundreds of popular deities and mythical figures! Sign up for one of our workshops in a city near you to develop your very own ritual. The customization possibilities are endless! Put a ritual in your ritual so you can be holy while you be holy! And we have a wide selection of military surplus hardware so you can start your very own holy war!"

...The kicker is that, just like the hilarity that ensues when Great People named for real historical people get born in cities and civilizations that have absolutely nothing to do with real history (eg. Albert Einstein and Leonardo da Vinci being contemporaries, both born in Tokyo)... Civ V religions are also named for real religions. In my current game, I'm playing at a higher difficulty setting, so I'm lagging behind the other nations, but I saw one found a religion and laughed so hard at the notification message I had to shut it down for the night:

"The nation of Polynesia has founded the religion of Christianity in the holy city of Honolulu!"

Oh and I'm playing the Byzantine Empire, so for now, it IS Constantinople, not Istanbul, bitchezzzzz. >:3
KumaKun
11 years, 8 months ago
Oh, I hate the original sin story so much >_<

" As to the Garden of Eden, man was created innocent. Yet man chose to believe the lies of the serpent (devil) over the word of God. Even then, God gave man the free will to make his own choice and when it was made, God then passed judgement. So your analogy is incorrect. It would be more appropriate to say that there was another person in that room telling one of the children that the gun would make a fun toy.


God created man innocent - meaning no knowledge of right or wrong - meaning they had zero ability to begin to comprehend the concept that doing what God says to do is "right" and doing what the serpent says to do is "wrong." The fruit of Knowledge, which God forbade man to eat, is what granted them the capacity to even be able to understand the notion of "wrong" to begin with - eating the fruit is the only thing that made them able to understand that they shouldn't eat the fruit. God created Man broken, lacking the brains or sense to even be able to know that if the snake told Eve "hey, Adam would totally love it if you carved his head off and threw it into the lake" that she was being lied to. She had no notion of lies or deception.

Because God chose to withhold that knowledge from them.

God, who supposedly knows the entirety of everything and everyone, who knows your soul and your thoughts and your intent, and how everything will happen before it ever happens - who knew Lucifer would betray him if he created Lucifer - who knew Lucifer would tempt Eve if he did not prevent it (which he had the power to do unless Lucifer is beyond God's power which he's not supposed to be) - who knew that when Eve ate the apple and when Adam did too, there was not the slightest PARTICLE of rebellion or betrayal or disrespect or ANYTHING against God in their actions - decided to pass judgment on these >innocent children< simply because they behaved in the manner that he had constructed them to behave within the parameters of the scenario he constructed knowing the inevitable outcome before he even set it all up.

It's a man leaving two children in a room with a gun, then allowing another man to enter that room knowing with absolute certainty that this second man WILL tell the children the gun is fun to play with and that the children WILL listen to this man because they have never been told anything of deception or lies, and then when the one child shoots the other, the father comes in and >casts these children out of his home, telling them they are eternally damned for what they have done, and so are all of their descendants into eternity.<

The notion of God knowing the future isn't actually in the Bible, that's a more recent construct. A being cannot be disappointed when they knew with absolute certainty what the outcome of every event would ever be. But even if we drop the omniscient stuff, and God was a Father who just hoped that his children would make the right choice, he is still a "Father" who >chose< to make them lacking the ability to know right from wrong, who >chose< to allow the serpent into the garden to begin with, and who >chose< to put that damn fruit there. Even if he did not have foreknowledge of how the situation would unfold, it was still the equivalent of an intelligent adult constructing a scenario with a fucking obvious outcome, placing a mentally impaired child into this scenario, sitting and watching it unfold without doing a thing to stop the child he lobotomized from doing the most natural thing to expect a child to do, and then spend the rest of eternity screaming at the child and all her children at how horrible and loathsome and full of sin that they all are because they didn't manage to escape the trap he created for them.
KumaKun
11 years, 8 months ago

The most rudimentary and child-like application of logic, reason, and sense, makes this story utterly and completely impossible to be taken as a story of a loving father with his children's best interests in mind. Which is why it has to be engrained before the mind has developed enough to think critically, and reinforced with scary and strict punishments and reprimand at even the slightest hint of questioning.

So that even if the person develops the capacity to understand and reject the evil which religion prescribes as a core and defining aspect of it, they will still have incredible difficulty rejecting the basic notion of religion itself.
AlexReynard
11 years, 8 months ago
>God created man innocent - meaning no knowledge of right or wrong - meaning they had zero ability to begin to comprehend the concept that doing what God says to do is "right" and doing what the serpent says to do is "wrong."

Thank you for obliterating this bullshit control story even more thoroughly than I could. For all the talk of God's love, his depiction is clearly meant to keep people always frightened of his capricious sadism. Fearful people do not think clearly.

>and then spend the rest of eternity screaming at the child and all her children at how horrible and loathsome and full of sin that they all are because they didn't manage to escape the trap he created for them.

God = Jigsaw. "Hello Adam and Eve. I want to play a game..."

And of course, the same theme is taken to an even more reprehensible length in the story of Job. "I'm going to destroy everything you love to make sure you still like me."

>So that even if the person develops the capacity to understand and reject the evil which religion prescribes as a core and defining aspect of it, they will still have incredible difficulty rejecting the basic notion of religion itself.

<WHUMP> That was the sound of the nail you just hit on the head.

It still amazes me that there are ANY adult converts. Maybe if you've survived something terrible because of a 'miracle' I can understand a bit. But I've heard of actual scientists who were converted by the 'The universe is so perfect it must be made for us' argument. That just makes me foam at the mouth. That argument is SO BAD. How the fuck can it hook people for more than a handful of seconds? Douglas Adams shattered it in a single paragraph. Is it just plain old human egocentrism that makes them believe in something so retarded? 'I want to believe I'm the center of the universe, therefore it's true'?
NaydrxSpade
11 years, 8 months ago
Frankly . . . I'm quite speechless XD pretty much summed up my way of thinking, which is pretty much your own, AlexReynard.
AlexReynard
11 years, 8 months ago
It's nice to realize your brain isn't alone, eh? :)
NaydrxSpade
11 years, 8 months ago
Indeed it is ^..^
Winterfeline
11 years, 7 months ago
I did enjoy having a bit of a read through this. I am usually a bit wary about conversations on religion, they tend to become rather intense after all. Religion is one of those topics where sometimes people can only agree on the fact they disagree about things.

Anyhow, just wanted to say this was a good, thought-provoking text to read.

I have to disagree with a lot of what 'Green' has to say in the text, it just hurts my head to think someone would use the kind of logic that they have in use here. Of course, they are entitled to their opinion, but personally I would just tell them that I cannot really agree with them.

If someone's mind is set on stone, then I don't see a point in discussing things with them. To me, the mind is 'written on paper', and so it can be changed. I'm willing to listen to two sides in an argument, and consider both points of view.
Winterfeline
11 years, 7 months ago
As an afterthought, too late to edit the last post so making this a small separate post. I apologise for double-posting though.

I consider my point of view pretty solid, I am willing to listen to different views of the world, discuss them and consider the options, but that doesn't mean I'll change my opinion easily, and lightly. I am open to the ideas, but I think them through critically nonetheless. I find most interesting conversations start between people who have this kind of world view. Willing to look at another possibility, but being critical enough to not allow themselves to be swayed easily. Discussing, not judging, and not preaching. Just a dialog between two people sharing thoughts, after which they can part as friends.
AlexReynard
11 years, 7 months ago
>Anyhow, just wanted to say this was a good, thought-provoking text to read.

Thanks very much!

>it just hurts my head to think someone would use the kind of logic that they have in use here.

The truth is, as exasperating as Green was, I'd much prefer to debate him again than a dozen or so other people I can remember. Green at least understood the concept of politeness and regarded me as a fellow human being. I never got the sense that Green was crazy, either. I have argued with people who it's like trying to talk to a toxic waste pipe.

>If someone's mind is set on stone, then I don't see a point in discussing things with them. To me, the mind is 'written on paper', and so it can be changed. I'm willing to listen to two sides in an argument, and consider both points of view.

Always good to know that other people value that. :) Still, I think arguing with a wide variety of people, even stubborn ones, is worthwhile. I think of it like testing my beliefs on a grindstone. I'm not going to cut the grindstone, but I can chip away the bits of my arguments that don't work. In trying to explain my ideas to someone who's resisting them, I'm forced to rethink them. I often have some of my best insights while trying to rephrase things I already know. I see new connections between things.

>I find most interesting conversations start between people who have this kind of world view. Willing to look at another possibility, but being critical enough to not allow themselves to be swayed easily. Discussing, not judging, and not preaching. Just a dialog between two people sharing thoughts, after which they can part as friends.

That is beautifully well-said and I agree wholeheartedly. :)
Haruboi
8 years, 9 months ago
Quite an interesting read, it certainly piqued my interest. If I were to say something, it has already been said perhaps by many. This "religion" is all together merely a tool and is used to its master's will. But that's is what I think, of course by many people's standards I'd appear demonic to those who had been preached to at a young age. Oh well, perhaps a qoute is necessary here just for the hell of it  "Once Zhuang Zhou dreamed he was a butterfly, a fluttering butterfly. What fun he had, doing as he pleased! He did not know he was Zhou. Suddenly he woke up and found himself to be Zhou. He did not know whether Zhou had dreamed he was a butterfly or a butterfly had dreamed he was Zhou. Between Zhou and the butterfly there must be some distinction. This is what is meant by the transformation of things." Oh well no need to listen to me ... after all maybe I'm an idiot believing to be right, or maybe I'm a right idiot! Well thank you for this post, and I hope I have given you something in return for this comment, cheers!
AlexReynard
8 years, 9 months ago
>This "religion" is all together merely a tool and is used to its master's will.

It seems very likely. I think religion can be the same as alcohol, as in, it releases inhibitions about showing your true self. If you want to be charitable and forgiving, it'll encourage you onto that path, but if you want to bully others, there's no more potent justification than telling yourself your victims are sinners and they deserve it.

Thank you for your comment as well! Sorry it took me a while to respond. Did family cookout stuff for the 4th and today.
Haruboi
8 years, 9 months ago
Indeed!It was not a problem, besides I am rather endeared with your standpoint (ahem)...People believe that morals are born from interactions with others, what they forget is that they have the choice to accept or deny aspects of what they believe in. I kinda hate justification to be honest! It has its uses, I just find it to be a coping mechanism. A way to shift the blame.

Oh why it was no problem! I really enjoy thought inducing topics, and insightful people as well. We just shot off fireworks, it was cool!
AlexReynard
8 years, 9 months ago
>I kinda hate justification to be honest! It has its uses, I just find it to be a coping mechanism. A way to shift the blame.

Same here. I'm just now fully realizing just how dangerous they can be. Like, an obvious bully is a bad thing. But a person who's 100% convinced they are a good person can be very dangerous too. Because of the risk of justifications. "I am a good person" can become "therefore everything I do is good" and then "therefore, if I do anything bad to someone else, they must have been bad and deserved it." Eek.
Haruboi
8 years, 9 months ago
It certainly is a frightening idea! However it is quite engrossing...to think that one person can be seen as both good and bad, and for both statements to be true. Point of view is a very fun thing to play with. "Nothing interferes with my concentration. You could put an orgy in my office and I wouldn't look up. Well, maybe once", Isaac Asimov Well ultimately all one can do is just shrug. It was a thrilling discussion Alex, perhaps we may have another stellar one in the near future! Cheers.
apdamien
8 years, 9 months ago
The bad things that Alex and others attribute to "religion" are what happens when belief of any sort -- whether in God or gods or an economic system (look at Communism) gains power and gets mixed up with the government.  The religion is simply an excuse for those in power to hold onto power.

If you look at the religions that _don't_ have power, you see a very different story.  Modern neopaganism is an example. I don't believe a word of it, but it does no harm.  Only partly because of that creed of "if it harms none, do what you will."  More because it simply doesn't have the power to harm others.

Belief in and of itself is not harmful. When belief gains temporal power, then it does harm.

Public policy should be guided by facts and figures. Not by belief.  Or, if you like, by the Golden rule: do as you would be done by.  Or perhaps by Hillel's version, which is older: do not do until others anything you would not like done to you.

The legend says that a gentile came to Hillel and said, I will convert on the condition that you teach me the whole Torah while I stand on one foot.  Hillel said, "That which is despicable to you, do not do to your fellow, this is the whole Torah, and the rest is commentary, go and learn it."

And with that, he converted the gentile.

Green's proposed "true religion" already contains the seeds of error: "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God, thou shalt love thy Neighbor as thyself."  That assumes
(1) That there is such a person as "the Lord thy God" (I happen to believe in such a being, but that doesn't mean everybody must)
(2) That "true religion" requires you to love the Lord, which requires you to believe in Him(Her).

I should note that from a Jewish point of view, the commandment to "Love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, with all thy soul, and with all thy might" is given to the Jews and not to the rest of the world.  The rest of the world can believe whatever they want, as long as they refrain from wantonly harming other people.
thirtyeight
7 years, 6 months ago
You really know your stuff. Have you ever visited exchristian.net?
AlexReynard
7 years, 6 months ago
I have not. That might be weird though, as I was never a Christian in the first place to be 'ex' from. One of my mother's few redeeming qualities was not pushing any religion on me and letting me check them out at my own pace. Turns out the only one I like is Solcibus. ;)
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