Theism vs. Atheism ... will it ever be settled? |
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The T
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: October 16 2006 Location: FL, USA Status: Offline Points: 17493 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 14:18 | |||
Hockey of all sports? At least you didn't say baseball...
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Vibrationbaby
Forum Senior Member Joined: February 13 2004 Status: Offline Points: 6898 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 14:22 | |||
Actualluly I teach McGill University students and play in their soft pitch leuge.where everyone has to hit. A lot of drinking goes on. More drinking than playing the game.
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Slartibartfast
Collaborator Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam Joined: April 29 2006 Location: Atlantais Status: Offline Points: 29630 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 15:25 | |||
Eases the pain if you get hit in the head with a ball. |
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 18:03 | |||
The problem is that two thousand years ago earthquakes and floods led people to create religions, because they didn't understand the forces of nature. Today we can explain all that, but religion lingers on. You may pride yourself in being an enlightened Catholic, but that doesn't change the fact that your religion is a relict from the bronze age that can only be applied to the modern world by massive re-interpretation and an erosion of the values that characterized it in the beginning. |
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Adams Bolero
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 07 2009 Location: Ireland Status: Offline Points: 679 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 18:15 | |||
But its values are based on the teachings of Christ who preached love and forgiveness and that is something thats always relevant. The moment the Catholic Church forgets this it will cease to be a part of the Christian faith but I don’t think it has reached that stage yet. Can’t you express your opinions and beliefs without insulting the beliefs of those that disagree with you? How can you expect a rational, friendly debate with a believer if you call their religion a ‘’relict from the Bronze Age.’’ Edited by Adams Bolero - July 27 2010 at 18:17 |
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''Nobody realizes that some people expend tremendous energy merely to be normal.''
- Albert Camus |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 18:19 | |||
^ The bronze age was 3,000 years ago and was long gone by the time Christianity and Catholicism arose, especially in the Middle East where they entered the Iron Age some half a millennia before the Europeans. Religions adapt and change to reflect the change in Human history/development, that's why there are so many of them and why they keep dividing and growing.
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What?
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 18:23 | |||
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What?
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Textbook
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 08 2009 Status: Offline Points: 3281 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 18:34 | |||
I'm tired of theists hiding behind this "disagreeing with our beliefs isn't friendly and nice" nonsense. How are we to have meaningful discussions on anything if all we do is worry about being PC? I still don't get why sensitive theists are readings a thread specifically for people to argue atheism versus religion.
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Adams Bolero
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 07 2009 Location: Ireland Status: Offline Points: 679 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 19:00 | |||
I have no problem with people disagreeing with my beliefs. It’s part of our human nature that we all have different viewpoints and beliefs. My problem is that Mike is being very patronising to religious believers by calling religion a relic from the past. We can have a meaningful discussion on religion without one side insulting the other. There is a good case for believing in God and for not believing. That is why threads like this will never be resolved. All I ask is mutual understanding and respect on both sides. The reason I’m reading the thread as atheism v religion is because that’s the name of the thread! Unless you see a big difference between religion and theism? Edited by Adams Bolero - July 27 2010 at 19:02 |
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''Nobody realizes that some people expend tremendous energy merely to be normal.''
- Albert Camus |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 19:10 | |||
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What?
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DisgruntledPorcupine
Forum Senior Member Joined: January 16 2010 Location: Thunder Bay CAN Status: Offline Points: 4395 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 19:11 | |||
Hockey > all sports.
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Textbook
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 08 2009 Status: Offline Points: 3281 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 19:20 | |||
Yeah I think what happened as AB read as an insult what Dean meant as a statement of fact (at least in his view) that religion actually is a relic from the Bronze Age. He wasn't being derogatory.
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 19:30 | |||
^ it was Mike who said it, not me.
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What?
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Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19557 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 21:34 | |||
Dean, I posted already a link about the non-literal interptretation of the Old Testament, as a fact the Church recognises that the Old Testament doesn't have historical accuracy.
The Old Testament is the revelation for the original péople of God, the Hebrew race. The New Testament is the revelatuion for the New People of God, the Christians, and as Jesus said, two Commandments are the most important for us:
And if this wasn't enough:
The message is radically different to the one in the Old Testament, because Jesus, came and changed it, this time we don't get the message from third persons who got it after oral tradition and centuries of oral tradition and proto writings, we get it from persons who were with Christ like Matthew.
So our Bronze Age texts according to the Church are referential in many aspects and must not be taken literally.
Iván |
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jampa17
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2009 Location: Guatemala Status: Offline Points: 6802 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 21:58 | |||
Well, talking about what I believe is offensive, is Mike calling our believes "Idiotic, stupid and ridiculous". That's offensive. To call something a relic from the Bronze Age, for me is better. As long as the message remains important -even in the plastic age according to Dean- then you can think it was something really important don't you think..?
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Textbook
Forum Senior Member Joined: October 08 2009 Status: Offline Points: 3281 |
Posted: July 27 2010 at 22:18 | |||
I also have a huge problem with the "don't take the texts literally" thing. How could you not take the word of god, if this is indeed what these texts are, literally? How dare you interpret for god and come to subjective decisions about what he meant, especially as a believer? I find the "don't take it literally" thing is entirely an excuse for priests to jettiison embarrassing portions of scripture or to use them to support various agendas.
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Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: July 28 2010 at 00:53 | |||
Last time I checked, two thirds of the Bible still consisted of the old testament ... and many Christians are still citing the ten commandments as binding rules for their lives. Christianity is based on the Bible. Modern Catholicism (for example) has progressed in some aspects (e.g. slavery, racism) but most of its Bronze Age roots are still firmly connected so to speak ... even with all the enlightenment that has taken place, the God of the Bible is still supposed to be this supernatural entity which watches over us, punishes us when we misbehave, created this world ... the latter is a good example. Catholics have come to accept that evolution is a fact, but still insist that "God helped it along the way", or that it was how God created us. Instead of accepting that the book of Genesis was a Bronze Age attempt of figuring out how the world works, and discarding that idea as the superstition that it was (similar to hunter/gatherer tribes worshiping the sun and the moon as gods), instead of all that most Christians insist on the idea that their God must have created this world, if not literally like in the book of Genesis then at least allegorically. Religions started out as ill advised attempts to figure out how the world works - back in the Bronze Age virtually everyone was superstitious, religions were simply ways to organize the superstitious beliefs. Today we know better ... even if you're a religious fanatic (which I know you're not, Dean, I'm speaking generally of believers), if you've come so far as to read this post then you know, deep within your mind, that this concept that you believe in and which you so fervently defend has some serious flaws. But, instead of dismissing it on behalf on these flaws, you soldier on and keep making up excuses and rationalizations for these flaws, so that you can continue holding the belief ... typically because it makes you feel better, and of course also because admitting that you might have been wrong about something this important for all your life would make you feel very uncomfortable. |
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: July 28 2010 at 02:26 | |||
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What?
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Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: July 28 2010 at 08:38 | |||
That's not really the response to the "relic" comment I was fishing for, to say the message is important only means it is important to you and doesn't address what the message actually is or how it is as relevant today as it was in the 1st century of the common era.
For any non-believer, (and I would go as far as to say, a majority of people who tick the appropriate religion box on the census form through habit or misplaced cultural identity rather than through belief or true religious conviction), that the message (whatever it is) doesn't need to be dressed up as a religion (and its associated rituals and mantras) to have any relevance, meaning or importance.
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What?
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seventhsojourn
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: December 11 2009 Location: . Status: Offline Points: 4006 |
Posted: July 28 2010 at 09:22 | |||
@Textbook,
Ignorant, delusional, fanatical... these comments aren't politically incorrect, they're just plain wrong. I don't take any personal offence, but they are nonetheless offensive. Religion is not a delusion, ignorant in this thread is emotionally loaded (and its continued use could be seen as trolling), and on Page 58 of this thread Mike still calls religious people fanatics:
Religions started out as ill advised attempts to figure out how the world works - back in the Bronze Age virtually everyone was superstitious, religions were simply ways to organize the superstitious beliefs. Today we know better ... even if you're a religious fanatic (which I know you're not, Dean, I'm speaking generally of believers), if you've come so far as to read this post then you know, deep within your mind, that this concept that you believe in and which you so fervently defend has some serious flaws. But, instead of dismissing it on behalf on these flaws, you soldier on and keep making up excuses and rationalizations for these flaws, so that you can continue holding the belief ... typically because it makes you feel better, and of course also because admitting that you might have been wrong about something this important for all your life would make you feel very uncomfortable.
For myself, I have no problem admitting I might be wrong... although, as ever, Mike is certain that he is correct and tells me what I must know. I'm not going to dig up the old arguments about delusions and ignorance (unless you want me to!), but Mike makes no bones about offending religious people. Why it should be acceptable to offend people for their religious beliefs is a mystery to me, but surely I'm entitled to express an opinion on it. Edited by seventhsojourn - July 28 2010 at 09:23 |
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