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jampa17 View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 18:36
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by JLocke JLocke wrote:



Reminds me of a friend of mine who is essentially an atheist, morally an agnostic, yet gets upset with me when I 'declare' myself as a non-believer. He says he is 'nothing', and thinks that if everybody just stopped talking about it, everything will go away. 


I've never understood how people can be Agnostics. Like former Christians who are no longer sure which Christian denomination is the right one, but they still believe that the Christian God exists. IMO that would be a bit of a paranoid state of mind ... there is a god, and he'll probably punish you for not following the right path, kind of like a lose-lose situation.

They should ask themselves: If there was a God, and he wanted us to behave a certain way, wouldn't he give us some better clues? Are we really to believe that He would allow that His books contain so many errors and contradictions? One gospel says that you should follow all the old testament rules (including circumcision), the other says that you *must not* follow these rules.

In the light of all that, I don't understand how people can prefer the conclusion that there is a God but we can't know what he wants of us to the much simpler conclusion that there probably isn't any god, and even though today billions of people are worshipers, they're as obviously wrong as those who worshiped Zeus or Apollo. When you read the bible vertically (as Bart Ehrman describes in Jesus, Interrupted) and look at how the books of the new testament were written and by whom, and you see that the stories were in (mouth to mouth) circulations for decades until they were written down ... you see that it's a human creation all the way. It shows.
 
Oh, that's easy Mike... they keep believing in God but lost their faith on the leaders of the religions... there's no too much problem with that, but as usual, you seem to be not able to understand others people's point of views. Agnostics generally, depends on them, believe in God and they find the Bible quite accurate (no matter your silly picking about circumcisions and other stuff that you don't know well) but they don't like the methods of the religions. Maybe they feel that some decisions are bad and that's why the keep believing. Because they understand the message, but dislike the messenger...
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 18:39
Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:



Here's my question to all the Atheists who are criticizing me here: Why are you blowing this way out of proportion, exaggerating any point I make to the extreme? If you want to keep your Atheism to yourself and leave the floor to the religious people - fine, but please don't demand that I do the same.

Exactly the same I demand from religious people: keep your beliefs to yourself. 

Sorry, but as long as children's genitalia are being mutilated, women are being stoned to death in the middle-east, cults are using the bible as a means of control, protests are being held at dead soldier's funerals saying ''God hates fags'', the pope preaches against using condoms, texas pushes to re-write history, public institutions are violated, schools are pushed into teaching adam and eve as 'science', gay couples are persecuted for wanting to marry, the ten commandments are forced into courthouses, televangelists steal money from the gullible, hate crimes are committed against homosexuals, etc.

I won't keep my opinions to myself. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 18:40
Originally posted by jampa17 jampa17 wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by JLocke JLocke wrote:



Reminds me of a friend of mine who is essentially an atheist, morally an agnostic, yet gets upset with me when I 'declare' myself as a non-believer. He says he is 'nothing', and thinks that if everybody just stopped talking about it, everything will go away. 


I've never understood how people can be Agnostics. Like former Christians who are no longer sure which Christian denomination is the right one, but they still believe that the Christian God exists. IMO that would be a bit of a paranoid state of mind ... there is a god, and he'll probably punish you for not following the right path, kind of like a lose-lose situation.

They should ask themselves: If there was a God, and he wanted us to behave a certain way, wouldn't he give us some better clues? Are we really to believe that He would allow that His books contain so many errors and contradictions? One gospel says that you should follow all the old testament rules (including circumcision), the other says that you *must not* follow these rules.

In the light of all that, I don't understand how people can prefer the conclusion that there is a God but we can't know what he wants of us to the much simpler conclusion that there probably isn't any god, and even though today billions of people are worshipers, they're as obviously wrong as those who worshiped Zeus or Apollo. When you read the bible vertically (as Bart Ehrman describes in Jesus, Interrupted) and look at how the books of the new testament were written and by whom, and you see that the stories were in (mouth to mouth) circulations for decades until they were written down ... you see that it's a human creation all the way. It shows.
 
Oh, that's easy Mike... they keep believing in God but lost their faith on the leaders of the religions... there's no too much problem with that, but as usual, you seem to be not able to understand others people's point of views. Agnostics generally, depends on them, believe in God and they find the Bible quite accurate (no matter your silly picking about circumcisions and other stuff that you don't know well) but they don't like the methods of the religions. Maybe they feel that some decisions are bad and that's why the keep believing. Because they understand the message, but dislike the messenger...
 
 

He just wrote an entire paragraph stating how full of error the bible is, and you ignored it. Yet you are the one who tells him that HE is the one who refuses to listen to reason? LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 18:43
Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

 
Whenever you find something that works wonderfully for you, you need to let it be known to the world. That's good a few times, but then it gets old. People here are not going to change it seems. And the great discussion that you probably want was had a long time ago in one of those other threads.... 

Something that seems to have escaped people's grasps, today . . . 

This forum gets new members all. the. time. Not everyone knows about the past threads, nor feel like seeking them out. Reinvigorating a discussion about ANY topic for the newcomers seems like a fine idea to me. 


Edited by JLocke - July 06 2010 at 18:43
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 18:43
Originally posted by JLocke JLocke wrote:

Originally posted by The T The T wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:



Here's my question to all the Atheists who are criticizing me here: Why are you blowing this way out of proportion, exaggerating any point I make to the extreme? If you want to keep your Atheism to yourself and leave the floor to the religious people - fine, but please don't demand that I do the same.

Exactly the same I demand from religious people: keep your beliefs to yourself. 

Sorry, but as long as children's genitalia are being mutilated, women are being stoned to death in the middle-east, cults are using the bible as a means of control, protests are being held at dead soldier's funerals saying ''God hates fags'', the pope preaches against using condoms, texas pushes to re-write history, public institutions are violated, schools are pushed into teaching adam and eve as 'science', gay couples are persecuted for wanting to marry, the ten commandments are forced into courthouses, televangelists steal money from the gullible, hate crimes are committed against homosexuals, etc.

I won't keep my opinions to myself. 

You are talking about some of the worst extremes of theism, some aberrations that I abhor as much as you do. 

We assume we won't stop any of that talking about it like 5 times over in PA... 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 18:45
Originally posted by JLocke JLocke wrote:

Originally posted by jampa17 jampa17 wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by JLocke JLocke wrote:



Reminds me of a friend of mine who is essentially an atheist, morally an agnostic, yet gets upset with me when I 'declare' myself as a non-believer. He says he is 'nothing', and thinks that if everybody just stopped talking about it, everything will go away. 


I've never understood how people can be Agnostics. Like former Christians who are no longer sure which Christian denomination is the right one, but they still believe that the Christian God exists. IMO that would be a bit of a paranoid state of mind ... there is a god, and he'll probably punish you for not following the right path, kind of like a lose-lose situation.

They should ask themselves: If there was a God, and he wanted us to behave a certain way, wouldn't he give us some better clues? Are we really to believe that He would allow that His books contain so many errors and contradictions? One gospel says that you should follow all the old testament rules (including circumcision), the other says that you *must not* follow these rules.

In the light of all that, I don't understand how people can prefer the conclusion that there is a God but we can't know what he wants of us to the much simpler conclusion that there probably isn't any god, and even though today billions of people are worshipers, they're as obviously wrong as those who worshiped Zeus or Apollo. When you read the bible vertically (as Bart Ehrman describes in Jesus, Interrupted) and look at how the books of the new testament were written and by whom, and you see that the stories were in (mouth to mouth) circulations for decades until they were written down ... you see that it's a human creation all the way. It shows.
 
Oh, that's easy Mike... they keep believing in God but lost their faith on the leaders of the religions... there's no too much problem with that, but as usual, you seem to be not able to understand others people's point of views. Agnostics generally, depends on them, believe in God and they find the Bible quite accurate (no matter your silly picking about circumcisions and other stuff that you don't know well) but they don't like the methods of the religions. Maybe they feel that some decisions are bad and that's why the keep believing. Because they understand the message, but dislike the messenger...
 
 

He just wrote an entire paragraph stating how full of error the bible is, and you ignored it. Yet you are the one who tells him that HE is the one who refuses to listen to reason? LOL
 
You know what is funny? That Mike and you think that is so easy to get to that conclusion that you refuses to understand all the people that just can buy your great "answer". Why I should bother to say about his brilliant "truth"? If that so evident, why people are not leaving the churches for this great Truth that Mike is saying...?
 
Back to the point, do you really believe that posting in these countless threads will change a bit the believing of believers...?
 
I found that funny...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 18:46
This thread needs more Apatheism.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 18:50
Originally posted by jampa17 jampa17 wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by JLocke JLocke wrote:



Reminds me of a friend of mine who is essentially an atheist, morally an agnostic, yet gets upset with me when I 'declare' myself as a non-believer. He says he is 'nothing', and thinks that if everybody just stopped talking about it, everything will go away. 


I've never understood how people can be Agnostics. Like former Christians who are no longer sure which Christian denomination is the right one, but they still believe that the Christian God exists. IMO that would be a bit of a paranoid state of mind ... there is a god, and he'll probably punish you for not following the right path, kind of like a lose-lose situation.

They should ask themselves: If there was a God, and he wanted us to behave a certain way, wouldn't he give us some better clues? Are we really to believe that He would allow that His books contain so many errors and contradictions? One gospel says that you should follow all the old testament rules (including circumcision), the other says that you *must not* follow these rules.

In the light of all that, I don't understand how people can prefer the conclusion that there is a God but we can't know what he wants of us to the much simpler conclusion that there probably isn't any god, and even though today billions of people are worshipers, they're as obviously wrong as those who worshiped Zeus or Apollo. When you read the bible vertically (as Bart Ehrman describes in Jesus, Interrupted) and look at how the books of the new testament were written and by whom, and you see that the stories were in (mouth to mouth) circulations for decades until they were written down ... you see that it's a human creation all the way. It shows.
 
Oh, that's easy Mike... they keep believing in God but lost their faith on the leaders of the religions... there's no too much problem with that, but as usual, you seem to be not able to understand others people's point of views. Agnostics generally, depends on them, believe in God and they find the Bible quite accurate (no matter your silly picking about circumcisions and other stuff that you don't know well) but they don't like the methods of the religions. Maybe they feel that some decisions are bad and that's why the keep believing. Because they understand the message, but dislike the messenger...
 
 


From the gospel of Matthew you can get the impression that the laws of the Jews should be kept, while in John as well as Paul's letters it explicitly says that those laws are not to be kept. Please don't say that I don't know these things well ... I'm sure that Robert (Epignosis) knows the Bible better than I do, but reading about it has become somewhat of a hobby lately and I would say that I'm qualified to at least say something about it which merits a more serious response.

The Bible contains many serious contradictions that are not easily reconcilable. Even if you reject all "leaders" and try to base your life on the Bible alone, you'll find that for many important situations one verse tells you to do one thing, and another tells you to do the exact opposite.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 18:50
Wouldn't it be funny if the whole debate one day ended like the wave / particle debate about light? Wink Actually my "God" model is an attempt to end the debate in this kind of way. 


A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 18:51
^ Which practical implication does your religion have?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 18:52
Originally posted by Any Colour You Like Any Colour You Like wrote:

This thread needs more Apatheism.


Luckily, by this definition most religious people are also practical Atheists. I just hope that there are enough to withstand the rise of Islam in the next 50-100 years.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 18:59
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by jampa17 jampa17 wrote:

Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

Originally posted by JLocke JLocke wrote:



Reminds me of a friend of mine who is essentially an atheist, morally an agnostic, yet gets upset with me when I 'declare' myself as a non-believer. He says he is 'nothing', and thinks that if everybody just stopped talking about it, everything will go away. 


I've never understood how people can be Agnostics. Like former Christians who are no longer sure which Christian denomination is the right one, but they still believe that the Christian God exists. IMO that would be a bit of a paranoid state of mind ... there is a god, and he'll probably punish you for not following the right path, kind of like a lose-lose situation.

They should ask themselves: If there was a God, and he wanted us to behave a certain way, wouldn't he give us some better clues? Are we really to believe that He would allow that His books contain so many errors and contradictions? One gospel says that you should follow all the old testament rules (including circumcision), the other says that you *must not* follow these rules.

In the light of all that, I don't understand how people can prefer the conclusion that there is a God but we can't know what he wants of us to the much simpler conclusion that there probably isn't any god, and even though today billions of people are worshipers, they're as obviously wrong as those who worshiped Zeus or Apollo. When you read the bible vertically (as Bart Ehrman describes in Jesus, Interrupted) and look at how the books of the new testament were written and by whom, and you see that the stories were in (mouth to mouth) circulations for decades until they were written down ... you see that it's a human creation all the way. It shows.
 
Oh, that's easy Mike... they keep believing in God but lost their faith on the leaders of the religions... there's no too much problem with that, but as usual, you seem to be not able to understand others people's point of views. Agnostics generally, depends on them, believe in God and they find the Bible quite accurate (no matter your silly picking about circumcisions and other stuff that you don't know well) but they don't like the methods of the religions. Maybe they feel that some decisions are bad and that's why the keep believing. Because they understand the message, but dislike the messenger...
 
 


From the gospel of Matthew you can get the impression that the laws of the Jews should be kept, while in John as well as Paul's letters it explicitly says that those laws are not to be kept. Please don't say that I don't know these things well ... I'm sure that Robert (Epignosis) knows the Bible better than I do, but reading about it has become somewhat of a hobby lately and I would say that I'm qualified to at least say something about it which merits a more serious response.

The Bible contains many serious contradictions that are not easily reconcilable. Even if you reject all "leaders" and try to base your life on the Bible alone, you'll find that for many important situations one verse tells you to do one thing, and another tells you to do the exact opposite.
 
This has been answered a thousand times in the other threads Mike. At least catholics, which is the religion I know from inside out, we have a little thing called Catechism, which is the wisdom of our Church through these 2 thousand years, so, in base of most the studiers of the Bible, we know how to interpret and know where the Bible could be refering to something different to what YOU alone would think.
 
We have good guiders in this matters, Iván has explain it as "ex Cathedra" explanation that the Pope can bring about any topic. You don't analyse the Bible, you search for contradictions to try to prove your point. We, with the knowledge of 2 thousand years of studies, knows a little better how to understand it...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 19:14
^ if that's what you want to believe - go ahead. Keep your head in the sand - while those "guiders" know full well that what people like Bart Ehrman say is true. And if you disagree out of a knee-jerk reaction, please find out who Bart Ehrman is before you do that. I think you'd be surprised.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 19:17
jampa17, let me ask you something . . . 

Do you really believe that a man was able to fit two of every species of land animal onto a boat?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 19:29
Originally posted by Mr ProgFreak Mr ProgFreak wrote:

^ Which practical implication does your religion have?

awareness of and respect towards nature and all that follows from it. It is a kind of ecologic religion. treat every living being with respect, even if at times it is difficult, like when there is this annoying fly in the room: this does not mean we are vegetarians though; I believe vegetarianism is unhealthy.
the human body clearly is that of an omnivore, and one should live according to that. but if an animal or parts of it are eaten, then we thank it and appease its spirit. this took quite an effort in the beginning, but now it has become second nature to us, and our kids don't know anything else and are very earnest at it


Edited by BaldJean - July 07 2010 at 01:36


A shot of me as High Priestess of Gaia during our fall festival. Ceterum censeo principiis obsta
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 19:41
Originally posted by JLocke JLocke wrote:

jampa17, let me ask you something . . . 

Do you really believe that a man was able to fit two of every species of land animal onto a boat?


of course that wouldn't be possible, but it misses the point of the Noah story and doesn't do justice the probabilty that if floods did occur it's probable someone would load their animals (and as many others they could find) into a big ship.  I am not religious but It seems to me the Noah legend is one of the more credible stories to the extent that it is quite plausible, even likely.

If one is going to question the Bible why not question the improbable things rather than the credible ones.  The dispute is whether God told Noah to do it, not whether someone, his family and livestock might build a big ship to survive a flood.



 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 19:44
Originally posted by JLocke JLocke wrote:

 

http://www.phy.duke.edu/~rgb/Beowulf/axioms/axioms/node4.html Like I said . . . 'apparently'. I honestly don't know how serious this guy is being, or how much truth is behind it. 

Well I guess its not really fair of me to judge Hume based on that write up. I don't care for the author's tone or prose, but more importantly his argument isn't really all that substantive and seems to suffer from some flaws in reasoning and overt red herrings.

Guess what I'm saying is I wouldn't try to get much out of it. I'll reference the original source some time in the future. The overall framework of the argument seems very compelling, but I'd think less comprehensive than we're led to believe.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 19:44
Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

Originally posted by JLocke JLocke wrote:

jampa17, let me ask you something . . . 

Do you really believe that a man was able to fit two of every species of land animal onto a boat?


of course that wouldn't be possible, but it misses the point of the Noah story and doesn't do justice the probabilty that if floods did occur it's probable someone would load their animals (and as many others they could find) into a big ship.  I am not religious but It seems to me the Noah legend is one of the more credible stories to the extent that it is quite plausible, even likely.

If one is going to question the Bible why not question the improbable things rather than the credible ones.  The dispute is whether God told Noah to do it, not whether someone, his family and livestock might build a big ship to survive a flood.



 

Ridiculous. None of the story makes sense, if you actually read it. It doesn't just say 'livestock, a guy and his family,' it says that God told Noah to build a boat, and fit two of every species of animal onto it. I think for someone like jampa17, who is a catholic, it is a very valid question to see if he really believes such a thing really happened. If the bible is indisputable, then he should have no problem answering me. 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 20:01
Originally posted by JLocke JLocke wrote:

Originally posted by Atavachron Atavachron wrote:

Originally posted by JLocke JLocke wrote:

jampa17, let me ask you something . . . 

Do you really believe that a man was able to fit two of every species of land animal onto a boat?


of course that wouldn't be possible, but it misses the point of the Noah story and doesn't do justice the probabilty that if floods did occur it's probable someone would load their animals (and as many others they could find) into a big ship.  I am not religious but It seems to me the Noah legend is one of the more credible stories to the extent that it is quite plausible, even likely.

If one is going to question the Bible why not question the improbable things rather than the credible ones.  The dispute is whether God told Noah to do it, not whether someone, his family and livestock might build a big ship to survive a flood.


Ridiculous. None of the story makes sense, if you actually read it. It doesn't just say 'livestock, a guy and his family,' it says that God told Noah to build a boat, and fit two of every species of animal onto it. I think for someone like jampa17, who is a catholic, it is a very valid question to see if he really believes such a thing really happened. If the bible is indisputable, then he should have no problem answering me. 


oh fine, next you'll tell me the Ararat Anomaly is just a big hunk of wood

   Wink



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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 06 2010 at 20:04
LOL
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