Moderators: Azrael, Moderators General, Prelates
ElPresidente wrote:I think he's a bozo who doesn't know what the word "Reason" means. If one takes it as a premise that God exists, through faith, it is no less reasonable to obtain (back on topic) a morality based on the Word of God than it is to obtain Benthamite utilitarianism reasoning from the premise that happiness is a moral good.
Bertrand Russell wrote:Not to be absolutely certain is, I think, one of the essential things in rationality.
Richard Feynman & many others wrote:Keep an open mind – but not so open that your brain falls out
ElPresidente wrote:Reasoning takes you from premises to conclusions. It has no purchase from which it may interrogate premises. Thus the effect of religion upon morality is to prevent the religious and the irreligious from having productive discussions about morality.
addams wrote: There is no such thing as an Unbiased Jury.
curtis95112 wrote:You realize that Dawkins doesn't rely only on formal logic, right? He's a scientist, he's saying that there is no reason to take those premises as valid.
Metaphysician wrote:There can be no reason to take any first principle as valid, because then that reason becomes the first principle and thus you end with an infinite regression. Some first principles can be seen as sillier than others but the bottom line is that faith is always placed in something in some form or fashion. The silliness becomes when people decide to argue about first principles, it's pointless really because they can't by definition, be proven. It amazes me that people are still arguing about these. Aristotle covered this a hell of a long time ago.


addams wrote: There is no such thing as an Unbiased Jury.
induction wrote:Metaphysician wrote:There can be no reason to take any first principle as valid, because then that reason becomes the first principle and thus you end with an infinite regression. Some first principles can be seen as sillier than others but the bottom line is that faith is always placed in something in some form or fashion. The silliness becomes when people decide to argue about first principles, it's pointless really because they can't by definition, be proven. It amazes me that people are still arguing about these. Aristotle covered this a hell of a long time ago.
All first principles are not created equal except in the absence of observation. While it's true that first principles can't be proven correct, they can be proven incorrect by counterexample. Granted, 'valid' is not the right word, but arbitrary first principles that don't correlate with empirical observation are not equivalent to those that simply haven't been proven correct but do have strong inductive support.
Belial wrote:That's charming, Nancy, but all I hear when you talk is a bunch of yippy dog sounds.
Lucrece wrote:The problem is that it's a lot harder to argue against the conclusions/findings of a being said to be superior/supreme over men than it is to call bullshit/reject what someone of your own stature (a human being) says.
If someone says "Supreme Being says this" and enough people believe it, their trust on some greater being will always win out over trust in a peer, especially in Abrahamic religions where mankind is constantly depicted as filthy, destructive, and unworthy of trust due to its vulnerability to temptation.
Churches offer a perfect mix for population manipulation because they offer a cure to loneliness by creating reliable community, and seeking the comfort of being part of a stable community means that people are willing to take up some viewpoints that won't affect most of them (5-8% of the population is gay, and it's not like you can just change -- unlike divorce, where half of your flock could be lost if you antagonize them over it) in exchange for being part of it.

addams wrote: There is no such thing as an Unbiased Jury.
mosc wrote:Wow, you have SERIOUS issues and a very biased and jaded reading of the bible. I'm not going to say anyone sane actually enjoys reading Leviticus, but there are plenty of uplifting parts and you seem to have missed the main points entirely.
SpringLoaded12 wrote:You're like a modern-day Holden Caulfield, except that no one would read a book about you.

Wow, you have SERIOUS issues and a very biased and jaded reading of the bible. I'm not going to say anyone sane actually enjoys reading Leviticus, but there are plenty of uplifting parts and you seem to have missed the main points entirely.
curtis95112, the main points of the bible are clearly about forgiveness, love, justice, and kindness. The number of passages that talk about such things are far more common than you seem to be letting on. It's a very long book written by many different people over many generations but the main themes are not that hard to miss.
Belial wrote:That's charming, Nancy, but all I hear when you talk is a bunch of yippy dog sounds.
mosc wrote:Slows down moral development? Did you miss the entire abolishionist movement in your textbook? Sleep through a 1940's Eastern Europe lesson or two? Wow. People are short-sided. No I certainly would never say anything that moronically stupid. I said religion reflects the morality of the culture much more than the culture reflects the morality of the religion.
Sin, sinners, and sinning is not really an old testament "abrahamic" concept. Jesus forgives sin to let you into heaven. Jews and Muslims don't have a gatekeeper, a criteria that must be met, etc. The entire concept of hell doesn't even exist in Judaism. Many more recent protestant branches of Christianity have long since abandoned things like "original sin", "eternal damnation", etc. The beliefs you speak of I would say are basically dated interpretations of Catholicism.
Lucrece wrote:If someone says "Supreme Being says this" and enough people believe it, their trust on some greater being will always win out over trust in a peer, especially in Abrahamic religions where mankind is constantly depicted as filthy, destructive, and unworthy of trust due to its vulnerability to temptation.
SpringLoaded12 wrote:You're like a modern-day Holden Caulfield, except that no one would read a book about you.
mosc wrote:curtis95112, the main points of the bible are clearly about forgiveness, love, justice, and kindness. The number of passages that talk about such things are far more common than you seem to be letting on. It's a very long book written by many different people over many generations but the main themes are not that hard to miss.
addams wrote: There is no such thing as an Unbiased Jury.
Belial wrote:That's charming, Nancy, but all I hear when you talk is a bunch of yippy dog sounds.

mosc wrote:Original Sin is hardly mainstream dogma for anyone but Catholics let alone any non-christian faith.
Even within Catholicism, there's been a shift away from it with Pope John Paul's edicts respecting other covenants. The bible's plenty big where if you look for hate, you'll find it.
I'm not arguing that point at all. I don't know why you want me to defend all of the worst parts of all religions here or something.
SpringLoaded12 wrote:You're like a modern-day Holden Caulfield, except that no one would read a book about you.
Copper Bezel wrote:Specifically, you're being asked to defend the part that you felt was worth personally insulting Lucrece over when ze criticized it. But I don't suppose that's very productive.

mosc wrote:Original Sin is hardly mainstream dogma for anyone but Catholics let alone any non-christian faith.
curtis95112, the main points of the bible are clearly about forgiveness, love, justice, and kindness. The number of passages that talk about such things are far more common than you seem to be letting on. It's a very long book written by many different people over many generations but the main themes are not that hard to miss.
Copper Bezel wrote:But I'm biased by the fact that I live in the US, where religiosity and resistance to evolving cultural norms and moral views are absolutely synonymous. But I'm probably reading the causality backwards, there; religiosity is really just a result of a certain set of norms within that subculture. Religion could have no effect on morality at all, so long as morality doesn't have to filter through that loop I mentioned earlier.
If you acknowledge that one's external/social world has an influence on moral views, then there's no basis for saying that morality varies according to culture but religion has no impact. To do so is to claim that religion or religious teachings have no sort of social impact, which I think is wholly untenable. A discussion about the degree of influence is a different story.Mosc wrote:I disagree. Morality is in the mind. It's all about what a person feels. It's very individual by nature. A religion can preach a morality but I don't see a strong correlation between participation in what we commonly define as big-R 'Religion' and morality. Common beliefs, common history, even common political views are much easier to correlate between a religions institution and it's participants than morality. I suppose morality and belief are not entirely separate things but I think morality differences would be better correlated with other things than specified religion. The concept of fairness is a big part of how we define morality. We all seem to like to balance the scale of Justice between cause and effect. The variations in morality tend to be more cultural than religious.
mosc wrote:Copper Bezel wrote:Specifically, you're being asked to defend the part that you felt was worth personally insulting Lucrece over when ze criticized it. But I don't suppose that's very productive.
Ok fine. "Churches offer a perfect mix for population manipulation..." Is bullshit. It's pretty close to the old "religion is the opiate of the masses" line, is completely intolerant of Religion (good and bad parts alike), unfairly classifies religion as propaganda, implies malicious intent, etc. Say what you want about Religion as a concept but it's not exactly opaque. One of the few constants is an almost compulsive need for communication. It's almost how we define how religious someone is, by how much they talk about their religion. Population manipulation is a bigoted exaggeration of intent.
Belial wrote:That's charming, Nancy, but all I hear when you talk is a bunch of yippy dog sounds.
Lucrece wrote:So you think a setting when you go in and sit while some self-appointed leader gives you life directives on a one-way format (no Q&A whatsoever after the sermon in front of the parish), that is not population control? What is religion if not a taught set of rules to live by?
I'm not even sure I would classify "televangelists" as religion. It fails many of the criteria we would use to define religion. They are better described as grifters, con men, scam artists, etc. Their product, if they have one at all, is to form a cult of personality. They may borrow heavily from religious themes and terminology but the message is more fundraiser and less culture.Lucrece wrote:Maybe I'm biased in the U.S., but over here the dominant denominations function strictly under spreading propaganda. If you can't see that in evangelical Christianity and the incredibly lucrative industry of celebrity religion in the likes of Joel Osteen, I don't know what to tell you other than you have a very sheltered view of how churches function in the world at large and not in a few select urban centers with the less populous UCC/Reform Judaism denominations.

Greyarcher wrote:------If you acknowledge that one's external/social world has an influence on moral views, then there's no basis for saying that morality varies according to culture but religion has no impact. To do so is to claim that religion or religious teachings have no sort of social impact, which I think is wholly untenable. A discussion about the degree of influence is a different story.Mosc wrote:I disagree. Morality is in the mind. It's all about what a person feels. It's very individual by nature. A religion can preach a morality but I don't see a strong correlation between participation in what we commonly define as big-R 'Religion' and morality. Common beliefs, common history, even common political views are much easier to correlate between a religions institution and it's participants than morality. I suppose morality and belief are not entirely separate things but I think morality differences would be better correlated with other things than specified religion. The concept of fairness is a big part of how we define morality. We all seem to like to balance the scale of Justice between cause and effect. The variations in morality tend to be more cultural than religious.
The idea that religion is used as a vehicle by a certain sub-culture to teach its particular moral views, and so morality is primarily a cultural issue--that's somewhat interesting. But I think that's still what we could call "an effect of religion upon morality". Unless we are insisting that many things people normally think of as "religion" would better be thought of as "sub-culture" and not "religion" at all. But since I think of religion and its denominations/sects as semi-culture from the start, I don't think I'd go that with that.
Not that I think you hold that view. It just occurred to me when running through possible ways in which your denial of religion's influence on morality would be tenable.
I don't really disagree. I'm just iffy on wording because, for instance, Christianity and Islam are spread across multiple countries and cultures. So in a sense religion is both super-culture and sub-culture. The common elements across cultures are super-culture; but specific local themes and interpretations are sub-culture.DSenette wrote:well i think this is the problem. religion doesn't need to be "thought of" as a sub culture....it is a sub-culture. that doesn't remove it's influence on the members of said culture.
which is...you know....what culture is (the behaviors and beliefs characteristic of a particular group). the culture that someone belongs to completely influences the traits that are inherent in said culture.

mosc wrote:DSenette, I agree. Much of what we talk about as morality is instinctual. What we think of as immoral is probably pretty much a direct reflection as what we think of as different from ourselves or against our own interests. It's not much more complicated than that.
I believe people are generally uncomfortable with homosexuality because they are uncomfortable with sodomy. They cannot think of male homosexual intercourse as a mutually pleasurable and mutually desired by two men. They place themselves in that situation and feel violated. I also find it not completely without cause. Sodomy can be tied with heterosexual male hazing rituals, torture, and in many ways pure dominance. These things come to mind more intuitively for a straight male than what could more accurately be described medically as mutual masturbation between two consenting adults. A lack of clarity (not saying justly) over the causes of the preference variation also contribute.
Wow, that paragraph is probably going to disturb some people. Good. I think those are the real issues. Religion will change with the flock.
DSenette wrote:uh, no that's not what i said....most actions that people would consider moral are not instinctual. in fact IN GENERAL morality is completely opposite of what we would currently consider moral (i.e. fucking as many women as possible, by any means possible, to create as many children as possible is TOTALLY instinct....it's not moral though)....so your idea that morality is "internal" or "entirely personal" is...well retarded.
also, to your middle paragraph....a male not wanting to be raped, and people being uncomfortable with sodomy are not the same thing. at all. and people aren't NATURALLY afraid of sodomy (as far as i know)....it's culturally influenced fear.
SpringLoaded12 wrote:You're like a modern-day Holden Caulfield, except that no one would read a book about you.

Will you still need me, will you still heed me, when you're sixty-four?*
In recent months we’ve seen several polls showing a majority of Americans now support marriage equality (plus one from NOM, less favorable, that merely highlights their own polling desperation).
These polls always display amazing support from young voters. Our opponents dismiss that: People get more conservative as they get older. They’ll change their minds. They’ll come to our side.
Many people do get more conservative as they age. Does that mean we’ll lose them? I’ve got two replies:
No.
It doesn’t matter.
I dove into the ABC/Washington Post poll, which compares results from March 2011 and October 2005 and breaks down the data by age. It’s pretty damn interesting. First, let’s deal with…
It doesn’t matter.
Support for marriage equality has increased in every age group from 2005 to 2011.
Now, this doesn’t tell us whether we’re losing people as they age. When you compare, say 30-39-year-olds in 2005 and 2011, you’re not comparing the same demographic group. The older half of 2005′s 30-39ers aged up into the 40-49 group by 2011, and were replaced by 2005′s older 20-29ers.
But it doesn’t matter. Even if we were losing some individuals as they age, we’re still making inroads into every age group. According to ABC/WP’s data, we’ve gone deep enough to gain a majority across the population, with momentum on our side.
Still, I would like to know what’s happening in people’s heads as they get older. Are we losing them? I can’t be sure, but I think the answer is…
No.
I wish this data were broken into five-year cohorts (30-34, 35-39, 40-44, etc.). That would better match the five-and-a-half-year period between surveys: 2005′s 30-34-year-olds would become 2011′s 35-39ers, and we could see how they had changed.
But we’re stuck with these ten-year cohorts. That means about half of 2005′s 30-39ers have aged into 2011′s 40-49er group. Let’s make the best of it and compare those numbers.
This chart compares each 2005 cohort with its aged-up 2011 counterpart.
That’s pretty cool. Except for the oldest respondents, each group in 2011 was more supportive than its younger neighbor in 2005. (And that oldest group spans more years than any other, possibly making it less susceptible to change.) So in other words:
For the most part, older people are more supportive of marriage equality in 2011 than younger people were in 2005.
Of course, this on the sloppy side, the result of wrestling with whatever data’s available. To do this right, we’d want a long-term longitudinal survey, asking a large sample of the same people year after year, preferably with the marriage equality question buried among a bunch of other issues covered by the survey.
That being said, I’d still like to point out this startling result:
Do you see that?
50-64-year-olds today aren’t just more supportive than 50-64-year-olds five years ago…
…or 40-49-year-olds five years ago…
…but are even more supportive than 30-39-year-olds five years ago!
That’s amazing. And it makes it hard to believe we’re losing people as they age. They may get more conservative (I don’t have data on that) but they’re not abandoning us. In fact, they’re joining us. That makes sense. Every year you live is another year you might meet more real, live gay people, decent folk to knock out the demonizing anti-gay stereotypes most of us grew up with.
Lord, I’d love more data. If anyone has other surveys conducted over time and broken down by age, please send them to me.
One last note.
Some people look at these surveys and say, We just have to wait for the bigots to die. Ugh. A gay commenter on another blog made an angry point along the lines of, I’ve been fighting for equality since the 60s. When you’re waiting for the older generation to die, you’re waiting for me to die. I fought too hard for too long — and you’re reaping too many benefits — for me to put up with that bullshit.
We don’t have to wait for anyone to die. And we don’t have to dismiss any generation as bigots. That’s what these numbers tell us. We can reach every age group. We can fight for everyone’s equality, no matter how old they are, no matter how old we are, and we can do it today.
Belial wrote:That's charming, Nancy, but all I hear when you talk is a bunch of yippy dog sounds.
I'd more explicitly remark on the question of efficacy though. After all, the ability of culture to change in spite of any religious influence is not an indication that there is no religious influence. That would be like saying parents have no influence over their children in cases where the children end up taking their peers' views instead; the conclusion would be a gross leap in logic.mosc wrote:What would you call a common morality difference? How about if homosexual relationships are moral? The argument proposed above is that religion is cultural and therefor has an effect but do we see people who grow up in a religion today holding the same morality as the previous generation? Clearly no. Age is fairly well correlated with homosexual tolerance. Religion is clearly not shaping the next generation's morality.
I would say it represents a difference in social activities, and possibly incentives. On the one hand, there's the simple fact that the non-religious have no concern with heaven or any other afterlife, or otherwise living up to some supernatural moral standard, so they lack an extra motivation that the religious have. Thus, moral thought isn't reinforced by some other set of beliefs. On the other hand, the non-religious often don't have the same social gatherings that the religious have; there is less opportunity for group influences towards a charitable direction, and again, less opportunity for moral thoughts and activities to be reinforced by external influences.guenther wrote:Let me offer up another example that I haven't seen mentioned yet. Religious people are more likely to donate time, money and blood than secular people (I lost my old citation, but this seems to make the same claim, though I didn't have time to read the whole thing). Does this reflect a difference in morality? Or if the religious and the areligious agree that such donations are a good thing, does it reflect how well those moral beliefs translate into behavior?
In my opinion, I think it's clear that religion plays some role in morality (as well as moral behavior), but I think the relationship is often complicated, even for a single person. Beyond the above reference, I don't have much to offer up besides anecdotes.
Belial wrote:That's charming, Nancy, but all I hear when you talk is a bunch of yippy dog sounds.
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