Notes Around
Yazata said:
While not particularly relevant to the issue of Mr. Novy and his head-sieve, it was an interesting question and a bit of an in-your-face challenge.
Is it too much to ask that you respect the context of what you respond to?
"While not particularly relevant to the issue of Mr. Novy and his head-sieve", it is relevant to my discussion with Billvon.
But, you know, if you have to recast everything in order to accommodate your straw doll, we can certainly leave you to play in its textures and folds.
The theological literature is filled with divine-command theorists' attempts to respond to it. But take that up with Plato, not with me. My only point there was to suggest that divine-command ethics aren't without their problems.
Alright. If you can't manage good faith, I'm happy to abide by that.
• • •
Gmilam said:
That's Novy's point, brainchild.
Would you assert that Pastafarians are theists?
See, the problem with your argument is that there is a difference between what people say and what they do. In this case, you describe an action. To the other, we already have a description of the action. You're simply trying to recast bigotry as something noble.
I get the point that these people are tired of religious bigots. But bigotry does not suddenly become noble just because it's atheistic, or Pastafarian, or whatever the hell.
One might as well say that refusing black people entrance to his business is making the point of applying the same rules to everyone, i.e.,
Everyone gets to make their own business decisions.
• • •
Spidergoat said:
Yes, they are designed to influence opinion. If you didn't notice, he makes fun of believers as much as I do. Is he also a hateful bigot?
He's
much better at it than you. Indeed, I don't often see Myers slip into open bigotry.
I don't deny that sometimes taking a didactic approach is pointless. No amount of patient understanding, for instance, will break through the brick wall of Jan's religious-based ignorance.
Perhaps yor brand of patient understanding is neither patient nor understanding.
You clearly don't have a clue what you're dealing with. Imagine being in the operating room:
Chief Surgeon: Look at that! Throbbing like it's got an alien ready to burst out. We need to remove it before it kills him!
Nurse: Um ... well ... that's his heart.
Before you can perform surgery successfully, you do need some medical education.
Similarly, before you dissect religion, you probably ought to know something about its anatomy and dynamics.
You argue against a political beast and call it religion.
My solution is converting as many people to atheism as possible, failing that to at least have them confront their religious assumptions with skepticism. Failing that to ridicule them mercilessly.
In other words, your solution is to do whatever you can to make things worse.
Sometimes we elevate, sometimes we keep it in the gutter for no other reason than it's fucking funny. We don't have to be pretentious lecturers all the time. So what if it makes us feel better. I find it empowering. This isn't the reason I'm an atheist though. To assume that is to underestimate the movement.
Empowerment through bigotry is empowerment through bigotry.
I single out religion because it makes a virtue of faith. And because it's so common. It's not the only ideology that can corrupt, but it's the main one.
Friendship?
Love?
I mean, you do realize that "falling madly in love" is actually accurate, do you not? It looks, in the brain, just like psychosis.
But I don't see atheists trying to solve this particular problem that results in so much human misery when relationships break down and people start trying to hurt and destroy one another. Maybe that's because your hatred would have to hit a little too close to home? Like, say, the face in the mirror?
What implications? We haven't been tolerated for centuries, nothing new.
The implications of bigotry in atheistic politics.
To be a Christian requires that you believe certain things, otherwise you aren't a Christian.
In theory.
It's the same strength as the occupy movement, who refused to develop a distinct ideology which could be refuted point by point.
The thing that gets in the way of seeing whatever point you're trying to make is the sense that you're trying desperately to whitewash the conduct of some atheists just like you spend plenty of words polishing your own knob.
I'm trying to think of an example from Occupy that wouldn't be a magnification of the sort that you get to complain about some quasi-Godwinesque inflation of the issues. But could you at least show me the Occupy protester who issued demands that he be empowered to commit the very financial crimes he denounced?
But you still haven't explain what is the poor behavior?
Actually, I've repeated my accusation of that poor behavior a few times in this thread, but since you couldn't be bothered to read the topic post and source article, I'm not surprised that you missed those reiterations of what I consider poor behavior on Mr. Nový's part.
I really don't understand you. Is it brilliant or is it bad?
I honestly don't believe you're so stupid that you cannot understand that one can be excellent at committing evil.
No, really, think about it. The dude who tried to
rob a store with a bat'lleth? That's pretty piss-poor evil.
Wall Street execs exploiting the laws to take bonuses for running their companies, as well as the American and world economies into chaos? Well, come on. That's pretty sharp. And it's hardly a new idea.
In the first place, the great crimes committed in the world are mostly prompted by avarice and ambition.
The greatest of all crimes are the wars that are carried on by governments, to plunder, enslave, and destroy mankind.
The next greatest crimes committed in the world are equally prompted by avarice and ambition; and are committed, not on sudden passion, but by men of calculation, who keep their heads cool and clear, and who have no thought whatever of going to prison for them. They are committed, not so much by men who violate the laws, as by men who, either by themselves or by their instruments, make the laws; by men who have combined to usurp arbitrary power, and to maintain it by force and fraud, and whose purpose in usurping and maintaining it is by unjust and unequal legislation, to secure to themselves such advantages and monopolies as will enable them to control and extort the labor and properties of other men, and thus impoverish them, in order to minister to their own wealth and aggrandizement. The robberies and wrongs thus committed by these men, in conformity with the laws—that is, their own laws—are as mountains to molehills, compared with the crimes committed by all other criminals, in violation of the laws.
But, thirdly, there are vast numbers of frauds, of various kinds, committed in the transactions of trade, whose perpetrators, by their coolness and sagacity, evade the operation of the laws. And it is only their cool and clear heads that enable them to do it.
(Spooner)
So, really, you can't figure out how an act can be both morally wrong (bad) and excellently devised and executed (brilliant)?
Okay.
We are fighting theocracy, not some pastors religious right to diddle kids with impunity.
This royal bollocking of the point is brought to you by Atheism.
What are you talking about? I embrace irrationality in some areas like art. Dadaism is incredible. Burroughs' cut-up method is fantastic. I'm sure in the origins of religion somewhere there was some creative genius who made up stories to entertain the tribe and make them think. But later a humorless degenerate made it into a religion and started cutting off heads in it's name.
What
is this thing about trying to change the topic all the time? It's pretty stupid, and getting fairly predictable:
If there is a substantive point to resolve, it will be pushed aside for a change of subject.
You offered Hitchens as an answer to the broader application of skepticism; he "often addressed the issue of art and architecture appreciation, since much of it is religious".
The question of the myth of art exists independently of religion. Pointing out that address "since much of it is religious" only reiterates that the only myth that qualifies for this heightened scrutiny is religion.
Free religion? The world would be a better place if all the dishonest conservatives in the United States didn't exist, but I'm not going to try to suppress them. I'm not going to try to take away their right to free expression. And I'm not going to fight back by behaving as badly as they do. Perhaps some might laugh at the preceding statement, but come on,
they would have to be kidding.
I don't see the juristic difference between my liberalism and, say, Lightgigantic's faith. That is, sure, I can laugh at what I consider his silly excuses for logic, but I can't imagine the government getting involved that way.
As
I pointed out to Iceaura:
(2) Furthermore, by your argument, I could make the following argument and expect the Czech government to accept it:
• The only dogma of my religion is to reject all dogma.
• By church dogma, I am obliged to wear a t-shirt that says, "Niggers Should Hang" on the front, and recites the Sandbox Joke on the back, wherever I go.
• I refuse to abide by the tenets of my faith and reject this dogmatic demand that is violative of my religion.
∴ Therefore I demand government endorsement of this dogmatic obligation that actually violates my religious faith, in the name of my religious freedom.
I have
reiterated the point to Gmilam,
discussed it with Quinnsong in the context of her inquiry about apathism, and
adapted its expression for Yazata.
Gmilam and Yazata have yet to respond; I'm not so concerned about Quinnsong's response insofar as she's not defending the underlying process. Indeed, the most constructive dialogue I've had so far in this thread is with Quinnsong, and given the mess atheists are making of this discussion, QS and I can always deal with those other issues another time.
I'm just saying, absolute skepticism would mean we don't make any tentative assumptions, which are necessary to achieve objective results. Faith is not tentative, it's not an experiment to see what happens. In science, statistical analysis don't have to show absolute correlation, only significant correlation. I suppose some personal judgement is required to come to a conclusion about what degree of confidence one can have about a result, but this isn't the abandonment of reason.
And I'm not asking you to be as paranoid as one of our Sciforums neighbors has shown himself to be, but you don't apply this sort of skepticism to the myth of the State. Or the myth of the Economy.
Just sayin'.
It already has. Evolution has told the story of humanity better than any religious mythology.
So what is the meaning of life?
Or is that not what you intended when you changed the subject?
Go for it. I think it's a lost cause and we are better off without it.
And you have no idea what that would do to humanity, largely because you don't care. Watch people writhe in the heat of neurosis, and then recite your insensate balbutive about getting rid of religion. And if you don't want to be a part of human progress, but would rather exacerbate the problems our species faces within its societies, there are, in fact, a few words to describe that outlook.
Villainous comes to mind.
Selfish, as well.
Antisocial fits in there somewhere.
But, hey, let's run ourselves into an extinction-level crisis by arbitrarily dismantling the most pervasive moral structures in human history without a thought toward what we might fill that vacuum with. Because, after all, it would make you happy, and that's what's important. Right?
You have no idea.
You cannot simply pull out religion like a sliver.
But when it's the religion that makes them assholes, and not their own fault, that's a special case. It's my particular axe to grind. I'm sure you have your own causes.
It's the difference between participating constructively in the human endeavor and telling humanity to go fuck itself to death.
Your particular axe is painted with the colors of bigotry. That's your problem; don't go making it everyone else's.
Atheists generally understand religion better than believers do.
Like I said, setting the bar low. If we reserve the idea of believers to include only the evangelical Christians, radical Muslims, Hindus, and Sikhs, and so on, well, yes, atheists probably
do understand religion better than the faithful.
But once we open the consideration to include other people of religious persuasion, your argument is bullshit.
Again ... are you willing to take a one-question pop-quiz? Gmilam won't commit, and you haven't answered.
We have to in order to debate it.
To take Sciforums as an example, though it is hardly unique or even rare, the atheists here are more interested in discussing the politics related to religion than religion itself.
Bare logic is one thing. The naked contradictions between the Old and New Testaments of the Bible are obvious to even the most superficial perusal. But that superficiality is problematic.
True, a member of John Hagee's congregation is more likely to be that sort of superficial religious idiot, but even the religious instructors I didn't like in my educational tale were smarter than the half-witted, self-superior crap we keep hearing from atheists in the public discourse.
I support your fight for equality, but not your quest to legitimize bigotry.
Please don't pretend it's that esoteric.
So ... how about that one-question pop-quiz?
They teach this crap to children.
Yes, they do. As do many atheists teach crap to children. The problem is teaching crap to children, not whether or not it's religious.
I make exceptions for religions that aren't supernatural or theistic in nature, there are some decent ones out there.
Such as?
And since you used the plural, please don't fall back to a single answer like Buddhism, since it has some insanely supernatural ideas built into it.
Seems to me it's working. Atheism is rising.
Yes, the rising atheistic movement is definitely succeeding in its endeavor to make things worse.
I'm sure Christians and others will continue to play the oppressed card, whining about how they no longer have freedom to limit other people's freedom.
Don't give them a legitimate reason to play the oppression card.
Fuck 'em. With a dong of thorns.
Rape advocacy and atheism. I hadn't paired those two before.
Thanks for that one.
____________________
Notes:
Spooner, Lysander. Vices Are Not Crimes: A Vindication Of Moral Liberty. 1875. LysanderSpooner.org. August 7, 2013. http://lysanderspooner.org/node/46