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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 08:50
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ I haven't seen any of the "New Atheists" say that god does not exist. The modern Atheist position is that of a very extreme Agnostic: You can't disprove the existence of a god, but there is no good reason to believe that there is one. All the Theist God theories are riddled with inconsistencies and based on highly improbable and unproved miracle stories, and history is full of examples of gaps in our knowledge that had been attributed to the divine for centuries, until a naturalistic explanation was found. Apply a good dose of common sense in the form of Occam's Razor, and the result will be that while you cannot disprove god, you can - for your practical life - make the assumption that there is no god, until you see some very good reason to assume otherwise.
It is always tricky when you make a blatant "God does not exist" statement, because that puts the burden of proof on you - to be able to make that statement you have to prove that all gods do not exist, disproving one is not enough because man will invent another one that circumvents whatever proof you put up.  Occam's Razor will never remove doubt from the equation so all your naturalistic explanations of divine attributions will only remove gods from the detail, and the nett result of that will be deism.
 
I don't make that statement - by asserting that all gods are an invention of man I can back that up using every scrap of evidence used by theists - every word written about gods was written by man, they claim it is they are words of gods and are accounts of the actions of gods, but they were written by the hand of man.
 
Even if an archaeologist finds the actual Ark of The Covenant, it still would not be proof:
Quote When Moses went and told the people all the LORD's words and laws, they responded with one voice, "Everything the LORD has said we will do." Moses then wrote down everything the LORD had said.
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Edit: And about the Deist position: Of course there is no good reason to believe that either. If you suppose an "Einsteinian" point of view ... I could agree with that, but it's simply a form of appreciation for how complex and beautiful our world is, and how it exceeds our capabilities, evolved apes as we are, to comprehend it. I like that position, but ultimately you of course have the problem of infinite regression (Who created the Deist god). Here Occam's Razor also applies: As strange as it may seem: Maybe there really was no first cause.
As a programmer I know that any recursive algorithm must have a short-cut escape-route to avoid infinite regression, (Douglas Hofstadter explains this better in GEB than I can here and it has been a while since I last read it), so the infinite regression at the origins of the Universe (with or without a creator) must have had such an escape-route (or we wouldn't be here). The other point about this is we are analysing it backwards looking for the start-point - true infinite regression has a start-point but no end-point. Oddly, most theist and non-theist theories hold the view that there was no "before" - time started at the moment of creation and at the moment of the Big-bang.
 
/edit - I also believe (but cannot prove) that any computing problem that can be solved using infinte regression can also be solved without it. The classic "Tower of Hanoi" example that is used to demonstrate the use of recursion can be solved without it.
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Of course these discussions always depend on how you define words like "Atheist" or "Agnostic", but I think you know what I mean.
I thought I did, but I'm still reeling from the notion that New Atheism is actually Old Agnosticism Tongue
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

If you countenance that a god may exist, or might exist then I cannot see how that makes you an atheist, that's agnosticism, if a deist holds that a god does exist, but does not interact with the universe and it's critters, then they are still a theist, because there is no corroborated evidence that a theist's gods interact with the universe either. Isn't the difference between a theist and an atheist entirely metaphysical?


See the beginning of this post in regard to the part that I put in bold letters. I completely agree with the part in italics.
As far as the last bit is concerned: Theists make the assumption that not only there is a God, but that it also interacts with the physical world. The afterlife is also such an interaction, since the concept makes the assumption that we, who are part of the physical world, enter another plane of existence after we die. Or you explain it with the concept of a "soul", which is part of the supernatural and somehow injected into our physical body upon birth and then returns to the supernatural world when we die.
The afterlife is still metaphysical, it is not an interaction with the physical world - one stops the other starts, it is not a two-way process, any idea that it is is simply a belief and not a provable (physical) reality. Again, the afterlife is an invention of man, a (perhaps unnecessary) justification for existence and a way of overcoming the natural fear of not existing. If nothing else it was an effective way of controlling a population.
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


So I agree with what you said, but I would add that for Theists the metaphysical interacts with the physical. For them God manifests in the physical world, and especially the Christian belief would not have found such widespread acceptance in the Roman empire if it hadn't been for the miracles.
No gods have been shown to manifest in, or interact with, the physical world, theists interact with the physical world and they believe that their god works through them, that is also a belief and not a proven truth.
 
Popularity will always increase with a good stage-show, miracles, feasts and ritual are an entertainment and a way of involving the congregation. Christianity spread through-out Europe using all these techniques, adopting, adapting and absorbing local customs to fit the message.
 
Not all christian churches put heavy reliance on miracles, the Protestant Reformation rejected them, Pentecost's have a different view of what a miracle is, in the modern world *i think* that only the Catholic church supports the view that miracles still happen.
 
 


Edited by Dean - January 02 2010 at 09:03
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 09:14
Human thought is in a way metaphysical. It is a separate universe of sorts. You cannot measure it in meaningful ways (at this time, I admit.) Culture is also something that exist outside the physical world.
 
Now the interesting question is if human consciousness is the only thing that allows these kinds of worlds to exist.
 
 
You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 09:23
Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:

Human thought is in a way metaphysical. It is a separate universe of sorts. You cannot measure it in meaningful ways (at this time, I admit.) Culture is also something that exist outside the physical world.
 
Now the interesting question is if human consciousness is the only thing that allows these kinds of worlds to exist.
 
 
Interesting ... I know that from watching my cat dream that *something* is going on  inside that puny cat mind, also observing him solve "problems" is another strong indication that he has a metaphysical model of the world.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 09:48
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


It is always tricky when you make a blatant "God does not exist" statement, because that puts the burden of proof on you - to be able to make that statement you have to prove that all gods do not exist, disproving one is not enough because man will invent another one that circumvents whatever proof you put up.  Occam's Razor will never remove doubt from the equation so all your naturalistic explanations of divine attributions will only remove gods from the detail, and the nett result of that will be deism.


Why should the result be Deism? Occam's Razor disposes of that belief as well. There may or may not be a divine creator, but it isn't necessary for understanding the world to suppose there is one.

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

 
I don't make that statement - by asserting that all gods are an invention of man I can back that up using every scrap of evidence used by theists - every word written about gods was written by man, they claim it is they are words of gods and are accounts of the actions of gods, but they were written by the hand of man.


Neither do I or any of the so called "New Atheists" ... I'm just repeating that since your post doesn't show that you got that message.

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

  
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Edit: And about the Deist position: Of course there is no good reason to believe that either. If you suppose an "Einsteinian" point of view ... I could agree with that, but it's simply a form of appreciation for how complex and beautiful our world is, and how it exceeds our capabilities, evolved apes as we are, to comprehend it. I like that position, but ultimately you of course have the problem of infinite regression (Who created the Deist god). Here Occam's Razor also applies: As strange as it may seem: Maybe there really was no first cause.
As a programmer I know that any recursive algorithm must have a short-cut escape-route to avoid infinite regression, (Douglas Hofstadter explains this better in GEB than I can here and it has been a while since I last read it), so the infinite regression at the origins of the Universe (with or without a creator) must have had such an escape-route (or we wouldn't be here). The other point about this is we are analysing it backwards looking for the start-point - true infinite regression has a start-point but no end-point. Oddly, most theist and non-theist theories hold the view that there was no "before" - time started at the moment of creation and at the moment of the Big-bang.


Maybe we simply don't understand it. There might also have been a creator of the universe, and that creator didn't have a cause. How ever it might have happened, my position is: We don't know (yet), so we simply leave it open until we have more information. I simply don't feel the need to suppose that it must have happened by a divine cause.

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

  
/edit - I also believe (but cannot prove) that any computing problem that can be solved using infinte regression can also be solved without it. The classic "Tower of Hanoi" example that is used to demonstrate the use of recursion can be solved without it.

Iterative solutions of the Towers of Hanoi are much less elegant though (I know that's beside the point).
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

 
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Of course these discussions always depend on how you define words like "Atheist" or "Agnostic", but I think you know what I mean.
I thought I did, but I'm still reeling from the notion that New Atheism is actually Old Agnosticism Tongue

Again, that depends on how you define Agnosticism. New Atheism is certainly different in that there is a commitment to acting in this world based on the assumption that there is no God (by using a capital G I hint towards the Theist God). Agnosticism, as it is commonly used, appears to me as a reluctance to commit yourself to either side. Such a position seems very illogical to me ... if you live your life based on the assumption that there may be a Christian God (for example), then you risk eternal damnation ... life under the sword of Damocles, and a somewhat likely candidate for death bed conversion. Wink

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


No gods have been shown to manifest in, or interact with, the physical world, theists interact with the physical world and they believe that their god works through them, that is also a belief and not a proven truth.
 
Popularity will always increase with a good stage-show, miracles, feasts and ritual are an entertainment and a way of involving the congregation. Christianity spread through-out Europe using all these techniques, adopting, adapting and absorbing local customs to fit the message.


In early Christianity it mostly depended on the miracles though ... the concept of vicarious redemption, the emphasis of Jesus' suffering on the cross etc. ... those things were added after Christianity had been established as the official religion of the Roman empire. So, in a way, first it emulated the old polytheistic Roman Gods and myths, and then evolved to emphasize the aspects that distinguish it from those older concepts.

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

 
Not all christian churches put heavy reliance on miracles, the Protestant Reformation rejected them, Pentecost's have a different view of what a miracle is, in the modern world *i think* that only the Catholic church supports the view that miracles still happen.
 


They even invented new miraculous concepts along the way, such as the transubstantiation.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 09:52
Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:

Human thought is in a way metaphysical. It is a separate universe of sorts. You cannot measure it in meaningful ways (at this time, I admit.) Culture is also something that exist outside the physical world.
 
Now the interesting question is if human consciousness is the only thing that allows these kinds of worlds to exist.
 
 


Thought is something that manifests inside a brain. The problem of course is that there is no way to communicate experiences directly ... the Vulcan mind meld is a nice idea, and it would really be a great breakthrough if concepts like telepathy could ever be implemented. I doubt whether it's possible though, or if we could ever find out that thoughts that are transmitted from one mind to another are indeed the same thoughts that were present in the original mind, or whether the transportation did alter them. Currently of course we have to describe our thoughts to other persons, and that clearly changes them.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 10:12
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Neither do I or any of the so called "New Atheists" ... I'm just repeating that since your post doesn't show that you got that message.
The New Atheists can not and will not make that assertion because they cannot applying the scientific method to it and are constrained by that limation.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 10:52
^ now you're starting to talk in riddles ... are you now criticizing them for not being unscientific?

If you indeed consider the scientific method as a constraint ... Ermm

Edit: And of course they can (and do) apply the scientific method, with the result being: We do not know - yet. And this is a much more honest statement than that of Theists and Deists ("We know") or Agnostics ("It cannot be known").


Edited by Mr ProgFreak - January 02 2010 at 10:55
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 10:53
Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:

Human thought is in a way metaphysical. It is a separate universe of sorts. You cannot measure it in meaningful ways (at this time, I admit.) Culture is also something that exist outside the physical world.
 
Now the interesting question is if human consciousness is the only thing that allows these kinds of worlds to exist.
 
 


Mmm, there are as many definitions of what a culture might actually be as there are identifiable cultures but for me:

Culture: Shared indigenous* beliefs and practices (with the addendum of *not necessarily localised  for such a phenomenon to arise where the practicioners do not share a concrete location e.g the internet etc ? - this qualification might be spurious methinks but hey ho...)

The practices part should really be a no-brainer (scuse the pun Wink) as these are physical activities consistent with the mental and social interaction that gave rise to the culture in the first place and follow naturally from the foregoing. It's all very well to posit that because 'culture' is but a human idea it somehow can be thrown in the metaphysical bag as existing outside reality, but what culture exists without a physical expression of same ? The kids next door don't need to believe snowmen are real just to learn to build one of the critters.

That must be the most long-winded way I have ever attempted to say being precedes essence (but then I never really shook off my existentialist phase all those years ago)


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 11:15
I have no argument against being precedes essence. However, we know that essence feeds back and alters the being that gave rise to it. Assuming I've got the appropriate definiton of essense and being in mind.
 
I am still trying to understand better these things. I may overextend the systems ideas I love so much. But there is so much we don't understand in the organization of reality. I believe that science will continue to illuminate more of it, but we're going to need more tools than we have now. Some of those will look quite metaphysical to our eyes now, and will seem like simple fact to those in the future.
You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 11:26
"being precedes essence" ... that's exactly the level of discussion that I meant when I called myself a (naive) realist.Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 11:32
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ now you're starting to talk in riddles ... are you now criticizing them for not being unscientific?

If you indeed consider the scientific method as a constraint ... Ermm

Edit: And of course they can (and do) apply the scientific method, with the result being: We do not know - yet. And this is a much more honest statement than that of Theists and Deists ("We know") or Agnostics ("It cannot be known").
Not quite - I am criticising them for being too scientific. Wink which prevents them from making the statement that gods do not exist.
 
"We don't know yet" is the only viable scientific conclusion based upon scientific reasoning. Atheism is not scientific, it is just supported by science more than Theism or Deism are.
 
They cannot apply the scientific method to the statement "god does not exist". They can complete the first two steps - characterisation by observation and hypothesis based on those observations but not the next two: they cannot make predictions based on the hypothesis nor can they prove it by experimentation.
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 11:33

It's hard for me to separate philosophical thought from religious thought from even scientific thought about the basic nature of the universe. Add on top of the the literary idea of all discourse being metaphor at one level or another, and things do get murky. Wink

There are some logical boundary lines, and it may be an intellectual mistake to try and cross those lines. But it feels like a natural thing at least to me.
 
Eventually you can't read everything, and must resign yourself to not knowing certain things. We all choose that point differently, but life is easier if you choose rather than endless wandering.
 
At least Dean seems to be evidence of this.
You are quite a fine person, and I am very fond of you. But you are only quite a little fellow, in a wide world, after all.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 11:39
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ now you're starting to talk in riddles ... are you now criticizing them for not being unscientific?

If you indeed consider the scientific method as a constraint ... Ermm

Edit: And of course they can (and do) apply the scientific method, with the result being: We do not know - yet. And this is a much more honest statement than that of Theists and Deists ("We know") or Agnostics ("It cannot be known").
Not quite - I am criticising them for being too scientific. Wink which prevents them from making the statement that gods do not exist.
 
"We don't know yet" is the only viable scientific conclusion based upon scientific reasoning. Atheism is not scientific, it is just supported by science more than Theism or Deism are.
 
They cannot apply the scientific method to the statement "god does not exist". They can complete the first two steps - characterisation by observation and hypothesis based on those observations but not the next two: they cannot make predictions based on the hypothesis nor can they prove it by experimentation.
 
 


That's a criticism that I can happily live with.Big smile
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 11:47
Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:

It's hard for me to separate philosophical thought from religious thought from even scientific thought about the basic nature of the universe. Add on top of the the literary idea of all discourse being metaphor at one level or another, and things do get murky. Wink

There are some logical boundary lines, and it may be an intellectual mistake to try and cross those lines. But it feels like a natural thing at least to me.
 
Eventually you can't read everything, and must resign yourself to not knowing certain things. We all choose that point differently, but life is easier if you choose rather than endless wandering.
 
At least Dean seems to be evidence of this.


Dean is evidence of the fact that life is easier if you choose rather than endless wandering?

Well, maybe so ... but I have chosen, too. I live my life based on the assumption that there is no god. I'm still sympathetic to spiritualism and mysticism in the way Sam Harris uses the words. That means that I might try meditation or contemplation, but knowing that these are concepts that happen within my mind, and have no bearing on the world around me.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 11:59
Originally posted by Negoba Negoba wrote:

It's hard for me to separate philosophical thought from religious thought from even scientific thought about the basic nature of the universe. Add on top of the the literary idea of all discourse being metaphor at one level or another, and things do get murky. Wink

There are some logical boundary lines, and it may be an intellectual mistake to try and cross those lines. But it feels like a natural thing at least to me.
 
Eventually you can't read everything, and must resign yourself to not knowing certain things. We all choose that point differently, but life is easier if you choose rather than endless wandering.
 
At least Dean seems to be evidence of this.


A very good and practical point clearly. I touched upon the work of the Existentialists in the last post and what is perhaps relevant to the thread is that Sartre in his pivotal L'existentialisme est un humanisme paper in 1946 alluded to what he felt would become the prevalent psychological malaise of the age in the post WW2 world i.e. when we run out of deterministic excuses for the destruction we have chosen to unleash in our midst, man is left with two things:

A potentially crushing burden of responsibility for all his actions (and inactions)

A potentially crushing loneliness in the wake of abandoning our God(s) who can no longer be entrusted to watch over us.

Rib tickling stuff I'm sure you'll agree but as much as you young un's might think old Jean-Paul irredeemably passée, he was remarkably prescient in identifying the central schism at the heart of 20th Century thought : Man is condemned to be free (to choose to save the drowning or repel all boardersBig smile)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 02 2010 at 20:01
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


It is always tricky when you make a blatant "God does not exist" statement, because that puts the burden of proof on you - to be able to make that statement you have to prove that all gods do not exist, disproving one is not enough because man will invent another one that circumvents whatever proof you put up.  Occam's Razor will never remove doubt from the equation so all your naturalistic explanations of divine attributions will only remove gods from the detail, and the nett result of that will be deism.


Why should the result be Deism? Occam's Razor disposes of that belief as well. There may or may not be a divine creator, but it isn't necessary for understanding the world to suppose there is one.
I've already said why - it does not remove "doubt" - so when the hypothesis is reduced to an either/or situation between "god" and "unknown physics" occam's razor cannot be used to choose between them.
Originally posted by wiki wiki wrote:

In the scientific method, Occam's razor is not considered an irrefutable principle of logic, and certainly not a scientific result
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

  
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Edit: And about the Deist position: Of course there is no good reason to believe that either. If you suppose an "Einsteinian" point of view ... I could agree with that, but it's simply a form of appreciation for how complex and beautiful our world is, and how it exceeds our capabilities, evolved apes as we are, to comprehend it. I like that position, but ultimately you of course have the problem of infinite regression (Who created the Deist god). Here Occam's Razor also applies: As strange as it may seem: Maybe there really was no first cause.
As a programmer I know that any recursive algorithm must have a short-cut escape-route to avoid infinite regression, (Douglas Hofstadter explains this better in GEB than I can here and it has been a while since I last read it), so the infinite regression at the origins of the Universe (with or without a creator) must have had such an escape-route (or we wouldn't be here). The other point about this is we are analysing it backwards looking for the start-point - true infinite regression has a start-point but no end-point. Oddly, most theist and non-theist theories hold the view that there was no "before" - time started at the moment of creation and at the moment of the Big-bang.

Maybe we simply don't understand it. There might also have been a creator of the universe, and that creator didn't have a cause. How ever it might have happened, my position is: We don't know (yet), so we simply leave it open until we have more information. I simply don't feel the need to suppose that it must have happened by a divine cause.
Here we agree. However, the problems associated with measurement means we will probably never be able to prove any of any scientific hypothesis on the subject. Experiments like the LHC will take us one step closer, but will not provide a definitive answer.
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

 
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Of course these discussions always depend on how you define words like "Atheist" or "Agnostic", but I think you know what I mean.
I thought I did, but I'm still reeling from the notion that New Atheism is actually Old Agnosticism Tongue

Again, that depends on how you define Agnosticism. New Atheism is certainly different in that there is a commitment to acting in this world based on the assumption that there is no God (by using a capital G I hint towards the Theist God). Agnosticism, as it is commonly used, appears to me as a reluctance to commit yourself to either side. Such a position seems very illogical to me ... if you live your life based on the assumption that there may be a Christian God (for example), then you risk eternal damnation ... life under the sword of Damocles, and a somewhat likely candidate for death bed conversion. Wink
Reading through the various definitions for atheist, strong atheist, weak atheist, implicit atheist, explicit atheist, agnostic-atheists, agnostic, weak agnostic, strong agnostic, nontheist, irreligious, noncognitivist, ignostic, antireligious, antitheist, deist, pandeist, panendeist, pantheist, panentheist, autotheist, polydeist I've come to the conclusion that some people get paid way too much money for thinking. But yeah, I'm with you... a person either believes a god exists or they don't and if they believe a god exists then they either believe in (ie worship) that god or they don't ... the middle ground is just fear of commitment.
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

No gods have been shown to manifest in, or interact with, the physical world, theists interact with the physical world and they believe that their god works through them, that is also a belief and not a proven truth.
 
Popularity will always increase with a good stage-show, miracles, feasts and ritual are an entertainment and a way of involving the congregation. Christianity spread through-out Europe using all these techniques, adopting, adapting and absorbing local customs to fit the message.

In early Christianity it mostly depended on the miracles though ... the concept of vicarious redemption, the emphasis of Jesus' suffering on the cross etc. ... those things were added after Christianity had been established as the official religion of the Roman empire. So, in a way, first it emulated the old polytheistic Roman Gods and myths, and then evolved to emphasize the aspects that distinguish it from those older concepts.
Not sure I agree with you there - as I said earlier, Paul was a Roman who was preaching in Rome in the 1st century (Col1:24) his teaching had the biggest influence on the early christian church in the Roman empire 300 years before it was the official religion.
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Not all christian churches put heavy reliance on miracles, the Protestant Reformation rejected them, Pentecost's have a different view of what a miracle is, in the modern world *i think* that only the Catholic church supports the view that miracles still happen.
 

They even invented new miraculous concepts along the way, such as the transubstantiation.
Transubstantiation was one of the many miraculous things rejected in the Protestant Reformation 500 years ago.


Edited by Dean - January 02 2010 at 20:06
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 03 2010 at 08:23
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Why should the result be Deism? Occam's Razor disposes of that belief as well. There may or may not be a divine creator, but it isn't necessary for understanding the world to suppose there is one.
I've already said why - it does not remove "doubt" - so when the hypothesis is reduced to an either/or situation between "god" and "unknown physics" occam's razor cannot be used to choose between them.
Originally posted by wiki wiki wrote:

In the scientific method, Occam's razor is not considered an irrefutable principle of logic, and certainly not a scientific result



I somehow doubt that science will ever be able to say anything about what is outside our universe, since it is based on the physical rules of our universe. Maybe it will someday, but until then any speculation about how the universe was created and what lies beyond does not have any rational basis. Maybe we can use logic as a basis (what I tried to do using Occam's Razor), but there's no way to know whether our rules of logic apply. Whatever's beyond our universe might be so totally different that not only our logic might not apply, but that we might very well call it "divine" even though it might be totally naturalistic, but just from another point of view.
 
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Reading through the various definitions for atheist, strong atheist, weak atheist, implicit atheist, explicit atheist, agnostic-atheists, agnostic, weak agnostic, strong agnostic, nontheist, irreligious, noncognitivist, ignostic, antireligious, antitheist, deist, pandeist, panendeist, pantheist, panentheist, autotheist, polydeist I've come to the conclusion that some people get paid way too much money for thinking. But yeah, I'm with you... a person either believes a god exists or they don't and if they believe a god exists then they either believe in (ie worship) that god or they don't ... the middle ground is just fear of commitment.



Exactly. Take any Theism you like: If you don't believe in its doctrine, from their point of view you are an Atheist. You may claim that you're a Deist, and maybe some believers will treat you a little bit differently because they might think "well, at least he believes in something", but at the end of the day they will come to the conclusion that you won't be saved, because you simply don't share his exact belief.

I prefer the label "Atheist".

Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

In early Christianity it mostly depended on the miracles though ... the concept of vicarious redemption, the emphasis of Jesus' suffering on the cross etc. ... those things were added after Christianity had been established as the official religion of the Roman empire. So, in a way, first it emulated the old polytheistic Roman Gods and myths, and then evolved to emphasize the aspects that distinguish it from those older concepts.
Not sure I agree with you there - as I said earlier, Paul was a Roman who was preaching in Rome in the 1st century (Col1:24) his teaching had the biggest influence on the early christian church in the Roman empire 300 years before it was the official religion.

I'm just saying that it would not have worked without the miracle stories.
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:


Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Not all christian churches put heavy reliance on miracles, the Protestant Reformation rejected them, Pentecost's have a different view of what a miracle is, in the modern world *i think* that only the Catholic church supports the view that miracles still happen.
 

They even invented new miraculous concepts along the way, such as the transubstantiation.
Transubstantiation was one of the many miraculous things rejected in the Protestant Reformation 500 years ago.


And it has led to much violence and conflict. And transubstantiation even only became an "official" miracle about 800 years ago.



(the whole presentation is very, very interesting to watch and mostly deals with the educational system in the USA. This part of the presentation mainly deals with blasphemy, and transubstation in particular. I hope you'll give me the benefit of doubt and watch this, purely for entertainment. And if you find it interesting, watch the next part too, because the waver story is continued there.)


Edited by Mr ProgFreak - January 03 2010 at 08:33
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 03 2010 at 11:01
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


I somehow doubt that science will ever be able to say anything about what is outside our universe, since it is based on the physical rules of our universe. Maybe it will someday, but until then any speculation about how the universe was created and what lies beyond does not have any rational basis. Maybe we can use logic as a basis (what I tried to do using Occam's Razor), but there's no way to know whether our rules of logic apply. Whatever's beyond our universe might be so totally different that not only our logic might not apply, but that we might very well call it "divine" even though it might be totally naturalistic, but just from another point of view.

I don't think there is any doubt involved and I don't think we need to go outside the Universe to hit that limitation.
 
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:


Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

Transubstantiation was one of the many miraculous things rejected in the Protestant Reformation 500 years ago.


And it has led to much violence and conflict. And transubstantiation even only became an "official" miracle about 800 years ago.

The violence and conflict was a result of the fundamental rift between Protestant and Catholic churches, which the rejection of miracles was a minor side-issue, the causes of the Reformation are well documented and not based upon belief or religious understanding, but on how the church was run - it was essentially a political revolution that not only created the Protestant religions, but also resulted in the Catholic Reformation where they went some way to putting their own house in order.
 
The Reformation was appropriated (by the various kings and princes of Europe) to break the political pan-European dominance of The Holy Roman Empire (evident by Catholic France joining the Protestant side during the Thirty Years War).
 
I know that religion and the Protestant/Catholic divide has been used as justification for violence ever since, but that is still political rather than spiritual.
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:




(the whole presentation is very, very interesting to watch and mostly deals with the educational system in the USA. This part of the presentation mainly deals with blasphemy, and transubstation in particular. I hope you'll give me the benefit of doubt and watch this, purely for entertainment. And if you find it interesting, watch the next part too, because the waver story is continued there.)
Always entertaining and I agree completely with what he says, but I still don't "approve" of his approach, or his justification for his approach - it is not necessary to provoke or attack to get your message over. The question I would ask is what did he do to aid Webster Cook in his original protest (over the use of Student Funds) after appropriating that particular Eucharist protest for his own purposes?
 
It was worth watching part two to see that other atheists can go "Woa! That's not helping the cause..."
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 03 2010 at 11:31
Originally posted by Dean Dean wrote:

The Reformation was appropriated (by the various kings and princes of Europe) to break the political pan-European dominance of The Holy Roman Empire (evident by Catholic France joining the Protestant side during the Thirty Years War).
 
I know that religion and the Protestant/Catholic divide has been used as justification for violence ever since, but that is still political rather than spiritual.


I seriously think that you're wrong here. Sure, religion has been used as a tool for leaders to get people to fight for their purpose. Still, individual people who are committing these acts of violence are deeply convinced that they are doing good deeds in the name of their God. Are you seriously telling me that Catholics who blow up abortion clinics are motivated politically? Or that the guy who tried to kill the Danish caricaturist yesterday was doing so to help his country on a political level, or because they're poor? Is Kashmir such an asset economically or politically that Hindus and Muslims are fighting over it to the death, even risking nuclear annihilation?

No. This is all done in the name of faith. Some people may be pulling strings behind the scenes, but the actual deeds of violence are religiously motivated, and I find it extremely difficult to find another motivator that would be nearly as potent as religion has proved to be.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: January 03 2010 at 12:04
Here's another video that I found quite amusing ... watch at your own discretion. It's only about 4 minutes long, and we have been mentioning Occam's Razor a lot here ... so it's even on topic.Big smile


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