Collarchat.com

Join Our Community
Collarchat.com

Home  Login  Search 

RE: Is Atheism a religion?


View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
 
All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion >> RE: Is Atheism a religion? Page: <<   < prev  21 22 23 [24] 25   next >   >>
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/13/2009 11:55:42 AM   
ThatDamnedPanda


Posts: 6060
Joined: 1/26/2009
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Musicmystery

I can't wait until we get to dragons.


I find the idea rather frightening, myself. I've seen a lot of movies about that.


_____________________________

Panda, panda, burning bright
In the forest of the night
What immortal hand or eye
Made you all black and white and roly-poly like that?


(in reply to Musicmystery)
Profile   Post #: 461
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/13/2009 12:04:36 PM   
Aswad


Posts: 9374
Joined: 4/4/2007
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: NihilusZero

Nearly all of the atheists I have encountered in years of interaction on freethinking, philosophy, skepticism and religious-based message forums, chat rooms and through irl interaction would not agree with your "basic" assessment at all.


Which moves us into the domain of jargon. Consider the word "slave." In the jargon of the BDSM communites, the majority uses it to denote some form of submission, a minority uses it to describe voluntary slavery, and a very small minority use it simply to describe plain old fashioned involuntary slavery. In mainstream language, the majority use it in the final sense, almost exclusively, while it sees sufficient usage in a minority sense corresponding to BDSM jargon that this minority usage is noted in the dictionary. Precisely this is the case for most in-groups: that their jargon has some similarity to mainstream usage, but is not representative of mainstream usage. It is also typical of many in-groups to be upset that the mainstream does not allow such a group to define the majority usage of a term to match their own jargon, even when that term is used as an identity element (which is the limitation that causes the most upset, generally).

I could use the term Gorean as a reference here, too. In mainstream use, it denotes a male supremacist fantasy that is predominantly pursued online, with a lot of Conan-style chest beating and weekend cyberwarrioring. However, in the jargon of the current frequent posters on the Gorean subforum on CM, its meaning is reasonably close to "Objectivism minus Secular Humanism, with two teaspoons of Primitivism, emphasis on real life implications." Hardly the same thing at all, and I have repeatedly argued that it would be better to use another term than "Gorean" to describe it, since that term is tainted outside the specific in-group. Instead, people vehemently oppose such a change, and insist their usage is the only correct one, with the rest of the world being mistaken in their majority usage.

Sound vaguely familiar?

quote:

It is not indicative of the views of most atheists at all and is incoherent on the simple premise that atheism alone tells you nothing positive (in an assertive sense) about a person. It doesn't even tell you why said person espouses atheism as a term acceptably descriptive of them.


I will admit that I am limited to forming my opinion of what the term implies on the basis of the evidence that is available to me. But if you have a quick look around, you will see a pretty fair number of self-identified atheists on these boards, spending a significant amount of time in threads about religion, espousing specific beliefs about the nonexistence of gods (usually defined to mean "the Judeo-Christian notion of God that mom'n'dad shoved down my throat 'til I puked"), and generally making a solid case that it is a key element of their identity. Oddly enough, the tooth fairy seems to play little part in their identities. Go figure.

That my opinion is sufficiently widespread (which matters when it comes to the meaning of language) to be noted in the Princeton dictionary in both its senses, and on Wikipedia (which serves as the Internet's "lowest common denominator" barometer) in its basic form with the extended form noted as extended, followed by a lot of back and forth about the dispute regarding the term, that strongly suggests that a lot of people have formed the same associations with the term on the basis of similarly limited evidence.

If the people without belief were more vocal, and those with disbelief were less vocal, the senses of the term would reverse over time, and you would have it your way. That would, incidentally, be much more palatable, as well, since mandating secular humanism as the only valid worldview, as many of the most vocal have suggested, is the kind of thing that get religious people humping each others' legs in frustration. Taking the high ground never gets old in establishing a perception of relative maturity, after all.

Health,
al-Aswad.


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


(in reply to NihilusZero)
Profile   Post #: 462
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/13/2009 12:23:47 PM   
Aswad


Posts: 9374
Joined: 4/4/2007
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: NihilusZero

And that pesky thing we know as reality has conclusively debunked epistemological nihilism as a viable concept in any form other than imaginative theorizing.


No, more like most people just don't run into any problems with relating to the world via their senses unless there are con artists around. And, frankly, to the average Joe, the TV remote is magic in a functional sense. You push a button, you get happy. It don't work, you smack it a bit, maybe change a battery, smack it again, then maybe it'll work. Magic. Don't mind the engineer behind the curtain. And certainly don't try to dabble in his sorcery by taking EE101, the Lords of Kobol forbid.

If you want really imaginative theorizing, I've heard that someone came up with an idea to replace the barter system with some non-corporeal entities that take the place of goods. Apparently, those are called "monies" or something, and come in flavors, like "dollars" and "euros," and different sizes. What a load of bollocks. Everyone knows you trade this rare fur here for that sack of grain there. Real, solid stuff that you can grab, hold and carry around. It's the only viable concept. Trading real goods for these fictional "monies" is swindling at best, theft at worst, since you're switching something for nothing.

Who on earth would be silly enough to let you get goods in return for those "monies" you got?

Oh... wait...

Health,
al-Aswad.


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


(in reply to NihilusZero)
Profile   Post #: 463
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/13/2009 12:38:54 PM   
NihilusZero


Posts: 4036
Joined: 9/10/2008
From: Nashville, TN
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Aswad

That my opinion is sufficiently widespread (which matters when it comes to the meaning of language) to be noted in the Princeton dictionary in both its senses, and on Wikipedia (which serves as the Internet's "lowest common denominator" barometer) in its basic form with the extended form noted as extended, followed by a lot of back and forth about the dispute regarding the term, that strongly suggests that a lot of people have formed the same associations with the term on the basis of similarly limited evidence.

As a dictionary definition is meant to adequately describe a word as it is relevant to reality (especially culturally), both you and Princeton (in prioritizing the 1 definition) are both wrong. The only reason dictionaries include definitions for atheism which suggest active belief is because the god concept is so pervasive that it is presumed true (thereby making the refusal to accept it seem a counterbelief). Otherwise simple etymology would serve to understand the distinction.



< Message edited by NihilusZero -- 9/13/2009 12:41:58 PM >


_____________________________

"I know it's all a game
I know they're all insane
I know it's all in vain
I know that I'm to blame."
~Siouxsie & the Banshees


NihilusZero.com

CM Sex God du Jour
CM Hall Monitor

(in reply to Aswad)
Profile   Post #: 464
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/13/2009 1:01:42 PM   
Aswad


Posts: 9374
Joined: 4/4/2007
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: NihilusZero

I meant any theistic entity. Inasmuch as such creatures would be considered worthy of worship or deference.


Depending on your definition of worship and criterion for worthiness, I might be inclined to agree that a good case can be made, but I would also contend that it is largely irrelevant.

quote:

This is because the theistic god is a vacuous concept that can appear prettier in the realm of imagination in the same way that our ideal relationship can exist quite wonderfully in our heads while trying to make it work in actuality involves understanding what it is you are seeking and expecting.


Bingo.

Imagination and escapism works wonders.

It creates such pretty illusions as equality, justice, good, right, fair, and so forth.

Crazy what people can manage to believe in, right?

Money is probably the most ineffable.

quote:

When someone mentions they have a theistic god, all they are telling us is that there is a set of defined (vaguely or not) characteristics that a sentient being can have which would make it able to demand an emotional TPE M/s metaphysical relationship from the acolyte.


Actually, no. That is not a premise of all theistic religions.

It is, however, a premise of some Christian religions, notably Catholicism.

Health,
al-Aswad.


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


(in reply to NihilusZero)
Profile   Post #: 465
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/13/2009 8:22:33 PM   
Lostkitten3


Posts: 179
Joined: 10/17/2008
Status: offline
If it feeels like fire burning their flesh, then any speaking human spit on by it with no knowledge of what it actually was would call it fire. Especially in the middle ages. The tale is of fire breathing dragons. Spitting would be a part of breathing. The fact that we interpret those words as we do is just a part of the myth and the extension of our imaginations.

< Message edited by Lostkitten3 -- 9/13/2009 8:34:41 PM >

(in reply to NihilusZero)
Profile   Post #: 466
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/13/2009 8:33:27 PM   
Lostkitten3


Posts: 179
Joined: 10/17/2008
Status: offline
My point is that an actual horn, as with a goat or a gazelle or a deer, are bone, and have a bone core.

Some dinosaurs had "horns" that were actually growths of their skull bones extended and covered with something. A regular horn on say a goat, falls off every year and grows anew in the spring.

The Rhino "horn" is Keratin, or hair, hoof, material. It has no bone core and so it is not actually a horn, but a clump of hair on his snout. Not a very good example of a single horn.

And as I said before, the narwal tusk is a tooth, not a horn at all. So neither are a good example that single horned animals exists. In fact it is more common to have 4 horns than one.

Unicorns are real? I'd love to see one. In fact, I'd love to see footage of any single horned animal, because current Science does not recognize any.

And the reason a rhino wasn't named until the 1800's is because white people hadn't encountered them, but the people living with them had a name for them, which I am guessing is not pronounceable by us.


quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl


quote:

ORIGINAL: Lostkitten3

The rhino "horn" is actually hair and the Narwhal "horn" is actually a tooth/tusk

I believe there are many dinosaurs that had a similar feature, but these traits develop for battle, typically.

The Old Testament Bible is a composition of stories, passed down verbally for thousands of years before ever being written.

The New Testament wasn't even a record of "news" but a story that had been told and retold and embellished (like the telephone game) until finally written down. Sometimes 60-100 or more years after Jesus died.

quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl

Unicorns are very real....

quote:

Modern readers have trouble with the Bible’s unicorns because we forget that a single-horned feature is not uncommon on God’s menu for animal design. (Consider the rhinoceros and narwhal.) The Bible describes unicorns skipping like calves (Psalm 29:6), traveling like bullocks, and bleeding when they die (Isaiah 34:7). The presence of a very strong horn on this powerful, independent-minded creature is intended to make readers think of strength.


http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/aid/v2/n1/unicorns-in-bible



Im lost as to your point here. He made a comment about unicorns. I gave him a response. Your post seems to infer that because the horn of a rhino is made of hair, it isnt a horn? And yes, there was a dinasaur with a single horn. Unicorns are/were real. Rhino's didnt even have an official name until the 1800's. I try not to assume anything, try not to read into anything, nor do i attempt to push my beliefs upon anyone else. These debates are, frankly, becoming tiresome because they have been debated for years and years, with no side agreeing to any points.


< Message edited by Lostkitten3 -- 9/13/2009 8:37:10 PM >

(in reply to tazzygirl)
Profile   Post #: 467
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/13/2009 9:54:33 PM   
tazzygirl


Posts: 37833
Joined: 10/12/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Lostkitten3

My point is that an actual horn, as with a goat or a gazelle or a deer, are bone, and have a bone core.

Some dinosaurs had "horns" that were actually growths of their skull bones extended and covered with something. A regular horn on say a goat, falls off every year and grows anew in the spring.

The Rhino "horn" is Keratin, or hair, hoof, material. It has no bone core and so it is not actually a horn, but a clump of hair on his snout. Not a very good example of a single horn.

And as I said before, the narwal tusk is a tooth, not a horn at all. So neither are a good example that single horned animals exists. In fact it is more common to have 4 horns than one.

Unicorns are real? I'd love to see one. In fact, I'd love to see footage of any single horned animal, because current Science does not recognize any.

And the reason a rhino wasn't named until the 1800's is because white people hadn't encountered them, but the people living with them had a name for them, which I am guessing is not pronounceable by us.


quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl


quote:

ORIGINAL: Lostkitten3

The rhino "horn" is actually hair and the Narwhal "horn" is actually a tooth/tusk

I believe there are many dinosaurs that had a similar feature, but these traits develop for battle, typically.

The Old Testament Bible is a composition of stories, passed down verbally for thousands of years before ever being written.

The New Testament wasn't even a record of "news" but a story that had been told and retold and embellished (like the telephone game) until finally written down. Sometimes 60-100 or more years after Jesus died.

quote:

ORIGINAL: tazzygirl

Unicorns are very real....

quote:

Modern readers have trouble with the Bible’s unicorns because we forget that a single-horned feature is not uncommon on God’s menu for animal design. (Consider the rhinoceros and narwhal.) The Bible describes unicorns skipping like calves (Psalm 29:6), traveling like bullocks, and bleeding when they die (Isaiah 34:7). The presence of a very strong horn on this powerful, independent-minded creature is intended to make readers think of strength.


http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/aid/v2/n1/unicorns-in-bible



Im lost as to your point here. He made a comment about unicorns. I gave him a response. Your post seems to infer that because the horn of a rhino is made of hair, it isnt a horn? And yes, there was a dinasaur with a single horn. Unicorns are/were real. Rhino's didnt even have an official name until the 1800's. I try not to assume anything, try not to read into anything, nor do i attempt to push my beliefs upon anyone else. These debates are, frankly, becoming tiresome because they have been debated for years and years, with no side agreeing to any points.




quote:

“The horns most closely resemble the structure of horses’ hoofs, turtle beaks and cockatoo bills. This might be related to the strength of these materials, although more research is needed in this area,” said Tobin Hieronymus, a doctoral student in biological sciences and lead author on the study.


over 2000 years ago, upon seeing such an animal, its doubtful man would have known it was only hair.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/11/061106144951.htm

And again you cannot accept the simple explanation that they had one horn, hense, a unicorn. Instead, you try and chip away at what science has revealed since the bible was written, many centuries ago. We do not know what they saw or didnt see.

Here is an example... a dodo bird. And here is how they pieced it together...

quote:

Our present day knowledge of what the dodo looked like is based on several sources. There are accounts from the diaries and writings of the sailors and captains who landed on Mauritius in the 16th and 17th century, drawings from the few humans who were able to witness them alive (although, it can't even be proven that all the artists who rendered the dodo ever actually saw one). There are a few fossils excavated from the island, which are kept at the British Museum, and a foot and a beak which are preserved at Oxford, but there are no complete stuffed specimens (models in museums are based on partial remains). From these records and pictures, scientists and ornithologists have pieced together a fairly detailed composite of the dodo.


http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Raphus_cucullatus.html

So, writings, drawings, and fairly small amounts of the parts of the animal. Can you be so sure that the "unicorn" of the bible didnt exist? If its horn was like a rhino's, would it not disolve when the animal died and decomposed? I dont have those answers, nor do i pretend to have them. Unicorns to exist... just not as someone's rendering of the fairy tale kind.

_____________________________

Telling me to take Midol wont help your butthurt.
RIP, my demon-child 5-16-11
Duchess of Dissent 1
Dont judge me because I sin differently than you.
If you want it sugar coated, dont ask me what i think! It would violate TOS.

(in reply to Lostkitten3)
Profile   Post #: 468
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/13/2009 10:11:53 PM   
Rule


Posts: 10479
Joined: 12/5/2005
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel
Does that mean that having read the Bible I should think that unicorns are real?

Usually, if there is a word for it, it is or was real.
Unicorns are real.

quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel
Isaiah 34:7

I have seen several of those unicorns. I will not elaborate on that.

quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel
Psalm 29:6

Here the unicorn is used in an analogy to describe action in terms of the action of unicorns. Very convincingly. Doesn't tell one what a unicorn is, of course, but we may deduce that it exists or existed.

quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel
Job 39:9-12

It is weird, but in the case of this unicorn - as well in retrospect perhaps that of Psalm - I do get the impression not of a uni-corn, but of a uni-hump. I wonder whether this unicorn might be the unihump or dromedary? Is there any similarity in word and/or writing in semitic languages between horn and hump?

(in reply to GotSteel)
Profile   Post #: 469
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/14/2009 7:30:12 AM   
Aswad


Posts: 9374
Joined: 4/4/2007
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Lostkitten3

I am saying whatever research you have done on the definition of Scientific Method, is not applicable to actual research.


I was not talking about research. It took a pretty long time before it became accepted that doctors had been killing pregnant women by not adopting proper hygiene. That was because people were obsessed with theories, while there was a falsifiable, standing and tested hypothesis to the effect that proper hygiene would lower death rates down to a level comparable to that of being in the care of a nurse or midwife (who didn't dissect corpses before moving on to patients). Science in the sense you are practicing it won out over scientific method.

quote:

I strongly disagree that people are gods.


Then you probably have a particular definition of "god" in mind.

quote:

That stopped in Egypt quite a while ago. Even the Pope, who is supposed to be God's right hand man, who is revered for his "knowledge and wisdom" is very clearly NOT a god.


Oh, really? I realize the pope has fallen in status lately, but people still prostrate themselves before him and kiss his feet in a manner that not so long ago was called worship when done in other contexts. Guess next thing you'll be buying that the Catholic church doesn't actually worship Mary, either, but merely "venerates" her (the terms are somewhat circular in Catholic practice, if you try to link them to anything outside it).

quote:

The Greeks and Romans believed their leaders were ordained by gods, chosen by gods, and that gods would procreate with humans and make a halfblood, but no human IS a god, at least has been for many years.


Again depending on the definition of the term.

quote:

Angelina Jolie is a husband stealing child collector who is beautiful because of a lot of plastic surgery, personal trainers, personal chefs, personal assistants and Nannies. I feel empathy for anyone who sees her as a goddess.


You must be a very empathic person. I couldn't bring myself to care whether or not that many strangers lived or died, let alone what their gods might be. That aside, while off topic, I would very much like to (in another thread) see some coherent argumentation to the effect that a husband can be stolen, like some inanimate object or property. Collecting children, I'm fine with. She can provide for them. She's apparently taking steps to limit their jadedness in growing up, while attending to the safety issues inherent in having a high profile parent. And, she's not stuffing them to keep them in some formaldehyde jar somewhere. In short, the kids could do worse. Don't see how she has a hair on Hera, if you'll pardon the pun. And, yes, most mythological women of any status seem to have attendants. A lot of non-mythological ones, too. Fringe benefit?

quote:

In fact the mystification of Hollywood is based on the premise these people are somehow better than we are, or more perfect, but it is all a smokescreen, as the Beatles taught us during their breakup.


Of course. And this is reflected in mythology, too. It is part of what allows us to identify with the human-like gods. Hera was jealous. Yahweh was vindictive. Inanna was bloodthirsty and lusty, if a quick refresher is correct. And the Æsir (as one example) were claimed in the Gesta Danorum to be mortal men who had charmed people into worshipping them as gods by virtue of some inner presence. Besides, even if it was never explicitly mentioned in the bible, Jesus went to the toilet to take a crap every now and then.

The modern notion of equality is a soothing lie, but a lie nonetheless.

But, yeah, the job description of a Hollywood star is to be perceived as a star. Perception matters. We can deny it, but not escape it. If you're beautiful, your chances of being convicted of a crime drop dramatically. If you're a woman, and asking for custody of a child, the father can pretty much forget about it. If you're black, you're more likely to be pulled over. If you're wearing a modest dress, people are less likely to think you a slut. If you wear a business suit with a tie, people take you more seriously in a meeting. All perception, most of it false, but highly relevant nonetheless.

Vicarious thrills are no less popular than envy, and an idol often invokes one of the two.

quote:

In fact, the one person that diefied the Beatles (not the girls who loved their love songs and wanted to fuck them) is CHarles Manson. I don't think he is a good example of choosing who to worship as a god.


A somewhat Chthonic one, at least. I don't see how it would be worse than Enyo or Marzanna, though.

quote:

Many men thought Marilyn Monroe was a goddess but as she said "They would go to bed with Marilyn Monroe and wake up with Norma Jean" meaning their myth was ruined by the reality of her fallibility.


Obviously.

But you are discounting an important point: for a very large number of people, expectations are a very large part of an experience. If you have the background you mentioned, then I am fairly certain you have a good idea of just how far choice bias can go, for instance. And the first time one has sex- at least, provided the hymen is not intact- is often experienced as better, due to the expectation that it will be "special." When people pick their nose, others in their environment reflexively avert their eyes in a subconscious manner a large part of the time, which is due to a cultural imperative that allows us to ignore flaws. Similarly, when in a state of PEA-induced puppy love, people disregard even the most obvious flaws in the object of their desire.

It is not unreasonable to think that, if she had acted the part, whoever went to bed with Marilyn Monroe with the expectation that the experience would be that of bedding a goddess, would experience exactly what they had expected to experience. In fact, this sort of adjustment of perception is precisely one of the main arguments used by atheists to deny the validity of religious experiences. Can't eat your cake and have it, too.

quote:

The tabloids are quick to point out faults, real or made up, of Hollywood moviestars.


Of course. Yet, they haven't pointed out mine lately. Imagine that...

quote:

No current religion holds people as gods.


A citation would be nice. Jiddu Krishnamurti was heralded as the reincarnation of a buddha, though he insisted he was not. The Dalai Lama is an instance of the avatar type of god, viewed as the reincarnation of his predecessor, which is a pretty current example, unless you are writing me from the future...

quote:

That is your interpretation...seemingly given to you by your cock more than your faith or love of god. Wanting to fuck people and fantasizing about them is not the same as worshiping a god. An all powerful omnipotent father figure randomly deciding who lives and who dies, not based on goodness or kindness.


Your roots are showing. I hopefully don't need to point out the need to examine yourself for bias.

As for my interpretation, it is pretty simple. Observation and Occam's Razor. People actually lived with these religions. Without needing a university degree to grasp them. And that tells me the concept behind them is not so complicated or abstract as to be incomprehensible without years of study. Without introducing a lot of superfluous fluff, we can simply consider whether a real basis for religious figures and a difference in paradigm will account for the facts, and it does.

Bear in mind that the notion of consciousness didn't arise until the 14th century, and was not in evidence in the earliest writings of mankind. It is not a far stretch to assume that they had a different relationship to abstract ideas that we now take for granted to the extent that we no longer need metaphors and analogies to deal with them. And we are just now starting to examine the notion of thoughts and ideas from a different perspective in the field of memetics, which so far is in its early stages. To posit Ma'at as the memetic analogue of a multicellular organism is a bit pop-sci, but it's not all that far out if you accept the basic premise. And to posit that Horus is a role with certain characteristics, just like the US president has a role and is expected to display certain characteristics, is not all that far out, either. You don't need to appeal to anything supernatural in order for this view to make sense, although you could, and some will. The notion of "supernatural" makes little sense to me, though, as the evidence I see, is that these people had a unified view of the world around them, and would not have made such an artificial distinction in the abstract.

Ascribing this to my cock is an unimaginative and crude ad hominem which falls on its ass right away, whereupon I violate it with as much lube as civility calls for. I don't see where you think it will advance your argument in any way. Addressing admitted biases on my part might serve that purpose as rhetoric, or in prompting me to reevaluate some part of my position.

Pronouncing that this is all coming out of my cock is just flamebait that doesn't even look tasty.

quote:

Faith in an imaginary god is in my opinion, childish. You have great reasons for why you do, I am sure. But Scientific Method is not one of them.


Stop conflating entities. It is fallacious.

I mentioned scientific method because you claimed conclusive proof was available, which it is not. QED.

quote:

Believing in mythical creatures, well, I do believe anything is possible, and most imaginary creatures are based on some fact. The interesting thing is Jung's theory that all people have similar imaginary mythical creatures in their heads, that represent certain emotions, that are typically seen in dream interpretation, worldwide.


Seems we agree on something.

And if you do believe anything is possible, and are familiar with Jung, then let me posit that synchronicity might actually be effected by a memetic analogue of a multicellular organism, much like lifting a cup involves triggering a ton of cells in our bodies via a cascade of different mechanisms involving a number of different cells and scaffolding (the skeleton and ligaments, needed to actually have the generated force do anything useful).

In a purely scientific sense, there is no Lostkitten. Instead, there is a collection of fundamental wave functions and all that. However, from a human perspective, we can indeed say there is a Lostkitten, without any ambiguity. That is an abstraction. It is no less valid an abstraction to say that there is a god, as an abstraction over a series of memetic type organisms, and we as humans would have no more direct access to the whole of that entity than would the cells of a Lostkitten have access to the Lostkitten itself. As mental masturbation, one could play with the idea of the abstraction being the reality and the physical substrate actually being the representation of what is real, reminiscent of Plato's cave, but let's not come all over this thread.

If you want to take the more reasonable assumption one step further, you could posit prayer as being memetically equivalent to a vesicle, although the popular Christian form of prayer would make little sense going by that analogy. The notion of "God helps those who helps themselves," however, would make as much sense by that analogy as any maxim makes sense about whatever it addresses (i.e. as a simplification of what is addressed down to an idea that evokes the core of truth).

That is also a view that corrects one of the most criticised problems about Christianity with the (incorrect, as evidenced by research into the genealogy of religions and deities, but that's beside the point) father figure model. Instead of the passive and submissive (why would a supposed creator god want slaves and then- with the power to create people- choose to create such crappy slaves as us?) lends itself more to empowerment and self-reliance, which is arguably positive: any help from the divine is a bonus, but ultimately, you're responsible for your own actions and need to take action to get what you want out of life.

That is, I think, what any good father would want for his children.

Jung would have a field day with me...

Health,
al-Aswad.


_____________________________

"If God saw what any of us did that night, he didn't seem to mind.
From then on I knew: God doesn't make the world this way.
We do.
" -- Rorschack, Watchmen.


(in reply to Lostkitten3)
Profile   Post #: 470
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/14/2009 7:51:44 AM   
eponavet


Posts: 406
Joined: 8/18/2006
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Lostkitten3

My point is that an actual horn, as with a goat or a gazelle or a deer, are bone, and have a bone core.

Some dinosaurs had "horns" that were actually growths of their skull bones extended and covered with something. A regular horn on say a goat, falls off every year and grows anew in the spring.

The Rhino "horn" is Keratin, or hair, hoof, material. It has no bone core and so it is not actually a horn, but a clump of hair on his snout. Not a very good example of a single horn.

And as I said before, the narwal tusk is a tooth, not a horn at all. So neither are a good example that single horned animals exists. In fact it is more common to have 4 horns than one.

Unicorns are real? I'd love to see one. In fact, I'd love to see footage of any single horned animal, because current Science does not recognize any.

And the reason a rhino wasn't named until the 1800's is because white people hadn't encountered them, but the people living with them had a name for them, which I am guessing is not pronounceable by us.




Ummm.....goats don't shed their horns every year. Most horns ARE extensions of the skull. I'm not getting into the whole unicorn argument, just felt that it was misleading to make the above argument regarding "regular" horns. Lots of cattle have horns too....

~ epona

_____________________________

~ You are a child of the Universe, no less than the trees and the stars. You have a right to be here, and whether or not it is clear to you, no doubt the Universe is unfolding as it should ~


(in reply to Lostkitten3)
Profile   Post #: 471
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/14/2009 8:11:16 AM   
StrictStacey


Posts: 1
Joined: 7/5/2009
Status: offline
It really makes me laugh when people use strings of ridiculous words to try and sound intelligent on the internet, I hope you don't all talk like that in real life because you come accross as egotistical morons.

(in reply to eponavet)
Profile   Post #: 472
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/14/2009 8:33:29 AM   
kittinSol


Posts: 16926
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: StrictStacey

It really makes me laugh when people use strings of ridiculous words to try and sound intelligent on the internet, I hope you don't all talk like that in real life because you come accross as egotistical morons.



Are you one of these people that espouses intellectual mediocrity as a sign of heightened moral virtue  ?

_____________________________



(in reply to StrictStacey)
Profile   Post #: 473
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/14/2009 8:44:31 AM   
thishereboi


Posts: 14463
Joined: 6/19/2008
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: kittinSol

quote:

ORIGINAL: StrictStacey

It really makes me laugh when people use strings of ridiculous words to try and sound intelligent on the internet, I hope you don't all talk like that in real life because you come accross as egotistical morons.



Are you one of these people that espouses intellectual mediocrity as a sign of heightened moral virtue  ?


I am still trying to figure out which words she thought were ridiculous. I have reread the post it was in reponse to, but I am not seeing them. Maybe she responded to the wrong post?

edited to add....ok I read her profile and I understand now.

< Message edited by thishereboi -- 9/14/2009 8:46:56 AM >


_____________________________

"Sweetie, you're wasting your gum" .. Albert


This here is the boi formerly known as orfunboi


(in reply to kittinSol)
Profile   Post #: 474
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/14/2009 8:58:14 AM   
Musicmystery


Posts: 30259
Joined: 3/14/2005
Status: offline
Maybe a lot of words are "big words" to her.

(in reply to thishereboi)
Profile   Post #: 475
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/14/2009 11:22:07 AM   
nephandi


Posts: 4470
Joined: 9/23/2005
From: Cold and magickal Norway in a town near Bergen!
Status: offline
Greetings

You you better not insult her, after all she will abuse you and then black you, or so she claim in her profile. She must have some mystical power to be able to abuse pepole over the Internet. Perhaps she can solve this whole debate. Just have her tele abuse some of our Atheists here and they will see the power of the supernatural manifested before their eyes. Do not fuck with tele abusing! :P

I wish you well


_____________________________

Whatever you think you can do or believe you can do, begin it. Action has magic, grace and power in it.--Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Futon torpedoes, make love not war!--Aswad


(in reply to Musicmystery)
Profile   Post #: 476
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/14/2009 12:10:14 PM   
thishereboi


Posts: 14463
Joined: 6/19/2008
Status: offline
That is funny, it reminds me of a profile that pops up from time to time when I hit the home page of CM. It starts off with

"If it is obvious that you have not read my profile you will be blocked and then I turn into a real bitch - Fair warning"

So if she blocks me and then turns into a real bitch, why would I care? Now if she was going to be a bitch and then block me, I might understand it.


_____________________________

"Sweetie, you're wasting your gum" .. Albert


This here is the boi formerly known as orfunboi


(in reply to nephandi)
Profile   Post #: 477
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/14/2009 2:14:28 PM   
tazzygirl


Posts: 37833
Joined: 10/12/2007
Status: offline
"I am young but very demanding, spoilt, selfish, greedy and vain, "

and gets paid... LOL

pretty much self explanatory!

_____________________________

Telling me to take Midol wont help your butthurt.
RIP, my demon-child 5-16-11
Duchess of Dissent 1
Dont judge me because I sin differently than you.
If you want it sugar coated, dont ask me what i think! It would violate TOS.

(in reply to thishereboi)
Profile   Post #: 478
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/14/2009 8:30:20 PM   
Lostkitten3


Posts: 179
Joined: 10/17/2008
Status: offline
You are right. GOats and cow horns are a part of the skull, and made of bone with bloodflow.

Tazzy, I am pretty sure that 2000 years ago, when everyone was herding animals (agricultural society) for a living, they knew exactly what horns were made of (since they had to debud their goats horns to keep themselves and their herds safe) and I am also sure that since so many cultures have the tendency to eat rhino horn, and know that it becomes stringy like hair when cooked, they also knew it was not in fact a horn in the sense of goats and sheep. I am willing to concede that someone saw a rhino in his travels, and called it a unicorn (or that it was simply interpreted from greek and latin into English as unicorn) and that what they had actually described (quite acurately) was a rhino. Given that people of that time probably couldn't understand the name given by another culture, they could have called it a farfegnugen for all we know, and it has been translated as "unicorn." But that doesn't prove that the horse with a single horn ever existed, unless you are referring to a rhino. People lived in africa, with the rhinos 2000 years ago honey.

al-Aswad, I don't see worshipping people for their supposed talents as god worship. People pray to gods to get miracles, to heal sick people to get a new puppy to avoid an accident in the midst of it, to save themselves from peril. They do not pray to the pope. they do not pray to the dali lama. He is the embodiment of the buddha but he is not the buddha. I don't know how to explain that. He has the soul of buddha, but he is reincarnated and must relearn his purpose in life each lifetime. And we all have the buddha in us, just as in christianity we all have god in us, and jesus is a part of god.

So we disagree on that much.

I do exists, for now, and sorta around here. Your speech reminded me of down the rabbit hole. I get that I exist in many realms at once, with infinite possibilities, until I make a choice and appear in this reality, right now, but that has very little to do with god and more with physics. God is a choice to believe in

ANd what I said (I thought) was that god cannot be proved with Scientific Method. That patterns and miracles are not proof of god. Perhaps I miswrote?



< Message edited by Lostkitten3 -- 9/14/2009 8:33:45 PM >

(in reply to eponavet)
Profile   Post #: 479
RE: Is Atheism a religion? - 9/14/2009 8:36:15 PM   
tazzygirl


Posts: 37833
Joined: 10/12/2007
Status: offline
quote:

Tazzy, I am pretty sure that 2000 years ago, when everyone was herding animals (agricultural society) for a living, they knew exactly what horns were made of (since they had to debud their goats horns to keep themselves and their herds safe) and I am also sure that since so many cultures have the tendency to eat rhino horn, and know that it becomes stringy like hair when cooked, they also knew it was not in fact a horn in the sense of goats and sheep. I am willing to concede that someone saw a rhino in his travels, and called it a unicorn (or that it was simply interpreted from greek and latin into English as unicorn) and that what they had actually described (quite acurately) was a rhino. Given that people of that time probably couldn't understand the name given by another culture, they could have called it a farfegnugen for all we know, and it has been translated as "unicorn." But that doesn't prove that the horse with a single horn ever existed, unless you are referring to a rhino.


I never said a unicorn that was the mythical creature existed. I think i may have even said it wasnt the mythical kind. I pointed out that an animal with a single horn may have existed... and that the lumbering creature the bible described could in fact have been a rhino.

_____________________________

Telling me to take Midol wont help your butthurt.
RIP, my demon-child 5-16-11
Duchess of Dissent 1
Dont judge me because I sin differently than you.
If you want it sugar coated, dont ask me what i think! It would violate TOS.

(in reply to Lostkitten3)
Profile   Post #: 480
Page:   <<   < prev  21 22 23 [24] 25   next >   >>
All Forums >> [Community Discussions] >> Dungeon of Political and Religious Discussion >> RE: Is Atheism a religion? Page: <<   < prev  21 22 23 [24] 25   next >   >>
Jump to:





New Messages No New Messages
Hot Topic w/ New Messages Hot Topic w/o New Messages
Locked w/ New Messages Locked w/o New Messages
 Post New Thread
 Reply to Message
 Post New Poll
 Submit Vote
 Delete My Own Post
 Delete My Own Thread
 Rate Posts




Collarchat.com © 2024
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy

0.254