quote:Being "not fond of" something is very much different than being told that your most deeply held beliefs are false and worthy of mocking. While I personally think that the word "troll" is thrown around with the same reckless disregard as is the word "homophobe," I can see how someone could call that "trolling."
I'm not very fond of puns
quote:Which is a shame, because when used conservatively, it can be a highly hilarious phrase.
some people on this board find the phrase "making Baby Jesus cry" unacceptably glib.
quote:Hmm. . . why is that, do you think?
I have a hard time remembering that people actually believe this stuff.
quote:What I like about this approach is that it correctly puts the blame where it belongs. Not on the believer for believing, but on the SPEAKER, for his failure of empathy.
Then, "because their beliefs don't work at all for me, so I automatically discount them without really thinking about it." Still truthful, yet not insulting to the intelligent people who hold the beliefs.
quote:The question was on my thought processes. In order to answer that honestly, I'm going to have to say what I am thinking. And I'm sorry, but my internal dialogue is nowise in polite disagreement with religious beliefs. Perhaps that was an unfortunately chosen phrase; 'slight disagreement' or 'difference of opinion' might have been better. Hence my example : On the subject of welfare, reasonable men of good will may hold different opinions; that is the sort of disagreement I see your formulation as implying.
The whole point *is* to have a polite disagreement, KoM.
quote:The answer given is as follows:
Kwea, Scott asked me a question about my thought processes. I attempted to answer it by drawing an analogy to his own.
quote:I'm not satisfied with this answer because it's defensive, and shows a real lack of self-criticism.
If an adult told you he believed in Santa Claus, would you automatically take his word for it, or would you suspect a leg-pull?
quote::grin: How am I supposed to know whether or not I'm going to like the answer to an unasked question? As a physicist, maybe you're privy to some. . . I dunno, some oracular quantum response. . . but trust me, wannabe-writers don't have this capability.
If he doesn't like the way I think, he's at liberty to try to change it or to ignore me. But if he's going to be insulted when I answer a question honestly - then he shouldn't have asked the question.
quote:Then you would have no chance of ever convincing a slaveowner of voluntarily relenquishing his ownership of slaves.
I think there is such a thing as taking empathy too far; at the risk of once more being accused of trolling, I see no value in empathising with the motives or beliefs of, say, slave owners.
quote:I can't help it. I'm brilliant.
Ralphie-- stop doing that thing where you say what I was going to say. Just. . . sit over there and drink your beer, you wino. . .
quote:Well, I never slaw such a thing!
Even when I'm cabbaged.
quote:Grant's guns had more to do with the end of slavery than any amount of reasoned argument. But in any case, I do not think you have to understand a state of mind in order to point out logical fallacies or undesirable consequences. Nor am I convinced that such an empathy would give you any advantage in discussion.
Then you would have no chance of ever convincing a slaveowner of voluntarily relenquishing his ownership of slaves.
quote:How awful. Next time I'll make sure to preface my remarks with some appropriate breast-beating. Seriously, just because you think your remarks are so cutting and incisive that I should immediately Realise The Error Of My Ways, doesn't mean I have to agree.
I'm not satisfied with this answer because it's defensive, and shows a real lack of self-criticism.
quote:Would you, indeed? And would you still consider him a full adult, capable of making informed, rational decisions on what to believe?
But I'll play my part, and answer you: it depends on the adult and the context of the statement. I would either laugh and hug him as a fellow-Father Christmas adherent, or I'd believe him utterly.
quote:Well, if he reasons that oil consumption is not a problem because Santa Claus will provide more oil if he's asked nicely, I think you have a legitimate cause for concern. What if he wants the Flying Reindeer Theory taught in biology classes? And in a somewhat similar vein, if in his next breath he tells you he believes such-and-such a stock is going to rise, would you take his advice to buy it, or seek a second opinion?
What does his belief in Santa Claus cost me?
quote:So people's statements about their beliefs, then, are so sacrosanct that you cannot apply critical thought to them? You would never doubt a politician's word that he thinks marriage is a sacred contract? It wouldn't occur to you that a preacher might be skimming off just a little from those millions the faithful send him? It's possible to take this too far, certainly. That's why I deliberately chose an absurd example.
Why should I think that he's trying to trick me? What a sad world it would be, if I went around thinking that people didn't REALLY believe the things that they say they believe in.
quote:Let me kindly suggest that you grow up and get over it. It takes one hella large ego to dismiss anyone's beliefs as illogical or insane simply because they are different from your own. Egotistical and about as juvenille as a belief in Santa Claus.
So let me rephrase : I find religious claims so completely out of whack that it is hard for me to believe that otherwise sane adults sincerely hold them. Presumably they and I experience the same world; logically we should draw the same conclusions. If they say they do not, only a few options are available : They are not very bright, insane, or lying. None of these options make for a particularly happy world to live in. (Incidentally, I tend to a combination of not-very-bright and brainwashed.) The obvious solution is to ignore the problem and assume that anybody I meet is an atheist until proven religious.
quote:If you are going to accuse me, at least have the "intelligence" to read what I said, not what you thought I was going to say.
I don't think you were just trolling, but you were looking for a response; and you got one.....probably the one you wanted.
quote:You can say,"Concerning that belief, that turns out not to be the case, wouldn't it be nice if that were true?" for the first phrase:firm yet polite, and honest.
I'm sorry, but I have yet to see anyone suggest a polite way of saying "Your most important beliefs about the world are just plain wrong, and this is obvious to anyone who isn't brainwashed", though many people have asserted that such a way exists.
quote:If you are unconvinced that empathy helps you understand and converse with people about possible logical fallacies that they are emotional about, you aren't as smart as you think you are.
But in any case, I do not think you have to understand a state of mind in order to point out logical fallacies or undesirable consequences. Nor am I convinced that such an empathy would give you any advantage in discussion.
quote:So everyone that believes anything different than you do is either stupider than you, insane, lying, or brainwashed? What a sad excuse for a worldview. Presumably even someone as arrogant as yourself would acknowledge that there are sane, honest people who are smarter than you yet believe in God. So that leaves what, in your cubbyholes? They must be brainwashed?
I find religious claims so completely out of whack that it is hard for me to believe that otherwise sane adults sincerely hold them. Presumably they and I experience the same world; logically we should draw the same conclusions. If they say they do not, only a few options are available : They are not very bright, insane, or lying. None of these options make for a particularly happy world to live in. (Incidentally, I tend to a combination of not-very-bright and brainwashed.) The obvious solution is to ignore the problem and assume that anybody I meet is an atheist until proven religious.
quote:There is NO polite way to say this, because this is not a civil opinion. The first part of the sentence is okay-- it's the second that is bothersome. Instead of addressing the beliefs in question-- instead of actually engaging the topic-- you close it down by slandering your opponent's character.
I have yet to see anyone suggest a polite way of saying "Your most important beliefs about the world are just plain wrong, and this is obvious to anyone who isn't brainwashed", though many people have asserted that such a way exists.
quote:Yes. I'll apply critical thought to the articles of their belief but the FACT that they believe is sacrosanct.
So people's statements about their beliefs, then, are so sacrosanct that you cannot apply critical thought to them?
quote:Of course they did. But, America is not the only place slavery has flourished. There's many parts of the world where it still exists. Second, wouldn't it be better to end slavery without a war if it could be done?
Grant's guns had more to do with the end of slavery than any amount of reasoned argument.
quote:First, you've never pointed out a logical fallacy about the mere belief in God, although you have pointed out error in certain ancilliary beliefs associated with one particular manifestation of belief in God.
But in any case, I do not think you have to understand a state of mind in order to point out logical fallacies or undesirable consequences.
quote:It's clear you're not convinced; it's equally clear you are not effective when communicating on this topic.
Nor am I convinced that such an empathy would give you any advantage in discussion.
quote:Just make sure you spell "adage" correctly. For Jon Boy's sake.
SM, you just made a sig.![]()
quote:How exactly do you go about making this type of judgement, Dan?
It has been my ancedotal experience that those people most vocal and enthusiastic in their evangelism are the people striving hardest to prove thier beliefs...to themselves.
quote:Unless you are using a very personal and useless definition of brainwashed.
. . . this is obvious to anyone who isn't brainwashed . . .
quote:Because that's one of the most common incorrect arguments against evolution.
2. If man evolved from monkeys and apes, why do we still have monkeys and apes?
quote:I think this is a trait that is very hard to see in oneself, and would be very difficult indeed to determine from an outside POV.
They want people to believe them so they can believe themselves.
quote:How do you know people's motivations? Are all activists only working to convince themselves? Or just the religious ones, because you can't imagine that anyone who speaks with fervor about something you don't feel could be telling the truth?
those people most vocal and enthusiastic in their evangelism are the people striving hardest to prove thier beliefs...to themselves.
This goes for faithful believers in LDS, Baptist Church, Islam, or even Agnostics and Atheists.
The arguments they make and the hysterics they go to in order to scream their dogma
quote:Trolling : Looking for a response. So you don't think I'm trolling, but you think I'm trolling. Well, that makes a lot of sense, doesn't it? I was responding to the second half of the sentence. However, I may possibly have over-reacted just a little. Sorry.
I don't think you were just trolling, but you were looking for a response; and you got one.....probably the one you wanted.
quote:Not at all; only about things where there is overwhelming evidence, yet people insist on stubbornly clinging to the opposite view.
So everyone that believes anything different than you do is either stupider than you, insane, lying, or brainwashed?
quote:Well, yes, as a matter of fact you are. To wit, you do not believe in Odin and Thor. You do not believe in Allah. You do not believe in Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva. You do not believe in any of the myriad tribal gods of the five continents. In short, you're almost as much of an atheist as I am : I believe in one god less than you do.
I believe in God.
Am I lying?
quote:I didn't say there is a logical fallacy in beliefs in God, only that you wouldn't have to empathise with the believer to point them out, should there be any. I intended this more for the slave-owning analogy.
First, you've never pointed out a logical fallacy about the mere belief in God, although you have pointed out error in certain ancillary beliefs associated with one particular manifestation of belief in God.
quote:I beg to differ.
I'm really smart. I'm extremely reasonable. I prize honesty. And I'm sane.
quote:There are many known phenomenons that cannot be explained at all.
The foremost logical problem is that no God is logically required. There is no known phenomenon that cannot be explained without resort to gods.
quote:First, you don't know that. Although I don't believe this to be the case, it could have happened as written. Second, it's not written as a mere historical, factual account in such a way as to preclude the use of metaphor. Science still uses metaphor today, and relies on millennia of human perception of common metaphors to explain itself.
Added to this are all the factual problems. Genesis did not in fact occur as described, in spite of clearly being written as a historical, factual account.
quote:Interesting that all of these could be true and the Gospel accounts could be true.
The miracles described in the New Testament were all recounted long after the fact, by eyewitnesses (notoriously unreliable sources) with good reason to lie. Archaeological evidence of mother-goddess worship among the ancient Israelites contradicts the 'Chosen People' bit, which requires Yahweh-only worship back to the Creation.
quote:are why many people consider you rude and insufferably arrogant and have a problem with your posts on religion.
quote:I beg to differ.
I'm really smart. I'm extremely reasonable. I prize honesty. And I'm sane.
quote:Are you really sure you want to insert your god into gaps in human knowledge? You'll find him shrinking rather rapidly. What specific phenomena were you thinking of, anyway?
There are many known phenomena that cannot be explained at all.
quote:Not without the creator lying outright, which contradicts some other bits of the faith. Stars at gigalightyear distances.
First, you don't know that. Although I don't believe this to be the case, it could have happened as written.
quote:Science uses metaphor to explain things to laymen. It uses math for actual work. And I'm with the fundies on this one : Genesis was written by someone who believed that this is what actually occurred.
Second, it's not written as a mere historical, factual account in such a way as to preclude the use of metaphore. Science still uses metaphore today, and relies on millenia of human perception of common metaphores to explain itself.
quote:And let me once again ask that question : Had you encountered such claims for the first time today, would you believe them, or dismiss them as an amusing fairy tale? Let me also note that the Nordic myths have just as much evidence in their favour as the Christian one : To wit, eyewitness accounts. Explain once more why you dismiss the one and not the other.
Interesting that all of these could be true and the Gospel accounts could be true.
quote:Yes, I know. I just couldn't think of a polite way to put that. I'm sorry, but I really don't believe comrade Ralphie is entirely rational on this subject, nor do I think she is being quite honest with herself.
(...) Are why many people consider you rude and insufferably arrogant and have a problem with your posts on religion.
quote:That's not what I said at all.
Are you really sure you want to insert your god into gaps in human knowledge? You'll find him shrinking rather rapidly.
quote:Well, the beginning of the Universe, for one.
What specific phenomena were you thinking of, anyway?
quote:An all powerful God could creating the stars could also create the light traveling from the stars so they appear instantly.
Not without the creator lying outright, which contradicts some other bits of the faith. Stars at gigalightyear distances.
quote:Ding! Ding! Ding! He begins to show comprehension, even if he thinks he's refuting something. (Just trying your own tone on for size.)
Science uses metaphor to explain things to laymen. It uses math for actual work.
quote:Adults are converted to various faiths all the time.
And let me once again ask that question : Had you encountered such claims for the first time today, would you believe them, or dismiss them as an amusing fairy tale?
quote:I'm not aware of the Nordic documents which are written to record the witnessing of actual events. Could you link one for me?
Let me also note that the Nordic myths have just as much evidence in their favour as the Christian one : To wit, eyewitness accounts. Explain once more why you dismiss the one and not the other.
quote:This makes no sense, KoM. On the one hand, you assert I'm lying about my belief in God-- yet at the end of your laughable logic, you not that I do indeed believe in at least ONE god.
I believe in God.
Am I lying?
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Well, yes, as a matter of fact you are. To wit, you do not believe in Odin and Thor. You do not believe in Allah. You do not believe in Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva. You do not believe in any of the myriad tribal gods of the five continents. In short, you're almost as much of an atheist as I am : I believe in one god less than you do.
quote:Why? What evidence do you have? You have no reason to be confident in this opinion, KoM, but you post it as brazenly as if you had gorges of studies to back you up.
I think the explanation of your faith is more likely to be found in very strong cultural conditioning, added to a considerable fear of death.
quote:To you, perhaps, but to most of humanity that would not ring true. Also, a lot of scientist I know, and keep in mind I worked for 3 years at USAMRIID so I knew some very intelligent ones (world class, actually), have far more questions about the world than answers. Read a medical journal sometimes to see what I mean...practically 50% of the articles are about new questions raise and tons of things unanswered. We are only beginning to understand the universe, and we might not even know what questions to ask yet.
There is no known phenomenon that cannot be explained without resort to gods.
quote:Just because people, disagree with the validity of their proof doesn't make them insane. It makes them disagree.
only about things where there is overwhelming evidence, yet people insist on stubbornly clinging to the opposite view.
quote:Don't make me link to a dictionary on this one, OK? Belief in one God is a very far step from not believing in any God.
I believe in God.
Am I lying?
Well, yes, as a matter of fact you are. To wit, you do not believe in Odin and Thor. You do not believe in Allah. You do not believe in Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva. You do not believe in any of the myriad tribal gods of the five continents. In short, you're almost as much of an atheist as I am : I believe in one god less than you do.
quote:Icky, Good point...I had already mentioned it earlier, when I said to stop pretending that the uproar was unanticipated.
This was done on purpose, knowing full well that it would offend, with giving offense, in fact, as the purpose.
quote:Yes, this is what I meant by 'lying outright'. An all powerful God could, by the same token, have created the Universe last Tuesday, complete with our memories of it. That way madness lies; let us not go there.
An all powerful God could creating the stars could also create the light traveling from the stars so they appear instantly.
quote:Really? So where are the Elder Scrolls that explain to the priests or other experts what is really going on?
Who was the target audience of Genesis? Laymen!
quote:While it certainly happens, it is very rare compared to the total number of believers. You'll note that it usually happens to people who are seriously unhappy in their lives for one reason or another. (And before you go off on a see-how-useful-it-is riff, let me note that I consider this as good a solution as alcohol.) Even then, though, the emphasis is usually on the God=loves-you part of the faith, not the these-miracles-happened part.
Adults are converted to various faiths all the time.
quote:Ynglinga Saga tells of the ancestry of the first kings of Norway, and is most certainly historical in the latter portions. You will observe that the war with the Vanir, the exchange of hostages, and the immigration north could well be folk-memory of actual events; I am a bit less inclined to believe the magical bits. You should note that this is oral tradition until Snorre writes it down; it is therefore more to be compared to the Old Testament than to the New in terms of the gap of time between event and writing.
I'm not aware of the Nordic documents which are written to record the witnessing of actual events. Could you link one for me?
quote:I am not backpedaling. I stated earlier that I thought religious beliefs came from lying (to oneself or to others), or from brainwashing, or from being not very bright. In your case, I think it is the middle cause at work, based on the evidence that I don't think you're lying and you seem reasonably intelligent in other matters. Elementary, my dear Dr Watson!
Why? What evidence do you have? You have no reason to be confident in this opinion, KoM, but you post it as brazenly as if you had gorges of studies to back you up.
quote:My usual response? Invite them in, have a chat. See if they'll give me a copy of their holy book. S'how I got my Book of Mormon, actually. I went through a period of investigating the LDS Church, and I still am (albeit much more slowly now). Knowing LDS people here on Hatrack made me curious, and what I knew about the Church was very compelling. But as much as I wanted the Church to make sense to me, I couldn't reconcile the theology with my observations of the world. Doesn't mean I think all Mormons are deluded jerks or have a secret mission to rule the world.
If you had been exposed to your religion, whatever it happens to be, for the first time as an adult, would you then be a believer? Be honest, now : What is your usual response to the Jehovah's Witnesses who knock on your door? (Substitute Mormon if you happen to be JW yourself). What is the usual response of most people? It seems to me, then, that most religious people hold their beliefs mainly because they've been exposed to them over a period of years from their parents. Brainwashed, in other words, or 'strongly socially conditioned' if you like.
quote:It's not my fault if most people aren't very bright. Again, though, perhaps you could give a specific example? While certainly there are few people who know the detailed mathematics of star formation, I think most would accept that star formation can be explained by astronomers.
To you, perhaps, but to most of humanity that would not ring true.
quote:I am thinking there is a slight difference between "I don't know how function X of the body works" and "OMG! God did this!" See my comment about God-of-the-Gaps to Dagonee.
Also, a lot of scientist I know, and keep in mind I worked for 3 years at USAMRIID so I knew some very intelligent ones (world class, actually), have far more questions about the world than answers.
quote:While it cannot be proved that no god exists, it is not too difficult to prove that any specific god doesn't exist as described. The Genesis objection to Christianity, for example. Since there are only a finite (though large) number of gods worshipped by humans, well then.
I don't accept the validity of your views, and I would like to see you prove it, and that would involve proving a negative.
quote:That's not lying outright. That's a practical solution to the problem of lighting the world immediately while providing for ongoing starlight.
Yes, this is what I meant by 'lying outright'. An all powerful God could, by the same token, have created the Universe last Tuesday, complete with our memories of it. That way madness lies; let us not go there.
quote:Why would such things exist?
Really? So where are the Elder Scrolls that explain to the priests or other experts what is really going on?
quote:No, I didn't, because, unlike you, I don't pretend to know everything about how others react to things. I have believed all my life. I can't tell you how I would respond right now. But I can, and did, point out that other people who have not believed all their life do come to believe it as adults. Numbers notwithstanding, this is enough to disprove your point that only brainwashing can explain faith.
In any case, you did not actually answer the question. If, today, you encountered the loaves-and-fishes miracle for the first time, would you believe it?
quote:Thanks for the links. Of course, I said I didn't dismiss them. And, as you point out, some may be actual history.
Ynglinga Saga tells of the ancestry of the first kings of Norway, and is most certainly historical in the latter portions. You will observe that the war with the Vanir, the exchange of hostages, and the immigration north could well be folk-memory of actual events; I am a bit less inclined to believe the magical bits. You should note that this is oral tradition until Snorre writes it down; it is therefore more to be compared to the Old Testament than to the New in terms of the gap of time between event and writing.
quote:They could be historical, in the sense she did have the vision. I don't know, nor claim to know. You really aren't good at understanding others, KoM. And it's hindering your ability to argue here. See?
In a somewhat similar vein, Voluspå purports to be a vision by a seeress, telling of the creation and eventual destruction of the Earth, sort of Genesis and Revelations wrapped up in one.
quote:Further example of your lack of understanding leading to essentially non sequitur responses. I've never said that "OMG! God did this!" is the explanation for anything, and your "God-of-the-Gaps analysis wouldn't be an on-point response if I had.
I am thinking there is a slight difference between "I don't know how function X of the body works" and "OMG! God did this!" See my comment about God-of-the-Gaps to Dagonee.
quote:Yes, that would be a lie. When we look at stars sufficiently far away, we are seeing what occurred many thousands or millions of years ago. If the world was indeed created 6000 years ago, then those events did not occur. In other words, God is telling us things that did not happen. That is a lie. It may be clearer if you consider the creation-last-Thursday theory; you then have memories, created by God, of things that never actually happened. That is a lie.
That's not lying outright. That's a practical solution to the problem of lighting the world immediately while providing for ongoing starlight.
quote:
There is something God can’t do—lie or deceive. Unfortunately, many people don’t see the logic of why the ‘fully grown’ ‘light on its way’ argument falls down badly. See Dr Humphreys’ excellent book Starlight and Time (right) for a detailed explanation, or this extract from our Answers Book. (Clue: the light from distant stars falling on Earth is more than light — it contains information recording past events. If the ‘light on its way’ idea is true, God created misleading information ‘part way’ along a beam of light, recording events that never happened. It can take a while for the proverbial philosophical ‘penny to drop’ on this one.)
quote:Because they exist in science, to wit, the aforementioned math. You asserted that Genesis was only aimed at laymen, and intended as a metaphor for them to understand. That would seem to imply that there is a deeper truth somewhere, telling what actually occurred, but only intended for those capable of understanding it.
Why would such things exist?
quote:Right, I agree. But I assume you do not believe they are historical in the sense that this really occurred, right? Yet they have exactly the same amount of credibility as Revelations. You have yet to explain why you believe one over the other. If indeed I am so poor at understanding others, why not help out a bit by explaining?
They could be historical, in the sense she did have the vision.
quote:We don't have a message from God saying, "Things observed in light all happened." We've inferred that. Again, I happen to think that light we observe relfects actual events. But there's nothing inherently dishonest about this not being the case, any more than there is anything dishonest about the universe appearing to be static and space and time appearing to be separate entities.
Yes, that would be a lie. When we look at stars sufficiently far away, we are seeing what occurred many thousands or millions of years ago. If the world was indeed created 6000 years ago, then those events did not occur. In other words, God is telling us things that did not happen.
quote:You're assuming the purpose of the Genesis revelation was to give a scientifically useful account. You may infer, but I certainly did not imply, that there is a deeper written truth somewhere. You're projecting your experience in one field, science, to a nother field with no basis for so doing.
Because they exist in science, to wit, the aforementioned math. You asserted that Genesis was only aimed at laymen, and intended as a metaphor for them to understand. That would seem to imply that there is a deeper truth somewhere, telling what actually occurred, but only intended for those capable of understanding it.
quote:You've made it clear you only accept proof that is physically observable and repeatable. I'm not going to waste my time offering other proof and then listen to you mock it.
If indeed I am so poor at understanding others, why not help out a bit by explaining?
quote:That was directed to Kwea. I did not assert that you had said any such thing. I said that 'we do not understand this' in a medical journal does not imply that the scientist invokes God to explain the process.
Further example of your lack of understanding leading to essentially non sequitur responses. I've never said that "OMG! God did this!" is the explanation for anything, and your "God-of-the-Gaps" analysis wouldn't be an on-point response if I had.
quote:This isn't sudden, it's a long-standing policy.
Indeed, I probably will not accept whatever reason you offer, but I would like to hear what it is. Why the sudden defensiveness?
quote:Oh, so very clever you are! I must be defensive and not actually believe what I say I do because I don't want to type what will, at minimum, be a 2-page post and would probably take a book for someone who starts threads to mock my beliefs.
Whatever I might think of your reasons, you know they're good ones, right? Or... do you?
quote:I've done more than that: I've asserted that God is the ultimate explanation for everything that happens in the Universe and beyond, although he has allowed the action of free will of created beings to have permanent effect as well. None of which calls into question the usefulness or validity of science within it's proper sphere of inquiry. Said sphere being that which can be physically observed.
And, by the way, you have in fact asserted that God is the explanation for the beginning of the Universe.
quote:Yes, there most certainly is. If we cannot trust what your god shows us in starlight, why should we trust what he shows us in Biblical writing?
Again, I happen to think that light we observe relfects actual events. But there's nothing inherently dishonest about this not being the case.
quote:In what way is this useful knowledge, though, since it only applies to things that cannot be observed? I would like to draw your attention to the Invisible Pink Unicorn, or IPU. The IPU does not interact in any way with the Universe, except for having created it. It is plainly divine, since it is Invisible and Pink at the same time - a magical feat, to say the least. How is the IPU a better explanation for the existence of the Universe than 'The Universe just exists'? How is it a worse one than the Christian God?
I've done more than that: I've asserted that God is the ultimate explanation for everything that happens in the Universe and beyond, although he has allowed the action of free will of created beings to have permanent effect as well. None of which calls into question the usefulness or validity of science within it's proper sphere of inquiry. Said sphere being that which can be physically observed.
quote:See note on "arrogant" and "insufferable" above.
Well, if you won't explain, you won't. I guess I'll just have to be satisfied with the explanation I had, to wit, you have no good reason for accepting Catholicism over any other dogma, except what your parents told you.
quote:Do you think they are refuted because you can point to a source? If they're bad arguments, say so, and why. That one's opponent is well-read on a subject is not usually considered a weakness.
KoM is parrotting arguments straight out of alt.atheism.
quote:No, but it is your fault that you are so damn arrogant that you feel you have the right (and ability) to dismiss most of the population as ignorant because they don't subscribe to your sophomoric attempts at sophisticated thought.
It's not my fault if most people aren't very bright.
quote:There you show your ignorance once again....not just in your tone, but in your lack of comprehension.
I am thinking there is a slight difference between "I don't know how function X of the body works" and "OMG! God did this!" See my comment about God-of-the-Gaps to Dagonee.
quote:Perhaps the fault isn't in the message, but in the arrogant presumptions you hold. Or maybe in your unswerving "faith" in the concrete world.
That would seem to imply that there is a deeper truth somewhere, telling what actually occurred, but only intended for those capable of understanding it.
quote:No, but it does leave room for all sorts of interpretations of the data you so proudly quote, most of which you have discounted.
That was directed to Kwea. I did not assert that you had said any such thing. I said that 'we do not understand this' in a medical journal does not imply that the scientist invokes God to explain the process.
quote:He did, you just refuse to listen.
Do you think they are refuted because you can point to a source? If they're bad arguments, say so, and why. That one's opponent is well-read on a subject is not usually considered a weakness.
quote:You are, of course, free to demonstrate how and why the belief is "stupid."
And there are some beliefs, even religious beliefs, for example Scientology, that are just stupid. If calling Scientologists stupid is not civil, then civility is overrated.
quote:You've still failed to provide a simple, convincing explanation for believing <atheism> over <insert other religion here>. Precisely the same amount of evidence.
Also, let me point out once again that no-one has been able to put up a simple, convincing explanation for believing one religion over another. Why do you believe <your religion here> over Scientology? Precisely the same amount of evidence.
quote:I'm not making any attempt to refute them. In fact, I agree with them. I suspect that I learned them from the same place you did, and used them there myself. But that forum was an appropriate place to do so. This isn't.
quote:quote:Do you think they are refuted because you can point to a source? If they're bad arguments, say so, and why. That one's opponent is well-read on a subject is not usually considered a weakness.
KoM is parrotting arguments straight out of alt.atheism.
quote:Atheism is the default position : Had you not been told of a god, would you believe in one? A claim of existence requires evidence; in the absence of such evidence, nonexistence is the logical position to take.
You've still failed to provide a simple, convincing explanation for believing <atheism> over <insert other religion here>. Precisely the same amount of evidence.
quote:And there is evidence. The fact that you don't accept it doesn't make it not evidence. It makes it insufficient evidence to convince you.
A claim of existence requires evidence; in the absence of such evidence, nonexistence is the logical position to take.
quote:Well, perhaps life is indeed empty of meaning. I mean, it would be sad if this were the case, but it's also sad that I don't have a million dollars and a harem, and I don't see you complaining about that.
(...) and too much logic at the cost of belief leads to an empty life devoid of meaning.
quote:Alt.atheism
Glenn Arnold, where do you think you know me from?
quote:If you take the problem of evil to be an evidential problem, there's a whole lot of evidence against theism. You might take all of the bad things that happen to innocent beings as evidence that there is no omnipotent, omniscient all-good being out there.
You've still failed to provide a simple, convincing explanation for believing <atheism> over <insert other religion here>. Precisely the same amount of evidence.
quote:'Illogical' is a strange choice of words here (Stand back, time for philosopher rant) since illogical means self-contradictory. I doubt you want to say that religion is illogical in the strictest sense.
My point was that science can't, and IMO won't ever, answer everything. That there are things that are illogical that still matter despite being so.
quote:There are numerous volumes on this subject, but the simplest counterpoint is that the "bad things" are bad in a temporal context; we don't know their effect in an eternal context.
If you take the problem of evil to be an evidential problem, there's a whole lot of evidence against theism. You might take all of the bad things that happen to innocent beings as evidence that there is no omnipotent, omniscient all-good being out there.
The stock reply is human free will, but there do seem to be all sorts of natural disasters and such that don't result in any way from human choice.
quote:See, it's good to have faith in something for which you have no evidence whatsoever.
Anyway, I don't share this pessimism about the long-term effectiveness of science. The origin of our universe is a topic ripe for scientific investigation. Theories, albeit very tentative ones, have already been proposed. It may take 100 or 1,000 years, but when such a theory finally becomes confirmed and accepted people will at last realize that yes, science and religion can and must conflict.
quote:The things I'm talking about are (for example) a forest fire started by lightning which kills off a lot of animals in a very painful way. Such things do happen, and it doesn't make a lot of sense to claim that they serve some eternal purpose.
There are numerous volumes on this subject, but the simplest counterpoint is that the "bad things" are bad in a temporal context; we don't know their effect in an eternal context.
quote:My evidence is induction: some practice (science) has been extremely effective in tackling problems of a certain type (explaining physical matters of fact) in the past. Thus I believe it will meet with further success in the future. Or perhaps you think I have no evidence for the view that a quantum theory of gravity will eventually be successful, or that the quantum measurement problem will one day be solved.
See, it's good to have faith in something for which you have no evidence whatsoever.
quote:Good question what "confirmable" means in the context of cosmology, but I'm quite sure that a theory of the universe's creation could be successful in the same way that our current cosmological models are, by providing an explanatory prediction of the astronomical phenomena we observe. An example of a very early stage of such a theory is the work of Alexander Vilenkin on quantum cosmology: http://www.arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0204061
I'd be interested to hear you propose even a hypothetical explanation for the beginning of the Universe that will be both scientifically confirmable and contradict religion.
quote:Sraw. Man.
Science already contradicts the Bible, just ask those fundies who believe in Creationism.
quote:The question was how one could be both confirmable and contradict religious beliefs, not merely how one could be confirmable.
Good question what "confirmable" means in the context of cosmology, but I'm quite sure that a theory of the universe's creation could be successful in the same way that our current cosmological models are, by providing an explanatory prediction of the astronomical phenomena we observe. An example of a very early stage of such a theory is the work of Alexander Vilenkin on quantum cosmology: http://www.arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0204061
Hawking also did some of the early work on quantum cosmology. I think Max Tegmark at U Penn and David Deutsch have also put some thought into this.
quote:The standard answer to this is that since atheism is a lack of belief, rather than a positive assertion, that:
You've still failed to provide a simple, convincing explanation for believing <atheism> over <insert other religion here>. Precisely the same amount of evidence.
quote:The quantum cosmology theory I posted contradicts the view that the universe was created by God.
The question was how one could be both confirmable and contradict religious beliefs, not merely how one could be confirmable.
quote:In this scenario, atheism is really a standard of proof, not a belief. But it's sure confusing that the word has almost contradictory meanings.
People don't "believe" in atheism.
quote:How so?
The quantum cosmology theory I posted contradicts the view that the universe was created by God.
quote:Which is why I campaign so hard for consistent and usable definitions of atheism and agnosticism. But we've been through that before.
In this scenario, atheism is really a standard of proof, not a belief. But it's sure confusing that the word has almost contradictory meanings. [Smile]
quote:So the model is: we start out with a 0-dimensional spacetime, which is a mathematical way of describing nothing, no universe. Over time there is a non-zero chance that such a 0-dimensional spacetime can turn into a 4-dimensional universe like the one we live in. Thus, the creation of a universe without a creator.
The picture that has emerged from this line of development is that a small closed universe can spontaneously nucleate out of nothing, where by 'nothing' I mean a state with no classical space and time.
quote:I never have. Big deal.
you can hardly deny that science contradicts a literal reading of Genesis.
quote:That all depends on your definition of "science" and "literal".
you can hardly deny that science contradicts a literal reading of Genesis.
quote:What it boils down to is this: You can say that I'm mistaken; You can say that I'm misled; but when I say 'I believe in God,' you CANNOT say I'm lying. You have no proof, you have no ground to stand on, you have less than a straw man with which to argue.
Scott, you do not believe in Allah, who is the One True God (tm). Therefore you are lying when you say you believe in God.
You do not believe in Odin, who is the One True God (tm). Therefore you are lying when you say you believe in God.
Do you see where I'm going? Possibly your irony meter needs a slight adjustment.
quote:Okay, so I'm "reasonably intelligent," and not lying. Somehow, though, I've fallen under the spell of social conditioning, which makes me make huge, irrational, stupid leaps of illogic. . .
I stated earlier that I thought religious beliefs came from lying (to oneself or to others), or from brainwashing, or from being not very bright.
In your case, I think it is the middle cause at work, based on the evidence that I don't think you're lying and you seem reasonably intelligent in other matters. Elementary, my dear Dr Watson!
quote:Did you read my exchange with Dagonee? My basic argument is that the overwhelming majority of the believers in a given religion are born to parents of the same religion. (Disregarding fly-by-night cults with two hundred members.) It is therefore reasonable to assume that, had you been born to Catholic parents, you would be a Catholic, and so on. Hence I conclude that your faith is determined by your conditioning.
Why do you think that I (or any religious person) only believe because of social conditioning?
quote:While that may be enough to convince you, I don;t see that convincing anyone else. It is flawed logic...incomplete at best, sloppy at worst.
Hence I conclude that your faith is determined by your conditioning.
quote:
That's Funny, You Don't Look Jewish.
Chaim and Billy both lived in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, just blocks away from each other, in worlds that almost never collided. Chaim was a Hasidic Jew – he'd never heard pop music or watched MTV. Billy Campion, known as the rocker Vic Thrill, was the star of an underground band. Billy put Chaim, who took on the name Curly Oxide, into the band, and in just one year, he leapt from the 19th Century into the 21st. David Segal, rock critic for the Washington Post, reports. Listen to program (start from six minutes into the program)
quote:Your assumption is wrong for a great many people, which you refuse to admit, or at least you minimize their numbers. The Cathloic Church has lost a lot of people lately, but their members haven't stopped having kids. Islam is showing signs of a huge upsurge in the USA, but most of those people are converts.
It is therefore reasonable to assume that, had you been born to Catholic parents, you would be a Catholic, and so on. Hence I conclude that your faith is determined by your conditioning.
quote:Next time you don't know why I disagree with you on a lot of these points see the statement above.
I also know that my 99% number is made up on the spot, but I'm comfortable with it
quote:Dictonaries help, too. If the majority of people here in the US are Christians, of one sort or another, how is Christianity a cult?
Cult: In religion and sociology, a cult is a group of people devoted to beliefs and goals which are not held by the majority of society, often religious in nature. Its marginal status may come about either due to its novel belief system or due to idiosyncratic practices that cause the surrounding culture to regard it as far outside the mainstream.
quote:I agree with this wholeheartedly. There's plenty of reasons to believe in the possibility of a God. It gets a bit trickier with specific gods, but even then there's more than a little justification for belief.
And until someone has a definitive answer, the possibility of a God is not "obviously" silly, uninformed, or crazy, false claims to the contrary aside.
quote:
Religiously involved families of early adolescents, ages 12 to 14, living in the United States appear to have significantly stronger relationships between mothers and fathers than families that are not religiously active. The National Study of Youth and Religion (The NSOYR is based in Univ. of North Carolina but funded by the Lilly Endowment, an openly pro-religion organization.)
quote:***
Various measures of religiosity are associated with a variety of healthy, desirable outcomes across a diversity of areas of concern, including juvenile drug, alcohol, and tobacco use, and dlinquency (citations ommitted), suicide; depression and hoplessness; adolescent health-enhancing behaviors; life satisfaction, involvement with families, and skills in solving health-related problems; effective coping with problems; risky sexual behaviors; pro-family attitudes and values; academic achievement; political and civic involvement; and commitment to and involvement in community service.
The National Study of Youth and Religion
quote:But if God wanted you to be Catholic, what better way to introduce you to the religion than to give you two Catholic parents?
It is therefore reasonable to assume that, had you been born to Catholic parents, you would be a Catholic, and so on. Hence I conclude that your faith is determined by your conditioning.
quote:Prove it. I would say that Genesis 1 was plainly intented to be a worship liturgy and Genesis 2-3 plainly was a story. And various other parts of Genesis are various other genres, but very little of it is plainly intended to be read as a history book.
Genesis plainly was intended to be read as literal history.
quote:I don't agree with this. "Biblical fundamentalist"is a term that compares different levels of belief. In the past, non-believers were less common, and those that believed in the bible as "Gospel truth" were more common. There were undoubtedly those whose beliefs were in between.
Biblical fundamentalism is a modern phenomenon, and shouldn't be attributed to ancient writers.
quote:West, LJ, Pierce, CM, Thomas, WD (1962) Lysergic Acid Diethylamide: Its effect on a Male Asiatic Elephant. Science, 138, 1100-1102 .
The Anti-Cultist and the Elephant: "A dose of madness - Forty years ago, two psychiatrists administered history's largest dose of LSD"
[...][Elephant drops dead]
[Conclusion]
West and Pierce's conclusion, a staggering feat of positive thought, sums up an era's belief in the infallibility of science: "It appears that the elephant is highly sensitive to the effects of LSD - a finding which may prove to be valuable in elephant-control work in Africa."·
quote:Mormo, I think that makes it onto my all-time favourite quotes list. Thanks!
I'm trying real hard to be the mahout.
quote:KoM:
this discussion has proven so far that I cannot expect honest or open discussion with him/her at all.
quote:The universal appearance of religion in almost every society is almost unarguable. Given its preponderance it is beyond simplistic to argue that religion is a learned behaviour. Ascribing to a particular sect or belief may be strongly influenced by learning but the desire/need to believe is, in my view, a subsequence of our nature.
My contention is that most people believe only because they have been so taught by their parents.
quote:Because they are not your puppets, that they have to believe things for the same reason you do...or that you don't, as the case may be. They have a ton of reasons for converting from one to another, and the fact that you dismiss some very important differences with a wave of hyperbole again shows how little YOU know of religion, not anything else.
would you like to suggest a third hypothesis for how people choose their religion, or dispute any of the assumptions? If not, the first hypothesis, 'people choose religion based almost solely upon the religion of their parents' appears to fit the data better. But if indeed religious beliefs are not based on evidence, why should they be given any respect or credence?
quote:How about all of them? Assume all you want, you still have not done anything but to try and define things so that they fit your preconceived notions of religion and beliefs. I don't buy any of your assumptions, nor do I see any data to back any of them up.
or dispute any of the assumptions?
quote:Not you, that is painfully obvious to anyone who does. BTW, when I converted I had to attend classes that described in detail what the differences were, and why.
dkw
"*snort*
You think the differences between denominations are changes in ritual?"
King of Men
"Yes, well? How many people really know anything about theology?"
quote:Not true at all, as evidenced by so much material that I am not even going to bother linking to it.....look up any standard sociological text. Or anthropology book. Or psychology text.
The nature of religion is such that it will be taught to children whether or not it works; it is a parasite meme, capable of diverting valuable resources from useful tasks into its own maintenance.
quote:Appears to be happening in your country, maybe, but not as a world-wide phenomenon.
Now that religion is in competition with atheism on a large scale, we should be seeing it fade into nothingness, which indeed appears to be happening.
quote:Linky
Now that religion is in competition with atheism on a large scale, we should be seeing it fade into nothingness, which indeed appears to be happening.
quote:
Now that religion is in competition with atheism on a large scale,
quote:
we should be seeing it fade into nothingness, which indeed appears to be happening.
quote:Perhaps a better way of saying this is that atheism is "out of the closet."
Now that religion is in competition with atheism on a large scale,
quote:Consider the source. Norway has the highest rate of atheism in the world, despite the fact that it still has church/state connections.
we should be seeing it fade into nothingness, which indeed appears to be happening.
quote:
76.5% (159 million) of Americans identify themselves as Christian. This is a major slide from 86.2% in 1990. Identification with Christianity has suffered a loss of 9.7 percentage points in 11 years -- about 0.9 percentage points per year. This decline is identical to that observed in Canada between 1981 and 2001. If this trend continues, then by about the year 2042, non-Christians will outnumber the Christians in the U.S.
(...)
- About 16% of adults have changed their identification.
- For the largest group, the change was abandoning all religion.
quote:And these data are for America; the fading into nothingness bit, admittedly, is more from my Norwegian experience. However, you might be interested in this table :
- For the largest group, the change was abandoning all religion.
- 14.1% do not follow any organized religion. This is an unusually rapid increase -- almost a doubling -- from only 8% in 1990.
code:In other words, the religious types are found predominantly in the oldest part of the population. Expect to see the 84% drop rapidly as that demographic dies.
Outlook | All adults | Young (18-34) | Senior (over 64)
Religious | 37 | 27 | 47
(...)
Secular | 10 | 14 | 7
quote:
7. A level growth of Nonreligious Persons.
While the growth rate of Islam is increasing, the worldwide growth of persons professing no religion, whether agnostics, freethinkers, atheists or non-religious humanists appears to have plateaued since the collapse of communism. Statistically speaking, the non-religious population of the world is holding its own at 15% of the world's population, and will continue so as we enter the 21st century.
quote:Is this it? Has Godwin's Law been invoked? Because I was gonna try to add to the discussion.
Since I believe religion is not only wrong, but harmful, I hope it will fade away, much as I hope that nazism has been discredited for good.
quote:I will deign to clarify on his behalf. He thinks the religious are a plague somewhere in the neighborhood of Nazis and should be eradicated from the planet.
Your reasons are unclear. Could you clarify?
quote:That's why you care so much about the numbers.
We'll just have to have a nice little war, Reformation-style, to settle the question.
quote:Why, are you going to backpedal on this too?
Well, Kwea, it's one study more than you've managed to come up with. In fact, being a summary of several, it's about ten studies more than you've managed to come up with. So might I suggest that you stop accusing me of fabrications?
quote:I haven't made a single claim that needs a link, not have I fabricated a single fact...or psudo-fact as the case may be.
I also know that my 99% number is made up on the spot, but I'm comfortable with it. Conversion is pretty rare.
quote:Did KoM say this? If so, it must not be on this page. I will agree that conversion in Europe is pretty rare, at least if we are to base it on what the Mormon missionaries there report. But this is definitely not the case in other parts of the world. I would like to point out that the yearly growth of the Mormon church increases more from conversion than by those born into it.
I also know that my 99% number is made up on the spot, but I'm comfortable with it. Conversion is pretty rare.
quote:I'm not sure what this means for the frequency of conversions, though, since we can't tell whether it is the same people going in and going out. If it is, that raises the question of whether two-years conversions should count.
Some groups such as Mormons and Jehovah's Witnesses appear to attract a large number of converts (in-switchers), but also nearly as large a number of apostates (out-switchers).
quote:What, again? It's not enough that they've already been pointed out, and you then ignored them? Read the thread.
People, could you please tell me exactly which facts I'm supposed to have made up, so I can check whether I am, in fact, talking total nonsense?
quote:The question. (emphasis mine)
A good number of sociologists, even while appreciating the role of symbols in men's social existence, are convicned that modern, industrial society will inevitably lead to the disappearance of religion. ... the advance of rationality and the scientific spirit would inevitably undermine the religious heritage; religious myths would give way to scientific explanations. ... What all these social thinkers observed, quite independantly from their particular theories, was the passage of European society from an old order in which religion was a taken-for-granted dimension of social, political and personal life, to a new, as yet undefined order where religion was losing its social, cultural, and poltiical importance and where even its significance for personal life was beign questioned by more and more people. But was it reasonable and scientific to make the description of this particular historical experience a sociological law of universal application and predict the disappearance of religion forever?
quote:The rest of the article deals specifically with the US and Canada, and isn't as relevant, unless someone wants to argue for some reason that "American religion doesn't count." Also note that the data mentioned spans approximately 80 years. From Baum, Gregory. Religion and Alienation. 1975, pp.140-1; 142-3.
Andrew Greely, in several important studies <yes, they are referenced>, has examined the empirical data on religion in America and presented the contrasting pattern as an argument against the theory of secularization. The available information reveals a certain cycle of slightly higher and slightly lower church attendance and membership, for which it is difficult to find a sociological explanation, but there is no evidence whatsoever for the theory that increasing industrialization and individualism lead to a weakening of religion.
quote:These quotes taken from Casanova, José. Public Religions in the Modern World. 1994, pp. 11; 16-17; 19.
Who still believes in the myth of secularization? Recent debates within the sociology of religion would indicate this to be the appropriate question with which to start any current discussion of the theory of secularization. There are still a few "old believers," who insist, rightly, that the theory of secularization still has much explanatory value in attempting to account for modern historical processes. But the majority of sociologists of religion will not listen, for they have abandoned the paradigm with the same uncritical haste with which they previously embraced it. ...
How can one explain this reversal? How could there have been so much myth before and so much light now? It is true that much empirical counterevidence has been accumulated against the theory since the 1960s, but similar counterevidence has existed all along and yet the evidence remianed unseen or was explained away as irrelevant. The answer has to be that it is not reality itself which has changed, as much as our perception of it, and that we must be witnessing a typical Kuhnian revolution in scientific paradigms. ...
... we may say with certainty that the assumption that premodern Europeans were more religious than modern ones reveals itself precisely as that, as an assumption in need of confirmation. Those versions of the theory of secularization which begin precisely with such an unfounded assumption and conceive the process of secularization as the progressive decline of religious beliefs and practices in the modern world are indeed reproducing a myth that sees history as the progressive evolution of humanity from superstition to reason, from belief to unbelief, from religion to science. ...
It was then [the 1960s] that the first flaws in the theory became noticable and the first critics were heard. For the first time it became possible to separate the theory of secularization from its ideological origins in the Enlightenment critique of religion and to distinguish the theory of secularization, as a theory of the modern autonomous differentiation of the secular and religious spheres, from the thesis that the end result of the process of modern differentiation would be the progressive erosion, decline, adn evnetual disappearance of religion. The new functionalist theory of secularization, formulated most systematically in Thomas Luckmann's The Invisible Religion, did not postulate the inevitable decline of religion in modern societies, only the loss by religion of its traditional societal and public functions, and the privitiation and marginalization of religion within its own differentiated sphere. ... Only in the 1980s, after the sudden eruption of religion into the public sphere, did it become obvious that differentiation and the loss of social functions do no necessarily entail "privatization."
In any case, the old theory of secularization can no longer be maintained. ...
The main fallacy in the theory of secularization, a fallacy reproduced by apologists and critics alike that has made the theory nearly unservicable for social-scientific purposes, is the confusion of historical processes of secularization proper with the alleged and anticipated consequences which those processes were supposed to have upon religion.
quote:Seems to me that insanity, in this case, applies more readily to atheists.
In popular culture, someone may be deemed insane if they have likes and dislikes outside those common for average people, especially if their actions are seen as frantic.
quote:Kom, I've never made the claim that religion was true. I'm not a true-believer so any religion I professed always seemed like convenient self-delusion. As regards the goodness of religion, I'd have to reiterate what I've said all along. Religion can be a force for good or evil. It is much like any other psyche handle in that those in a position of influence can bend the flock to their will.(I've stated this badly and may offend some true-believers so please accept my apologies. I do know there are many with strong moral values that would resist pressure if they thought their flock leaders were overstepping their bounds.) I am ignorant of the 'programming to rape' that you referenced so I can't respond to that.
And punwit, let us for a moment assume that there is some deep-rooted need to believe. How does that make religion either true, or a good thing? Compare with the 'programming to rape' that some people have suggested for males.
quote:This might call for a definition of "conversion". If you're just talking an affiliation change in the paperwork then you have an uncontested point, bev, but I served in Brazil and have a somewhat different view. I had always heard about the huge numbers of conversions in South America before going on my mission. While serving there I found that a majority of those "converted" went inactive within months if not weeks of the "converting" missionaries being transferred. I served in several wards where around 10% of members of record actually attended services. In one ward, the bishop actually asked the missionaries (4 of us) to lay off the new investigators and help them find and reactivate the members. There was one town that hadn't had missionaries in a few years, though there was a ward there. Our mission president sent missionaries to re-open the area. When they found the church building, there hadn't been a meeting there in over a year and the custodians were actually living in a classroom in the building. The bishop of the ward had even gone inactive.
I will agree that conversion in Europe is pretty rare, at least if we are to base it on what the Mormon missionaries there report. But this is definitely not the case in other parts of the world. I would like to point out that the yearly growth of the Mormon church increases more from conversion than by those born into it.
quote:I BEG YOUR PARDON?! What in God's name was that meant to be, AntiCool?! You're lucky this board doesn't allow vulgarity, or you'd be flooded by now.
Nazi.
quote:
I will deign to clarify on his behalf. He thinks the religious are a plague somewhere in the neighborhood of Nazis and should be eradicated from the planet.
quote:I didn't say YOU said it. I said KoM said it. You're really making me doubt your reading comprehension ability here, JH.
I was not saying that, Dagonee.
All I'm saying is that the use of Nazis - even by "joke" - is something that is unacceptable by anyone with some form of moral values within him/her.
Shame on you.
quote:Believe what you must, Scott.
And my summation of the situation is better than Dag's because he's vampiric.
quote:Another one on my side - TomD: social satire is bad.
... but it's not bad as social satire.
quote:I think this is entirely possible. Certainly, in both the Believers thread and the Non-believers thread, we've seen some evidence that people are just predisposed to faith -- or not.
In fact, I *could* make the outrageous claim that if "being religious" is genetic and runs in families, all the religious genes ran off to America, first because of the oppression towards various Protestants and later when Mormon missionaries came through and large numbers of people converted and came to America.
quote:Actually, it is your fault. You have shown us that you have no qualms making vicious and outrageous claims against people that you disagree with on religious issues.
It's not my fault if you people's irony detectors are on the blink.
quote:It is unnecessary only if you are talking with people that already agree with you. You are not.
As for whether religion is bad, well, I do believe this is true, and I haven't given any links for it; I think this is a touch unnecessary for anyone familiar with European history.
quote:Bev, I think it would be more accurate to phrase it as follows:
Making up facts or statistics in order to "win" an argument is contemptible behavior, IMO.
quote:Your numbers are American only (here I presume you got them from the link you posted, which when I skimmed it, was concerned solely with America). I am not American, nor is most of the planet Earth. As I stated before, the United States has long been the exception to all sociological studies of secularization - even contradicting studies agree on this.
Eaquae, sociology is a notoriously divided subject; I think your theorists are still going to have to explain the numbers linked in my previous posts. In particular, if there's no trend towards secularisation, why do the numbers of nonreligious people rise from 8% to 14% in a decade? And why are the religious found mainly among the elderly?
quote:Oh, you Americans! High time you caught up with the rest of the world.
Andrew Greely, in several important studies <yes, they are referenced>, has examined the empirical data on religion in America and presented the contrasting pattern as an argument against the theory of secularization. The available information reveals a certain cycle of slightly higher and slightly lower church attendance and membership, for which it is difficult to find a sociological explanation, but there is no evidence whatsoever for the theory that increasing industrialization and individualism lead to a weakening of religion.
quote:You're right it isn't...the fact that I used a straw man argument at all, that is.
You have advanced the straw man that all Europeans are familiar with European history; this just ain't true.
quote:But you have claimed, earlier, that your whole approch is the logical, systematic approch, and so MUST be the correct one, and that all who disagree with you are insane, moronic, or both.
Look, people, I said in the same post that the number was made up. I never tried to present it as anything more than a ballpark estimate. 99% == 'an overwhelming majority'. In somewhat the same vein I might say '42' instead of 'lots'. What is the problem, as long as I don't pretend to have scientific backing?
quote:And now you show that you don't really even understand what a straw man is, which could explain a lot...and by that I don't mean 42....of things.
Kwea, my argument may be good or not, but it is assuredly no strawman. I have not advanced it so I could shoot it down, I have advanced it because I believe it.
quote:I just want to address this. For the most part, those who go completely against the church (Public displays of hatred towards the church) are usually those who have been excommunicated for various offences. These peoples' names are removed from the church rosters and are effectively not counted as members. In addition, there are several who simply choose to have their names removed from the lists of church members. They are granted their request if it is given, signed, to proper authority (A bishop, for example). This happens VERY rarely. In general, the number of people who completely fall away from the church and choose to no longer be members are not counted as part of the church and thus, not part of the yearly membership count. Since that count seems to be increasing by over 100,000 each year, it is safe to assume that a larger number of people are converting to the church than those leaving it. Of course, this doesn't account for people who become members but just stop going to church. Many of these people actually consider themselves Mormons, but choose not to attend meetings for various reasons. The most effective way to determine how much the church is actually growing is by paying attention to the number of stakes or wards are organized in each year. Wards only split based on the number of active members in a geographical location. The average ward has roughly 200 members (This number is reached in two ways, by having a knowledge of the way the church operates as well as by assuming an activity rate among registered members of 50%, then dividing by the number of actual wards). There was an increase of 687 wards during the 6 year span given by beverly. By multiplying 687 by 200 we come to a total of over 130,000 new, active members in a 6 year period. Doesn't sound like much? That's a 10% growth every year. That's just one religion, KoM. Islam grows about as fast, if not faster world wide. Considering there are about 2 billion Muslims around the world, that's about 20 million more every 5-6 years.
The church continues to grow at an amazing rate, and it would be interesting to know how much of the staying growth is due to conversions and how much is due to those born in. I honestly don't know. When reading the statistics, they don't give info on those having left the church.
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The woman stayed where she was, looking at him as if without comprehension. Mikal grew angry, but he said nothing because suddenly her melody counseled silence, insisted on silence, and instead Mikal turned to Nniv. "Make her stop humming," he said. "I refuse to be manipulated."
"Then," Nniv said (and his song seemed to shout with laughter, though his voice remained soft), "then you refuse to live."
"Are you threatening me?"
"Nniv smiled. "Oh, no, Mikal. I merely observe that all living things are manipulated. As long as there is a will, it is bent and twisted constantly. Only the dead are allowed the luxury of freedom, and then only because they want nothing, and therefore can't be thwarted."
quote:I grant that your grammar is not of the best, but it certainly looks to me like a claim that all of Europe knows European history, and therefore ought to agree with me.
There are still a large number of religious people in Europe, right? SO I guess that takes care of your myth that all of Europe, of all familiar with it's history, believe the same as you.
quote:Kwea, are you really arguing in good faith? This is precisely what I said a strawman is : Advancing a weak argument for the other side, so you can shoot it down. When I advance an argument for my own side, it cannot be a strawman!
A straw man isn't about your argument, not if you are the one mentioning it....it is not about your ideas at all. It is the way you present your opponants arguments, picking a weak argument that they never intended ans using that to attempt to disprove their position. Bascially risrepresenting thei position, and then using that false position, which really has nothing to do wit their actual beliefs, to advance your own arguments.
quote:No, Kwea, you are reading those statistics wrong, or at least drawing unwarranted conclusions. It said that 16% of adults had changed their faith (so my 99% wasn't that far off, actually) and that of those 16%, the largest group was those who changed away from any religious belief. You cannot conclude from this that the converted-to-atheism group is 'dwarfed' by the changed-faith groups, there just isn't enough data.
know KoM's link said that according to their study the single largest group was from believers to non-believers, but when compared to the total the figure was much less than the whole picture gathered. In other words, while the single largest group was "converted" to atheism, that group was dwarfed by the number of people who still believed in a higher power but changed denominations..... ...hardly convincing proof of KoM's point, don't you think?
quote:I did that. You're not listening, apparently.
You need to show that secularisation is not happening; it is insufficient to show that any particular cause has been discredited.
quote:KoM, while Siberia might be a bit larger than your ego, it's still too small to hold all of the believers of the world.
Well, that all depends on whether or not I become God-Emperor of Earth and can send the faithful to Siberia.
quote:Seem like? That's very generous, Boris. It isn't seem like. It is blatant bigotry just like it is incoherent logic.
seem more like blatant bigotry than actual coherant thought.
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More to the point, it has an opportunity cost in terms of going to church, donating, and such activities. If indeed we have only this life, that's many hours of it you've wasted when you could have been doing something fun instead.
quote:Well, I gotta be polite.
Seem like? That's very generous, Boris. It isn't seem like. It is blatant bigotry just like it is incoherent logic.
quote:No, I think you said that yourself earlier. But really, what kind of "fun" would I be having if I didn't go to church and donate money to the poor and needy and give part of my life to serve my fellow man? I'm curious. Cause I think our definition of the word fun may be different.
Boris, are you trying to imply that atheists do not fall in love, or that our lives are empty of meaning? Speaking of bigotry.
quote:It could be one reason, although the study didn't say anything about that, but you have not excluded any of the many other reasons mentioned here, so your conclusion is still unsupported. That fact is crystal clear. That hasn't stopped you from declaring the point irrefutable, though.
As for whether religion is bad, well, I do believe this is true, and I haven't given any links for it; I think this is a touch unnecessary for anyone familiar with European history. Is this the fact you've been complaining about? If so, no wonder we've been growing increasingly frustrated, because I see this as totally irrelevant to the actual subject under discussion, which was whether religious believers are brainwashed. I think you are projecting what you know about my beliefs onto my posts.
So let me re-iterate : I have been arguing that social conditioning is the only reason people believe. For support, I offer the claim that the overwhelming majority of believers stay within their parents' religion, which I think is backed up well by the study I linked.
quote:That is a straw man, because you are saying that the ONLY reason people stay within their faith is social conditioning, and so therefore it makes no sense and must be because they are brainwashed/insane. You are saying their faith is because of X, which isn't what they say at all, and therefore Z MUST be true......You create the straw man that excludes what the actual believers say, which is that there are many reasons why they continue to believe as they do, and postulate a completely unsupported reasoning, and then attribute it to them.
Your straw man argument is that if people stay within the faith of their fathers it is completely because of their social conditioning, for no other reasons.
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You are forgetting the Invisible Pink Unicorn.
quote:I probably do underestimate the size of Siberia...and subsequently, the comparative size of your ego.
Well, sarcasticmuppet, you're failing to take into account the bloody war before my coming to power. Also, I think you underestimate just how big Siberia is. At a pinch, I can add Canada - the current inhabitants can be given the more fertile parts of the continent, they deserve it more than most Americans.
quote:I don't understand why, Beverly. For every witness claiming to have witnessed Christ's love, we can pull out witnesses historical and living who claim to have witnessed the power of some other mutually-exclusive force or godhead. Clearly, there is no authoritative witness here.
I think there needs to be a counterpart to Godwin's law that states when an atheist pulls out pink unicorns, purple pandas, and the easter bunny, productive conversation has died.
quote:Funny you should mention that. The evidence I have for my belief fits with only one religion. That's the one I'm in. I've seen no other religion professing claims of doctrine that are in any remote level of harmony with that evidence. And no, I'm not going to tell you that evidence. Sorry, that's personal
As for your evidence : Had you been born into a different faith, the same evidence would have supported a quite different doctrine. That's the point I've been making for much of this thread : If people do, indeed, select their faith based on evidence, why, it's really amazing how often that evidence coincides with what their parents happened to believe.
quote:Muslims believe in the same God as Jews and Christians. Just sayin'.
Which means, as far as we're concerned, that the only difference between Bigfoot and the Christian God is that there's no one in any numbers out there saying that they have proof Bigfoot doesn't exist, while thousands of Muslims, Hindus, and pagans would insist that they have proof that the Christian God doesn't.