Did the Red Sea Part?
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Non-believers don't have to prove anything. If you say statement A, you have to back it up. Everyone else does not have to back !A up.
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Edmundisme wrote:
Atheism isn't the lack of a belief in God. It is the acting belief that he does not exist.
It is both. Atheism means "without theism" - NOT "anti theism". Atheism in its purest sense is not a belief - it is disbelief! If it's summer and you don't see snow falling down, would it be reasonable to assume there is snow on the ground? There is no justification to believe that there is snow on the ground. That is EXACTLY how an atheist thinks about theism (supernaturalism to be exact). Just as you don't believe in Norse mythology, I do not believe in your god.
Edmundisme wrote:
How is does your belief require less faith than mine?
Because it is YOU who is making an assertion here. Had you not been around claiming that god(s) exists, atheists wouldn't have argued. The burden of proof is on you.
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Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:
It is both. Atheism means "without theism" - NOT "anti theism". Atheism in its purest sense is not a belief - it is disbelief!
It is a subtle but important difference. In my experience, atheists are not unconvinced that God exists, rather they are convinced he does not. The positions might seem similar, but they are drastically different and so, in my opinion, they each deserve their own word.
Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:
If it's summer and you don't see snow falling down, would it be reasonable to assume there is snow on the ground?
Sure. It would be reasonable to assume that. But could you know it for sure? Would you put $500 on it? What if someone drove into the hills and dumped snow on your lawn as a practical joke? (Admittedly this is contrived, but it makes my point.) Furthermore, you use an example of evidence we both agree on. We both agree that a sunny summer day suggests there is no snow on the ground. However, we disagree on what is considered evidence of God. I belief that life, nature, personality, laws of morality, are all evidence of God.
Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:
Edmundisme wrote: How is does your belief require less faith than mine? Because it is YOU who is making an assertion here. Had you not been around claiming that god(s) exists, atheists wouldn't have argued. The burden of proof is on you.
Are you sure theists claimed the existence of God before atheists claimed his non-existence? Also, most atheists I've had discussions with assert that there is no God. So, I think assertions are being made by theists and (most) atheists.
Edmundisme wrote:
atheists are not unconvinced that God exists, rather they are convinced he does not. The positions might seem similar, but they are drastically different and so, in my opinion, they each deserve their own word.
Convinced as in assuming that there is no snow on the ground a sunny summer day, or that there in fact is snow on the ground a winter day when snow is in the air. It's all about reason.
Edmundisme wrote:
Would you put $500 on it? What if someone drove into the hills and dumped snow on your lawn as a practical joke? (Admittedly this is contrived, but it makes my point.)
No it does not make your point. You see, this is all testable. It is science. You can challenge my theory! I cannot challenge yours, no matte how hard I try. Not because your logic is super tight, but rather because you've got short circuits in your logic.
Edmundisme wrote:
I belief that life, nature, personality, laws of morality, are all evidence of God.
Do you have any evidence for your believing that those are evidence? See what I mean with short circuit logic? You short circuit your logic with god. You cannot back up what you say. I'd have to "take it on faith" - which I am not convinced/willing to do.
Edmundisme wrote:
Are you sure theists claimed the existence of God before atheists claimed his non-existence?
Frooobleknoooooblebabump does not exist!!!!!! No matter what someone in the future might say!!! How can you claim something not to exist if you don't believe in it, before anybody proposed its existence? Do you see the flaw in your logic?
Edmundisme wrote:
Also, most atheists I've had discussions with assert that there is no God.
Atheists are humans, just like theists. Hence they have emotions. Emotions make people assert. As an atheist, being confronted with theism as if it was some kind of truth, is very frustrating. I wonder what you'd think of me if I dedicated my life to the invisible pink camel living on the top of Mount Everest? Chances are that you'd assert that I'm wrong. I do not assert that there is no god. What I am saying though, is that it is highly unlikely that there exists anything supernatural. The only reasonable option is to live my life as if there is no god. I wish other people could see it
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Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:
Norse mythology,
One of my cockatoos is named Loki.
_________________________________________ You can't fix stupid, but you can medicate crazy.
Is he naughty? :) (In case you're wondering, the nordic pronounciation of Loki is Lou-keh)
-- Raaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!
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Edmundisme wrote:
Well, if you believe there are no absolute truths, the debate is pointless. I assume there are absolutes.
That is impossible. Every religious person believes absolutely in his or her religion and no other. But they cannot all be absolute truths. However, the key word here is not absolute, but believe. Belief and absolute are contradictory.
Edmundisme wrote:
So, you point out that "lack of proof cannot be proof itself" is simply my belief. Do you believe otherwise?
Go read about Cantor sets and uncountability and all. That should prove to be an interesting read for you. Theirs also an Axion of Choice in mathematics that holds true in some sets and not in others. Unfortunately, this is one area of mathematics that deals with no proof but choice.
Edmundisme wrote:
Again, atheism is not a lack of belief in God, it is an active belief that God does not exist. There is a difference.
No it's not. An atheist is someone who is not a theist. Nothing more. Theists are trying to redefine atheistism to mock them by way of saying they believe in not believing. However, if they say they don't believe not for lack of believing, but for lack of proof, you have to accept that they know themselves well and what they're talking about.
Edmundisme wrote:
If we can pick and choose definitions for the words we use, then communication (nevermind debate) is impossible. If we don't agree on the definition of a word, then that word can't help convey meaning, it can only hinder it. The actual definition of atheism is the "belief or doctine that there is no God". If this is not what you mean when you say "atheism" then atheism isn't the right word to use.
That's only because you're picking where your definitions come from. That is the disagreement we're having. If we define something the way someone else wants it and not as how we see it, then obviously we'd never win an argument. But if an atheist tells you he doesn't believe in God for lack of proof, then don't make it out to be a religion. Otherwise, there's no such thing as having no religion. Those who have no feeling one way or the other never gave it much thought to be defined, but everybody can give you a definite answer if put on the spot. By your argument, everybody is thus religious. :wtf:
Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:
That is impossible. Every religious person believes absolutely in his or her religion and no other. But they cannot all be absolute truths..
I didn't say my beliefs are absolutes. I said absolutes exist. If a thing is true, it is so regardless of personal opinion on the matter. I stated that lack of proof is not itself proof. You dismissed that as merely my belief. I suggest it is a logical certainty. Furthermore, when Columbus theorized that the world was round, was that absolutely true even though most others were "absolutely" certain it was flat?
Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:
Belief and absolute are contradictory
I'm not sure what you're saying here. They are contradictory? So if something is absolute it cannot be believed in? Or if something is believed in it cannot be absolute?
Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:
Go read about Cantor sets and uncountability and all. That should prove to be an interesting read for you. Theirs also an Axion of Choice in mathematics that holds true in some sets and not in others. Unfortunately, this is one area of mathematics that deals with no proof but choice.
I have no idea what you're talking about. However, based on logic, I would highly doubt that even in this context lack of proof is itself proof.
Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:
An atheist is someone who is not a theist. Nothing more.
By your definition of the word, I suppose you are correct. However, your definition is not the prevalent one in my experience. At this point, understanding we mean different things, it is no longer worthwhile to debate the definition of the word.
Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:
That's only because you're picking where your definitions come from
I picked a dictionary. That seemed like the best place to get an unbiased definition. I didn't scour the net looking for a definition that fit my purpose. You, however, got your definition from an atheist's website. So which of us is "picking" where our definitions come from?
Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:
if an atheist tells you he doesn't believe in God for lack of proof, then don't make it out to be a religion. Otherwise, there's no such thing as having no religion
I don't think
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Edmundisme wrote:
Consider the implications of the answers to the questions "does God exists?" and "do unicorns exist?" and they suddenly lose their simmilarity.
I honestly don't see your point. I don't see the loss of similarity. For the rest we can merge the separate threads[^]
You don't think that whether or not God exists is an important question? More important than whether or not unicorns exist? What are the personal implications of whether or not unicorns exist? I suggest there are none. On the other hand, what are the personal implications of whether or not God exists? I suggest there are many. However, if you don't accept that the existence of God has serious personal implications then this discussion is pointless. But I surmise that even most who don't believe in God admit the answer (whatever it is) has serious implications.
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Edmundisme wrote:
atheists are not unconvinced that God exists, rather they are convinced he does not. The positions might seem similar, but they are drastically different and so, in my opinion, they each deserve their own word.
Convinced as in assuming that there is no snow on the ground a sunny summer day, or that there in fact is snow on the ground a winter day when snow is in the air. It's all about reason.
Edmundisme wrote:
Would you put $500 on it? What if someone drove into the hills and dumped snow on your lawn as a practical joke? (Admittedly this is contrived, but it makes my point.)
No it does not make your point. You see, this is all testable. It is science. You can challenge my theory! I cannot challenge yours, no matte how hard I try. Not because your logic is super tight, but rather because you've got short circuits in your logic.
Edmundisme wrote:
I belief that life, nature, personality, laws of morality, are all evidence of God.
Do you have any evidence for your believing that those are evidence? See what I mean with short circuit logic? You short circuit your logic with god. You cannot back up what you say. I'd have to "take it on faith" - which I am not convinced/willing to do.
Edmundisme wrote:
Are you sure theists claimed the existence of God before atheists claimed his non-existence?
Frooobleknoooooblebabump does not exist!!!!!! No matter what someone in the future might say!!! How can you claim something not to exist if you don't believe in it, before anybody proposed its existence? Do you see the flaw in your logic?
Edmundisme wrote:
Also, most atheists I've had discussions with assert that there is no God.
Atheists are humans, just like theists. Hence they have emotions. Emotions make people assert. As an atheist, being confronted with theism as if it was some kind of truth, is very frustrating. I wonder what you'd think of me if I dedicated my life to the invisible pink camel living on the top of Mount Everest? Chances are that you'd assert that I'm wrong. I do not assert that there is no god. What I am saying though, is that it is highly unlikely that there exists anything supernatural. The only reasonable option is to live my life as if there is no god. I wish other people could see it
Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:
Edmundisme wrote: Would you put $500 on it? What if someone drove into the hills and dumped snow on your lawn as a practical joke? (Admittedly this is contrived, but it makes my point.) No it does not make your point. You see, this is all testable. It is science. You can challenge my theory! I cannot challenge yours, no matte how hard I try. Not because your logic is super tight, but rather because you've got short circuits in your logic.
It does make my point. My point is that evidence and proof are not the same thing. You have strong evidence that there is no snow on the ground. However, you can't prove it until you actually look at the ground.
Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:
Do you have any evidence for your believing that those are evidence? See what I mean with short circuit logic?
How is it any different for you? Do you have evidence that these things are not evidence? How is your position different than mine? I say these things are evidence, you say they are not. We each interpret the implication of these things differently. We've taken the same data and have drawn different conclusions. Regardless of whether or not his existence can be proven, what is illogical about God? How does God short-circuit my logic? If I say that God exists, that He wasn't created, and that He created all things - and I take this as my axiom on which all other beliefs depend, where does the logic break down? You may not think I'm right, but being right and being logical are not the same. You can logically draw a conclusion and still find that your conclusion is wrong.
Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:
Frooobleknoooooblebabump does not exist!!!!!! No matter what someone in the future might say!!! How can you claim something not to exist if you don't believe in it, before anybody proposed its existence? Do you see the flaw in your logic?
To directly assert that God does not exist does indeed require an existing idea of God. However, could the one who first thought of God been the one to first assert his non-existence? Furthermore, you can indirectly assert the non-existence of God with an assertion that does not require the idea of God. You could assert that Man is the greatest intelligence in the universe. This assertion is mutually exclusive to the assertion that God exists but does not first require the asserting that
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Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:
Edmundisme wrote: Would you put $500 on it? What if someone drove into the hills and dumped snow on your lawn as a practical joke? (Admittedly this is contrived, but it makes my point.) No it does not make your point. You see, this is all testable. It is science. You can challenge my theory! I cannot challenge yours, no matte how hard I try. Not because your logic is super tight, but rather because you've got short circuits in your logic.
It does make my point. My point is that evidence and proof are not the same thing. You have strong evidence that there is no snow on the ground. However, you can't prove it until you actually look at the ground.
Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:
Do you have any evidence for your believing that those are evidence? See what I mean with short circuit logic?
How is it any different for you? Do you have evidence that these things are not evidence? How is your position different than mine? I say these things are evidence, you say they are not. We each interpret the implication of these things differently. We've taken the same data and have drawn different conclusions. Regardless of whether or not his existence can be proven, what is illogical about God? How does God short-circuit my logic? If I say that God exists, that He wasn't created, and that He created all things - and I take this as my axiom on which all other beliefs depend, where does the logic break down? You may not think I'm right, but being right and being logical are not the same. You can logically draw a conclusion and still find that your conclusion is wrong.
Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:
Frooobleknoooooblebabump does not exist!!!!!! No matter what someone in the future might say!!! How can you claim something not to exist if you don't believe in it, before anybody proposed its existence? Do you see the flaw in your logic?
To directly assert that God does not exist does indeed require an existing idea of God. However, could the one who first thought of God been the one to first assert his non-existence? Furthermore, you can indirectly assert the non-existence of God with an assertion that does not require the idea of God. You could assert that Man is the greatest intelligence in the universe. This assertion is mutually exclusive to the assertion that God exists but does not first require the asserting that
Edmundisme wrote:
Just as you assert that theists are wrong.
You obviously don't comprehend what I write, or choose not to read it all. I will end this conversation right here, because this won't lead anywhere.
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Edmundisme wrote:
Just as you assert that theists are wrong.
You obviously don't comprehend what I write, or choose not to read it all. I will end this conversation right here, because this won't lead anywhere.
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OK, you are correct that you said that you do not assert that there is no God. However, you do assert that it is highly unlikely that there is a God. What about my rebuttal to your conclusion that my logic is flawed? I'm curious as you how you might respond to that.
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You don't think that whether or not God exists is an important question? More important than whether or not unicorns exist? What are the personal implications of whether or not unicorns exist? I suggest there are none. On the other hand, what are the personal implications of whether or not God exists? I suggest there are many. However, if you don't accept that the existence of God has serious personal implications then this discussion is pointless. But I surmise that even most who don't believe in God admit the answer (whatever it is) has serious implications.
Perhaps this conversation is pointless. I was not aware that we were discussing the personal implications of a belief in god. I thought we were talking about "atheism as religion" and in that context, the questions retain their similarity. -- modified at 17:55 Tuesday 3rd April, 2007
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Le Centriste wrote:
If atheism is a religion, then not collecting stamps is a hobby.
Atheists don't simply reject religion. They actively have a working theology, which makes that analogy a poor one. Saying "If atheism is a religion, then collecting coins is a hobby" would be more along the lines of reality.
You are absoltely correct. Otherwise, on what basis would they be able to differentiate right from wrong. That has to be based upon some kind of moral authority, and that moral authority can only come from the state. Thereby turning the state into an institution promoting one particular interpretation of morality - that of atheism.
Modern liberalism has never achieved anything other than giving Secularists something to feel morally superior about
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Perhaps this conversation is pointless. I was not aware that we were discussing the personal implications of a belief in god. I thought we were talking about "atheism as religion" and in that context, the questions retain their similarity. -- modified at 17:55 Tuesday 3rd April, 2007
I was responding to your assertion that a disbelief in unicorns is the same as a disbelief in God. I was simply making the point that even though on a simple level they are in someways similar, that one question has more serious implications that the other. So, although in some ways they are similar, in others they are very different. That's all. Also, I don't think I claimed that atheism is a religion (I suppose it would depend on the agreed-upon definitions of both words) but that it is a faith-based belief. Again, I suppose this depends on your definition of atheism.
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oilFactotum wrote:
Perhaps. But not believing in the existence of god is the same as not believing in the existence of unicorns.
Consider the implications of the answers to the questions "does God exists?" and "do unicorns exist?" and they suddenly lose their simmilarity.
oilFactotum wrote:
There is none. I happen to believe in god. Atheists do not believe god exists which is not the same as believing that god does not exists.
Atheism is not merely a lack of belief in God. Atheism is an active belief that God does not exist. I'm not sure what word best describes someone who neither believes that God exists or that he does not exist, but I think "agnostic" is what most people use to describe this position. Whatever it's called, it is not the same as atheism.
Edmundisme wrote:
Atheism is not merely a lack of belief in God. Atheism is an active belief that God does not exist.
Atheism can describe either position. a = without; theism = belief in god/gods Those who merely lack the belief in God are called weak atheists or atheist agnostics, those with an active disbelief are called strong atheists.
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I was responding to your assertion that a disbelief in unicorns is the same as a disbelief in God. I was simply making the point that even though on a simple level they are in someways similar, that one question has more serious implications that the other. So, although in some ways they are similar, in others they are very different. That's all. Also, I don't think I claimed that atheism is a religion (I suppose it would depend on the agreed-upon definitions of both words) but that it is a faith-based belief. Again, I suppose this depends on your definition of atheism.
Edmundisme wrote:
I was responding to your assertion that a disbelief in unicorns is the same as a disbelief in God.
In the context of atheism as faith based the two are the same.
Edmundisme wrote:
Also, I don't think I claimed that atheism is a religion (I suppose it would depend on the agreed-upon definitions of both words) but that it is a faith-based belief
I did misstate your position.
Edmundisme wrote:
Again, I suppose this depends on your definition of atheism.
I don't think it does. There is more than on definition and strong atheism may be considered faith based. But that is not the only definition. And we are have that discussion elsewhere, if you wish to continue it.
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Edmundisme wrote:
Atheism is not merely a lack of belief in God. Atheism is an active belief that God does not exist.
Atheism can describe either position. a = without; theism = belief in god/gods Those who merely lack the belief in God are called weak atheists or atheist agnostics, those with an active disbelief are called strong atheists.
I have been educated on this point in this thread. I thought "weak atheism" had its own word: agnosticism. It seems unfortunate that atheism is overloaded. But now that I know that, I can ask whether someone is a weak atheist or a strong atheist before entering into a discussion (these two positions seem drastically different to me). :)
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Edmundisme wrote:
I was responding to your assertion that a disbelief in unicorns is the same as a disbelief in God.
In the context of atheism as faith based the two are the same.
Edmundisme wrote:
Also, I don't think I claimed that atheism is a religion (I suppose it would depend on the agreed-upon definitions of both words) but that it is a faith-based belief
I did misstate your position.
Edmundisme wrote:
Again, I suppose this depends on your definition of atheism.
I don't think it does. There is more than on definition and strong atheism may be considered faith based. But that is not the only definition. And we are have that discussion elsewhere, if you wish to continue it.
Well, whether or not atheism is faith-based does depend (I think) on whether it is weak or strong atheism. I would assert that strong atheism is most definately faith-based, but that weak atheism may not be (is weak atheism ever faith based? I'm not sure I'll have to think about this). I'm assuming the strong atheist would say "There is no God!" and the weak atheist would say "I don't know if there is a God or not." If that's not the case, then I still don't understand the difference between the two. If it is the case, then I'm not sure why weak atheism is used instead of agnosticism.
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Well, whether or not atheism is faith-based does depend (I think) on whether it is weak or strong atheism. I would assert that strong atheism is most definately faith-based, but that weak atheism may not be (is weak atheism ever faith based? I'm not sure I'll have to think about this). I'm assuming the strong atheist would say "There is no God!" and the weak atheist would say "I don't know if there is a God or not." If that's not the case, then I still don't understand the difference between the two. If it is the case, then I'm not sure why weak atheism is used instead of agnosticism.
I think that the atheist web site l linked you to earlier does a pretty good job of differentiating between weak and strong atheism and agnosticism. I also think it does a good job in showing the difference between 'I don't believe god exists' and 'I believe that god does not exist'.
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Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:
Edmundisme wrote: Would you put $500 on it? What if someone drove into the hills and dumped snow on your lawn as a practical joke? (Admittedly this is contrived, but it makes my point.) No it does not make your point. You see, this is all testable. It is science. You can challenge my theory! I cannot challenge yours, no matte how hard I try. Not because your logic is super tight, but rather because you've got short circuits in your logic.
It does make my point. My point is that evidence and proof are not the same thing. You have strong evidence that there is no snow on the ground. However, you can't prove it until you actually look at the ground.
Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:
Do you have any evidence for your believing that those are evidence? See what I mean with short circuit logic?
How is it any different for you? Do you have evidence that these things are not evidence? How is your position different than mine? I say these things are evidence, you say they are not. We each interpret the implication of these things differently. We've taken the same data and have drawn different conclusions. Regardless of whether or not his existence can be proven, what is illogical about God? How does God short-circuit my logic? If I say that God exists, that He wasn't created, and that He created all things - and I take this as my axiom on which all other beliefs depend, where does the logic break down? You may not think I'm right, but being right and being logical are not the same. You can logically draw a conclusion and still find that your conclusion is wrong.
Joergen Sigvardsson wrote:
Frooobleknoooooblebabump does not exist!!!!!! No matter what someone in the future might say!!! How can you claim something not to exist if you don't believe in it, before anybody proposed its existence? Do you see the flaw in your logic?
To directly assert that God does not exist does indeed require an existing idea of God. However, could the one who first thought of God been the one to first assert his non-existence? Furthermore, you can indirectly assert the non-existence of God with an assertion that does not require the idea of God. You could assert that Man is the greatest intelligence in the universe. This assertion is mutually exclusive to the assertion that God exists but does not first require the asserting that
Edmundisme wrote:
what is illogical about God? How does God short-circuit my logic? If I say that God exists, that He wasn't created, and that He created all things - and I take this as my axiom on which all other beliefs depend, where does the logic break down?
It is illogical that, at least, in the past thousand years God has not performed miracles, has not helped his chosen people, has not guided mankind, has not sent missives, has not shown his face, has not parted seas. It is illogical that God chose a period of pre 2007* years ago to impose his will and then chose to do nothing since. It is illogical that the Christian God chose one small area in what is now called the Middle East to spread his word. Why not the multitudes of Asia and North & South America and Africa? It is illogical that so much changed in his message from the Old to New Testament unless one considers the thoughts of politicians of the ages to be logical; ever changing to retain power. It is illogical that he allows so much wrong to be said in his name. Faith? I have faith. I have faith in the human spirit, in life itself and the splendor of the universe. In the scales, from the smallest to biggest from the most generic to the most varied from the strangest to the most logical to the simple fact that I am here and so are you. I have faith that should a god exist he is not your sea-parting, tribe-smiting, clause-demanding diety. That he is benevolent to the point of non-existance; a sea to live in, air to breathe in, atoms to live by. But really, there is no need for god. Life is god, atoms and everything that makes up the beautiful chaos that is our multiverse is god. As a plainly intelligent man, you, you should see that. You should feel that in everything you do, in the children you rear in the wife you love. Praise life, not some Bible bound, apostle abused figure-head for a church that has forsaken all that is good in the life that Jesus led. He, Jesus, did good, no denying it. Argh! Can't you see? Love, life, the universe; it is so much greater than this god we talk of. * rough to a few decades at best
regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa
Shog9 wrote:
And with that, Paul closed his browser, sipped his herbal tea, fixed the flower in his hair, and smiled brightly at the multitude of cute,
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Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:
That is impossible. Every religious person believes absolutely in his or her religion and no other. But they cannot all be absolute truths..
I didn't say my beliefs are absolutes. I said absolutes exist. If a thing is true, it is so regardless of personal opinion on the matter. I stated that lack of proof is not itself proof. You dismissed that as merely my belief. I suggest it is a logical certainty. Furthermore, when Columbus theorized that the world was round, was that absolutely true even though most others were "absolutely" certain it was flat?
Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:
Belief and absolute are contradictory
I'm not sure what you're saying here. They are contradictory? So if something is absolute it cannot be believed in? Or if something is believed in it cannot be absolute?
Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:
Go read about Cantor sets and uncountability and all. That should prove to be an interesting read for you. Theirs also an Axion of Choice in mathematics that holds true in some sets and not in others. Unfortunately, this is one area of mathematics that deals with no proof but choice.
I have no idea what you're talking about. However, based on logic, I would highly doubt that even in this context lack of proof is itself proof.
Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:
An atheist is someone who is not a theist. Nothing more.
By your definition of the word, I suppose you are correct. However, your definition is not the prevalent one in my experience. At this point, understanding we mean different things, it is no longer worthwhile to debate the definition of the word.
Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:
That's only because you're picking where your definitions come from
I picked a dictionary. That seemed like the best place to get an unbiased definition. I didn't scour the net looking for a definition that fit my purpose. You, however, got your definition from an atheist's website. So which of us is "picking" where our definitions come from?
Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:
if an atheist tells you he doesn't believe in God for lack of proof, then don't make it out to be a religion. Otherwise, there's no such thing as having no religion
I don't think
Edmundisme wrote:
Furthermore, when Columbus theorized that the world was round, was that absolutely true even though most others were "absolutely" certain it was flat?
Oh sure, use the fact as the basis of your argument. What if I said if atheists believe that the world is round even though you are claiming that they are wrong because you and or the majority say it is so? As for the absolutes exist clause, only in mathematics, everything else is a science. When it comes to God, there are those who claim one side and those who claim the other. That is a personal decision. You can't make someone believe in God without some sort of proof (that they have to accept which in this case alone is a near impossibility) since they cannot believe in something that is abstract. However, them not believing in God does not mean they have a faith-based belief. All of them may not believe for different reasons. Maybe they (think they) have proof that God doesn't exist, that would would negate the fact that it's a faith-based belief since they're going on "fact" even if you don't see it as "fact".
Edmundisme wrote:
I picked a dictionary.
Too many dictionaries are open to interpretation, Here's the one I use. Atheism: 1. The doctrine or belief that there is no God. 2. A lack of belief in the existence of God or gods. Since both are valid, you cannot claim it is a faith-based belief since the latter is what I've seen. I'm not sure if the numbering is significant, but if one person claims to be of type two, then it is not a faith-based belief. Unless you can absolutely say no type two's exist, then you're basic your argument on your belief and interpretation.
Edmundisme wrote:
I don't think I claimed that atheism is a religion. I did claim that atheism is a faith-based belief. But again, it seems that we have different definitions of the word.
Fair enough, but the argument still holds. Again, since no definition is absolute, you cannot impose your definition on the supposedly 2 billion atheist population.
"There are II kinds of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who understand Roman numerals." - Bassam Abdul-Baki Web -[](</x-turndown)
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Edmundisme wrote:
what is illogical about God? How does God short-circuit my logic? If I say that God exists, that He wasn't created, and that He created all things - and I take this as my axiom on which all other beliefs depend, where does the logic break down?
It is illogical that, at least, in the past thousand years God has not performed miracles, has not helped his chosen people, has not guided mankind, has not sent missives, has not shown his face, has not parted seas. It is illogical that God chose a period of pre 2007* years ago to impose his will and then chose to do nothing since. It is illogical that the Christian God chose one small area in what is now called the Middle East to spread his word. Why not the multitudes of Asia and North & South America and Africa? It is illogical that so much changed in his message from the Old to New Testament unless one considers the thoughts of politicians of the ages to be logical; ever changing to retain power. It is illogical that he allows so much wrong to be said in his name. Faith? I have faith. I have faith in the human spirit, in life itself and the splendor of the universe. In the scales, from the smallest to biggest from the most generic to the most varied from the strangest to the most logical to the simple fact that I am here and so are you. I have faith that should a god exist he is not your sea-parting, tribe-smiting, clause-demanding diety. That he is benevolent to the point of non-existance; a sea to live in, air to breathe in, atoms to live by. But really, there is no need for god. Life is god, atoms and everything that makes up the beautiful chaos that is our multiverse is god. As a plainly intelligent man, you, you should see that. You should feel that in everything you do, in the children you rear in the wife you love. Praise life, not some Bible bound, apostle abused figure-head for a church that has forsaken all that is good in the life that Jesus led. He, Jesus, did good, no denying it. Argh! Can't you see? Love, life, the universe; it is so much greater than this god we talk of. * rough to a few decades at best
regards, Paul Watson Ireland & South Africa
Shog9 wrote:
And with that, Paul closed his browser, sipped his herbal tea, fixed the flower in his hair, and smiled brightly at the multitude of cute,