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Роберт wrote:In the Chronicles of Narnia, there's a character who worshiped "Taft" (basically a demonic idol) who is accepted by Aslan (basically Jesus/God) who said "you thought you were worshiping Taft but you were really worshiping me".
quantumcat42 wrote:Роберт wrote:In the Chronicles of Narnia, there's a character who worshiped "Taft" (basically a demonic idol) who is accepted by Aslan (basically Jesus/God) who said "you thought you were worshiping Taft but you were really worshiping me".
Minor, tangential quibble: it's "Tash". I only bring it up because this is really, really not this. Although, now I really want to see a scene in a movie where a group of teenagers accidentally summons the wrath of Taft.
addams wrote:Politics is hard. I can't do it.
It takes a nasty Jr. High School Girl in a man's body to keep up.
podbaydoor wrote:Faith comes in to enable people to claim things without evidence. Which means that what can be claimed can be anything. (And we have seen a wide variety of things claimed.) You might have the faith to move mountains in Christianity...buuut so did the guy who underwent the trials of the Eleusinian Mysteries.
guenther wrote:podbaydoor wrote:Faith comes in to enable people to claim things without evidence. Which means that what can be claimed can be anything. (And we have seen a wide variety of things claimed.) You might have the faith to move mountains in Christianity...buuut so did the guy who underwent the trials of the Eleusinian Mysteries.
Faith is a tool. If I find a hammer to be useful, it doesn't mean I think every use of the hammer is wonderful.
guenther wrote:I believe that faith is about being faithful. Religion typically includes many demands on one's lifestyle, and this hard work can make a person want to bail. It's easier to stick to a challenging path with a higher conviction in your beliefs.
And more broadly, I suspect that a shared narrative helps groups function better as a cohesive unit, enabling better cooperation, motivation, accountability, etc. Faith helps maintain this shared narrative.
guenther wrote:First of all, I don't rate the quality of groups by whether they have faith or not. As I said, faith is a tool; it doesn't make something inherently good. So I don't count faith as a black mark, but a group doesn't get props for merely having faith.
But I suppose what your getting at is does the benefit of faith justify a false belief. And if the belief is clearly false, I would not throw my lot behind it. Though I wouldn't necessarily oppose it if there was no evidence of harm.
Evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins criticizes all faith by generalizing from specific faith in propositions that conflict directly with scientific evidence. He describes faith as mere belief without evidence; a process of active non-thinking. He states that it is a practice which only degrades our understanding of the natural world by allowing anyone to make a claim about nature that is based solely on their personal thoughts, and possibly distorted perceptions, that does not require testing against nature, has no ability to make reliable and consistent predictions, and is not subject to peer review.
Excuse me? Every single metric we can conceive of shows an increase in well-being due to human capacity for understanding the world around us. Also no one is claiming that humans are rational just that we have the capacity to be rational, a opportunity many of us want to see increased within the population.morriswalters wrote:Guenther, take your faith and enjoy it. It is no better and no worse then the many beliefs held by others. Including the one often espoused here that men are rational and that given time they will make the world a better place. There is no evidence to support that idea and at least some modicum evidence of the contrary. I post an excerpt on the article on faith from Wikipedia.
morriswalters wrote:Guenther, take your faith and enjoy it. It is no better and no worse then the many beliefs held by others.
morriswalters wrote:Guenther, take your faith and enjoy it. It is no better and no worse then the many beliefs held by others.
SexyTalon wrote:the Hot Freshness of Wicked Classic.
ShootTheChicken wrote:morriswalters wrote:Guenther, take your faith and enjoy it. It is no better and no worse then the many beliefs held by others.
This is demonstrably untrue.
podbaydoor wrote:What proof do you have that their belief was "obviously false"?
Zcorp wrote:So, you prefer to have true belief and you think that shared beliefs create a better society. Why then, do you place greater value in Christian faith than in secular institutions that strive to create shared beliefs and values in reason, knowledge and human well-being on earth.
CorruptUser wrote:Especially when you have Religions of Evil. Which religions those are, according to most religions, are most other religions.
infernovia wrote:morriswalters wrote:Guenther, take your faith and enjoy it. It is no better and no worse then the many beliefs held by others.
Takes a lot of faith to say something like that.
In general, superiority and inferiority is inherent in any subjective viewpoint. When one ends up saying that it is "no better or worse," especially on such a broad topic as this, its because they are too exhausted or have lost their purpose.
morriswalters wrote:hile we certainly live longer, and more comfortably today, it's easily arguable that this is true only in the sense that it is very possible to live comfortably on a credit card until you max it out.
morriswalters wrote:A majority of small business fail each year, yet we still start them. Isn't this faith?
morriswalters wrote:Religious faith provides the casus belli for any number of evils, but the unanswerable question is what would you have had without it? Man can seem to cause any manner of mischief absent any Religion.
It's certainly true that we use faith in very practical ways. We use faith to buffer uncertainty. A majority of small business fail each year, yet we still start them. Isn't this faith?
SexyTalon wrote:the Hot Freshness of Wicked Classic.
guenther wrote:By "clearly false" I meant that we could test the claim and come away with a clear negative result. For example that the earth is flat. I don't know enough about the worship of Demeter to know if they made testable claims or not.
ShootTheChicken wrote:Also, the idea that morality is religion-driven and that without it we have no morality is pathetic, wrong, and insulting.
podbaydoor wrote:Yes. Which is why destroying religion is not the only aim, promoting rationality, evidence-based approaches, critical thinking, and constant re-evaluation of accepted human rights is what's called for. Religion will be dragged along this process whether it likes it or not.
They come from lots of places. For individuals who have the luxury to dapple in philosophy (and it is very much a luxury) they come from trying to a achieve the goal of bettering humanity. For others they come from unreasoned reactions they have to the cultural environment or from the indoctrination of their society and direct guardians.morriswalters wrote:Who said that? However since you brought it up. Where do you think they come from?
While she is confident in her knowledge using the word faith to describe this confidence is amazingly disingenuous within the context if this discussion. You are using that word to try and draw a parallel between a Faith in God (belief in something without evidence) and confidence in belief (or in this case knowledge). The discussion is using the word to mean a belief not based on evidence, you are using the word to represent an entirely different concept. Doing this just adds confusion and works to actively destroy discussion. So please stop.podbaydoor wrote:Yes. Which is why destroying religion is not the only aim, promoting rationality, evidence-based approaches, critical thinking, and constant re-evaluation of accepted human rights is what's called for. Religion will be dragged along this process whether it likes it or not.
You seem to have faith in your beliefs,
You seem to need a history lesson. As reason has dragged Religion kicking and streaming toward a better humanity for a few thousand years, it has found some ground and pulled back for a few centuries but over all it has just lost ground. Which is one of the primary reasons the Christianity that we say 400-1400 years ago is so different than what see today. Christian beliefs have be forced to accept reality.as the idea of dragging Religion anywhere is comparable to and ant dragging an elephant.
Her idea implies that we should always try to make things better and that understanding our world through science and reason allows us to do just that. There are many people fighting against this idea.Your idea implies that things will always get better, what if they don't. The things you value so highly seem to be products of abundance. In the absence of that abundance will they still hold true. Evaluate it with the lifeboat scenario. As a final observation, you seem to feel like some Christians that coexistence is not possible, if killing or enslaving others as groups was a commonly used method to destroy those who didn't agree with you, would you use those methods?
It's hard to ignore religion when it's one of the biggest motivators for people's positions against abortion, or gender/sexuality equality. You don't ignore something that's holding back society.morriswalters wrote:Infernovia I agree that all things being equal Religion will wither. What I don't believe is that it can or should be attacked directly. It simply hardens positions that might otherwise fall apart on their own. The Germans didn't attack the Maginot Line, they drove around it, therefore making it irrelevant.
podbaydoor wrote:No, that's optimism. And the existence of small businesses that do succeed serves as the "evidence" that it isn't automatically futile.
LaserGuy wrote:So, if a religion were to claim, say, that the Earth was swallowed up by a global flood, and there was concrete evidence that such a flood never happened, then that religion would be "clearly false"?
Xeio wrote:It's hard to ignore religion when it's one of the biggest motivators for people's positions against abortion, or gender/sexuality equality. You don't ignore something that's holding back society.
guenther wrote:It's also evidence that they will most likely fail. But people starting businesses may divorce their beliefs from the evidence or perhaps even outright deny evidence to take a more optimistic view of their own likely success. Here's an example of that in regards to swimming. If such a thing adds benefit, then our economic system might select for it among business owners.
guenther wrote:LaserGuy wrote:So, if a religion were to claim, say, that the Earth was swallowed up by a global flood, and there was concrete evidence that such a flood never happened, then that religion would be "clearly false"?
Supposing such evidence, it would mean that a claim of literal truth about Noah's flood is wrong. It does not mean that the religion is false, nor does it mean that every other claim of literal truth about the Bible is false.
LaserGuy wrote:I would think this just means that people need to be better educated about planning fallacies and positive bias.
LaserGuy wrote:So why would it then matter if Demeterism (or whatever it was called) said the Earth was flat or not?
Zcorp wrote:The concepts of Christianity are incompatible with Reason. One strives to create reasonable beliefs and gain knowledge, the other tries to perpetuate unreasonable beliefs and actively fights against the acquisition of knowledge for its own livelihood. And yes like with any differing value structures there is certainly an possibility that bloodshed is a possibility. However, currently the goal on the side of reason has been to create educational institutions to increase the amount of knowledge the average individual has access to. The response has been anti-knowledge institutions attempting, and in some cases succeeding, to take over that educational system.
If you wait till your sure of success then it is likely that you will achieve nothing.LaserGuy wrote:I would think this just means that people need to be better educated about planning fallacies and positive bias.
morriswalters wrote:If you wait till your sure of success then it is likely that you will achieve nothing.LaserGuy wrote:I would think this just means that people need to be better educated about planning fallacies and positive bias.
morriswalters wrote:It's pitched exactly to her definition. Look at the hidden assumption. There is no evidence that most people can or even want to do these things, even some of the time. Reason is easily snatched from us by emotion. My world is composed of frameworks, things designed to remind me that it's not okay to smash someones face in because they are different or because they don't agree with me.
Yeah I agree. 2000 years to get to this point. Quick work.
morriswalters wrote:My point was to highlight the idea that the conditions that you value so highly are a product of a abundance. Take away said abundance and what are you left with. Add to that growing political instability and you have a recipe for a completely different world.
It can also refer to beliefs that are not based on proof (e.g. faith that a child will grow up to be a good person)
podbaydoor wrote:So if Demeterism is not obviously false, why not subscribe to it too? Might as well cover all your bases, right?
The Great Hippo wrote:Arguing with the internet is a lot like arguing with a bullet. The internet's chief exports are cute kittens, porn, and Reasons Why You Are Completely Fucking Wrong.
Drumheller769 wrote:There is also the affect that God has had on our lives.
Mine for example:
Growing up I was a 'Sunday' Christian, in name only. I knew the stories, but didn't really care, I just had to get up early on Sunday. Well when I became an adult and went to college, just trying hard and hoping...yea they didn't get me very far. When your down in the bottom of the shitter because your major is difficult for you, and you cant stop drinking alcohol no matter how hard you try to stop yourself, and something comes along to turn that around, you tend to put some belief in it.
So for me, its not aesthetic, its that its had a profound affect on my life. I spent a year trying to turn myself around, by trying harder, by seeing a counselor, by listening to friends, all that didn't help a bit. So the first time I break down, and pray for help because I can' do it, and I get picked up instantly...yea, that's why I believe.
IcedT wrote:Also, this raises the important question of whether or not dinosaurs were delicious.
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