This is topic Happy National Atheist’s Day! in forum Books, Films, Food and Culture at Hatrack River Forum.


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Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
Happy National Atheist’s Day!
Psalms 14:1 The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.

NATIONAL ATHEIST'S DAY

Get your own bumper sticker too!

[ April 02, 2005, 11:35 PM: Message edited by: Jay ]
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
Christian charity on display, Jay?
 
Posted by punwit (Member # 6388) on :
 
quote:
Come to think of it, April 1st might be the perfect day to celebrate "National Atheists Day." Nothing in life is more foolish than denying the existence of God, since He has left indisputable proof!
Since we are in the laughing and enjoying a bit of jest mood, this was quite comic to my eyes.

[ April 01, 2005, 09:29 AM: Message edited by: punwit ]
 
Posted by Anna (Member # 2582) on :
 
[Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Anna (Member # 2582) on :
 
While we're on it, Dag, I just wanted to tell you that I respect you a lot. There's a lot of points on which we disagree, but you disagree with respect and actually listen to what you are told.
So I love you, in a very platonic way [Razz]
 
Posted by KarlEd (Member # 571) on :
 
I have to second that, Anna. Whenever I read something from Dag I disagree with I really have to stop and analyze why I disagree.

I think we agree more often than not, but when we disagree that fact alone gives me pause. His opinions are among those I respect the most.

[edit for spelling]

[ April 01, 2005, 09:39 AM: Message edited by: KarlEd ]
 
Posted by Primal Curve (Member # 3587) on :
 
Geez Jay, you're about as good at cracking jokes as an aging prostitute at the end of a long night of cheap sex and crack cocaine.
 
Posted by narrativium (Member # 3230) on :
 
KarlEd, very well put. Props to Dag.

Whenever I read something written by Jay that I disagree with, I just roll my eyes.
 
Posted by Anna (Member # 2582) on :
 
I do that too !
 
Posted by punwit (Member # 6388) on :
 
[Roll Eyes] <--- Jay smiley?
 
Posted by Anna (Member # 2582) on :
 
Could be. [Smile]
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
Guess it’s like that British humor that I don’t get.
 
Posted by Anna (Member # 2582) on :
 
I guess that's like a lot of things you don't get.
 
Posted by AntiCool (Member # 7386) on :
 
*resists**

*well, mostly
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
"For those of you easily offended, get off your high horse and laugh a little, it’s a joke!

Well, a joke with a serious twist. Something to think about."

I submit, Jay, that a joke which intentionally offends in order to give someone something to think about is not "just a joke." Give that some thought.
 
Posted by Anna (Member # 2582) on :
 
Well said.
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
Seems that pretty much every joke is offensive to someone. So maybe we should outlaw jokes.

Oh well. I knew there’d be some who couldn’t take the joke. Figured it was worth it none the less. And yeah, it is intended to be more then just a joke.
 
Posted by Anna (Member # 2582) on :
 
If it's "more than a joke" then I guess people could be right to take it as an offense. [Big Grin]
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
I guess if they’re offended something in their heart is bugging them that maybe they need to think about. Good.
 
Posted by punwit (Member # 6388) on :
 
More humor, I love it!
 
Posted by Anna (Member # 2582) on :
 
I'm a believer, and I felt offended on behalf of all the atheists I care for. So I guess there's nothing I should "take time to think about" except maybe how the intolerance of other believers sometimes make me embarassed to belong to their ranks.How ironic would it be if a "firm believer" like you actually made me reconsider my choices and come back to agnosticism ? [Big Grin]

[ April 01, 2005, 10:43 AM: Message edited by: Anna ]
 
Posted by mothertree (Member # 4999) on :
 
Um, I wouldn't normally reply to this thread but I'm conducting some immaturish thread arrangement.
 
Posted by zgator (Member # 3833) on :
 
quote:
I guess if they’re offended something in their heart is bugging them that maybe they need to think about.
Or maybe you're being offensive. It could be that.
 
Posted by Anna (Member # 2582) on :
 
I believe Jay is a demon. Remember in "Good Omens" when Rampa actually makes more wrong in annoying a lot of people than in damnating one poor soul at a time ?
*sends good vibes to everyone, including herself*
No reason to spend any time to answer this kind of thinking, I'm afraid.

[ April 01, 2005, 10:47 AM: Message edited by: Anna ]
 
Posted by Erik Slaine (Member # 5583) on :
 
Lame. And you probably wonder why Athiests get defensive.

[Roll Eyes]
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
You guys are all stupid! Ha ha ha! And I'm only half joking! Ha!

Of course if you don't think it's funny there must be something wrong with you. Jeez, excuse a guy for having a sense of humor...



There are ways this could have been presented that would be funny, even to atheists. This wasn't one of them.

[ April 01, 2005, 03:04 PM: Message edited by: Chris Bridges ]
 
Posted by AntiCool (Member # 7386) on :
 
quote:
Seems that pretty much every joke is offensive to someone.
*attempts*

Why did the egg cross the road?

Because it had the inclination.
 
Posted by Noemon (Member # 1115) on :
 
Porter, you filth! You excrement! I...I can't believe you just said that.
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
I don't get it.
 
Posted by Bob the Lawyer (Member # 3278) on :
 
No, see Jay, Tom's pointing out that if I told a joke like this:

Edit: Joke removed before Tom gets after me for being mean to people again.

I wouldn't really be telling a joke, I'd be telling something that's obviously intended to be insulting. Not that I honestly think you didn't understand Tom's point, I just couldn't pass up an opportunity to tell my "joke".

[ April 01, 2005, 03:22 PM: Message edited by: Bob the Lawyer ]
 
Posted by Bob the Lawyer (Member # 3278) on :
 
What's an incline, Raja?
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
Either:
  1. That was the point.
  2. It's a joke about inclines and gravity rolling the egg across the street.
-Trevor
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
That egg joke is actually pretty funny.

EDIT: I thought twinky was joking about not getting it!

[ April 01, 2005, 03:21 PM: Message edited by: Teshi ]
 
Posted by mimsies (Member # 7418) on :
 
I really like the egg joke, but can't help but think that it must have been a pretty tough shelled egg, otherwise it would have broken.
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
quote:
It's a joke about inclines and gravity rolling the egg across the street.
What, that's it?

Fine: Why does the elephant have four feet?
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
Eggs are pretty tough.

I don't know. Why does an Elephant have Four Feet?
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
Because four inches wouldn't satisfy his lady friend. [ROFL]
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
I figured it was something like that.

*groan*

[Wink]
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
Why did the egg cross the street?

Because the best yolks run.

-Trevor
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
Ewwww….. now that’s bad…….

It’s also funny because of the irony.
 
Posted by mimsies (Member # 7418) on :
 
quote:
Eggs are pretty tough.

We always have at least one break when we boil them. I think they ARE tought, but tend to have "imperfections" in their strong structures that give them a tendency to break when bumped just hard enough in the wrong (right?) place.
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
What's ironic about an elephantine penis?
 
Posted by The Pixiest (Member # 1863) on :
 
Names for imporant days in "holy week"

Jesus on his ass Day - Palm Sunday

Ritual Cannibalism Day - Maundy Thursday

Christ on a Stick Day - Good Friday

Jesus is Dead Day - Saturday after Good Friday

Zombie Jesus Day - Easter

Hey, don't get mad Jay, just get off your high horse and enjoy the Joke. Well, a Joke with a serious twist.

(Other christians out there: I'm JUST KIDDING to get under Jay's skin! Don't get upset!)

Pix

(edit: Spelling)

[ April 01, 2005, 03:35 PM: Message edited by: The Pixiest ]
 
Posted by Beren One Hand (Member # 3403) on :
 
I think Twinky had his happy hour a bit early today. [Razz]
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
He's been like this all day!
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
Which reminds me - does anyone know if Jesus saw his shadow or not?

I don't know if I can take any more winter.

-Trevor
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
You don't have spring? We have spring [Big Grin] .
 
Posted by skillery (Member # 6209) on :
 
quote:
What's ironic about an elephantine penis?
When they get that big they're usually green :

quote:
The most perplexing aspect of musth is the continual streaming of urine down the legs of the males. It seems incredible wasteful for gallons of liquids to flow out of an animal that spends most of its time walking between water holes. Besides the waste, there is always the risk of infection, especially seeing the penis becomes coated in an algal layer, giving it a green sheen, and resulting in the nickname of GP-syndrome, or green penis syndrome of the highest level of musth.

 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
quote:
I think Twinky had his happy hour a bit early today.
More accurately, I am approaching an entire happy weekend. [Big Grin]

quote:
He's been like this all day!
You've been watching? [Angst]
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
Today, you've been kind of hard to ignore.

EDIT: I've not been ignoring you either. I'm just not creepy. I do not mean this in a creepy way.

I know I'm not the only person to have noticed.

[ April 01, 2005, 03:49 PM: Message edited by: Teshi ]
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
Hey Pix you forgot to put those with a bible verse so they made sense like the original joke, which is what made it ironic.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Skillery--that was a fascinating article.

Male elephants in musth sound like Vulcans in "heat".
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
Oh and Jesus made for a terrible character witness - he got nailed on cross.

-Trevor

Edit: eek - the dangers of thread-hopping.
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
quote:
Today, you've been kind of hard to ignore.
[Frown]

That's it, I'm leaving.

Soon. [Razz] (In about 25 minutes, to be precise. And then you'll have to do without me for the whole weekend. So there!)
 
Posted by Ryuko (Member # 5125) on :
 
When I first saw this thread, I thought, what an a**. And then I thought well, no it's kind of funny, you know, Jay supporting atheists on April Fools day... Eh, whatever.

But when I clicked on the thread I realized I was right the first time.

On behalf of all the atheists I know, Jay and all of the Christians, you are an a**.
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
quote:


That's it, I'm leaving.

I didn't mean it that way! Arg.
 
Posted by The Pixiest (Member # 1863) on :
 
I wasn't trying to parody you, Jay.
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
Did you not notice the last line, which implied strongly that I was kidding? [Smile]

I've been in a goofy mood all day because I'm excited about this weekend. That, coupled with extreme boredom due to lack of work to do at work (I mean, honestly, they give me a task and expect it to take several hours, then I'm done in several minutes and nobody has anything more for me to do), has resulted in what is probably my highest sustained post rate on any forum ever today.
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
Tesh is a little high-strung. [Big Grin]

-Trevor
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
I'll keep that in mind for the Hatrack Canada gathering. [Smile]

Teshi, you know I was kidding with the "You've been watching? [Angst] " thing too, right?
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
Yes I did notice [Razz] .

I am just continuing my knee-jerk tradition of worrying that I have being misunderstood.

(I'm so misunderstood! [Cry] [Wink] )

EDIT: I am not as naive as I claim to be, appear or act.

EDIT: In fact, lets just pretend the last few posts never occured because its really a waste of space. [Blushing]

EDIT:

quote:
I'll keep that in mind for the Hatrack Canada gathering.

*cries* DON'T. I am not high strung. I can take a joke. See? Now I've dug myself a hole of misconception from which I cannot escape!

The reason I am a freak when it comes to joke-conversation is because it so rarely happens to me because everyone assumes I cannot take the joke. Vicious cycle.

ARG.

[ April 01, 2005, 04:23 PM: Message edited by: Teshi ]
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
I dunno, I found them amusing. I just wanted to make sure that you did, too.
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
I’m so hurt. Not!
God is the one who called atheists fools.
April Fools Day is fools day.
So basically anything you’re calling me you’re basically calling God since the site was just quoting Him.
And that’s not very funny.
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
Given that god doesn't exist, I certainly find that somewhat amusing.
 
Posted by Hobbes (Member # 433) on :
 
What exactly do you think athiests will "think about" right after you call them fools, how true The Bible is?

Hobbes [Smile]
 
Posted by Telperion the Silver (Member # 6074) on :
 
*sings*

Oh I'm proud to be an agnostic!
Cause at least I know I'm free!
And I won't forget that man who died
on that alleged tree.
And I'll gladly stand up, next to you and defend your right to think differently!
Cause there ain't no doubt I love this land!
*dramatic echo* ...love this land...
Hypothetical God/Universe/Life Force/Nothing At All bless the USA!

[ April 01, 2005, 04:22 PM: Message edited by: Telperion the Silver ]
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
God is the one who called atheists fools.
Exactly. God has the credentials and the moral authority to call someone a fool. Did He say we're supposed to go around doing it for him?

Dagonee
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
Please see my extended post above, if you missed it.
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
2 Timothy 3:16 - All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
quote:
ARG.
[Big Grin]

I'm sorry, your last edit there really amused me. I will take you at your word, though, and continue to joke around you when I feel so inclined. [Smile]

[Wave]
 
Posted by skillery (Member # 6209) on :
 
I don't believe in atheists.
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
Thank. You.

*dies*
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
2 Corinthians 11:16 - I say again, let no man think me a fool; if otherwise, yet as a fool receive me, that I may boast myself a little.

Proverbs 18:2 - A fool hath no delight in understanding, but that his heart may discover itself.

Proverbs 26:5 - Answer a fool according to his folly, lest he be wise in his own conceit.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
You also agree that you will not use this forum to try to convert people to your own religious beliefs, or to disparage others for their own religious beliefs.

 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
Is that like that the forum rules? Where are those by the way….
Also, I am glad that we have established that atheism is a religion. Now we should separate it from our public schools.
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
Jay, you have gone way to far.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
Hey, Dags, why didn't you quote that at me? Given up? [Wink] Anyway, my mocking-the-other-side thread went on for seven pages. Bet this one dies in three. That will show you.
 
Posted by Telperion the Silver (Member # 6074) on :
 
quote:
Also, I am glad that we have established that atheism is a religion.
Riiiiiight... [Wink]
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
Is that like that the forum rules? Where are those by the way….
You have to start the registration process to see them. I think I'll suggest to kacard that a link be added for easy reference.

But yes, those are the forum rules, and you agreed to them.

quote:
Also, I am glad that we have established that atheism is a religion. Now we should separate it from our public schools.
Sounds like you might be grouping me in with the atheists there, Jay. Also, I never encountered atheism in public schools. And most people who have fought the evolution fight here with you have at one point or another acknowledged that evolution doesn't disprove the existence of God. So I'm not sure where you're getting that from.

quote:
Hey, Dags, why didn't you quote that at me? Given up? [Wink] Anyway, my mocking-the-other-side thread went on for seven pages. Bet this one dies in three. That will show you.
KoM, I think posting a thread breaking those rules is an order of magnitude different than posting it in the course of a discussion. And you changed your initial post, alleviating the worst of the problem.

It's always better to convince people they should change then to use rules to force them to.

Dagonee
P.S., I forgot to thank Anna, KarlEd, and narrativium. Thanks!

[ April 01, 2005, 04:47 PM: Message edited by: Dagonee ]
 
Posted by skillery (Member # 6209) on :
 
My brother became an atheist when he decided that he didn't need the guilt that came from professing a belief in God while at the same time indulging his favorite vices.

What's easier, tossing out the booze and dirty magazines, giving up gambling and spanking your monkey, or just saying that God doesn't exist?

I'm sure there are some atheists who put some real thought and science behind their reasoning. The rest, and I believe the majority, are just a bunch of lazy addicts (fools).
 
Posted by The Pixiest (Member # 1863) on :
 
I became an atheist when I realized I couldn't justify believing in God with the dirth of evidence of his existance. (that's an argument for another time.)

Point is, losing my faith was a very painful and ugly process. It wasn't so I could continue sinning. There's not a lot I do that's sinful.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Unfortunately, skillery, your kind qualifier that "maybe some of us have thought through it" doesn't really help to ease the nastiness of calling the majority lazy addicts.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
I've seen plenty of atheists (and agnostics) who pride themselves on going against the grain, being among the few who put enough thought into it to escape a powerful social norm. They seem to look on believers as being the lazy (fools) accepting the stories they've been told, not willing to be brave and question.

Of course, there are plenty of self-proclaimed "apatheists" who admittedly just don't really care. They don't put thought into it because it's not worth giving their thought too.

It is probably not a good idea to speculate on the motivations of others, whatever your own perspective.
 
Posted by Glenn Arnold (Member # 3192) on :
 
I just want everyone to know that after reading Jay's initial post I have seen the error of my ways, and I realize that I was wrong all these years for hating God. I accept Jesus Christ as my personal savior. I am reborn.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
Well, to get on with serious discussion - Jay, the issue at hand is essentially whether or not the Bible may be taken as a reliable account. And in an attempt to prove this, you are - quoting the Bible. This is like me saying "I'm telling the truth, because I say so, and since I'm telling the truth, you must believe me."

Incidentally, since you have stated that your belief is based on your understanding of creationism, why is it that you shy off every time I post something that quite plainly shows evolution is true? For example, once and for all, what is your response to the identity of ERV insertions in human and ape DNA? Or the fact that our making-Vitamin-C gene is broken in exactly the same way, across several different species of primate?
 
Posted by Alcon (Member # 6645) on :
 
Religion requires organization. Atheism is a scattered and disparate band of people who all share a strong belief that there is no god. And little else.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
Atheism is a scattered and disparate band of people who all share a strong belief that there is no god
I thought we recently established that many self-identified atheists don't have a "string belief that there is no god."

You guys need to get organized and let us know what's going on. [Smile]
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
Lack of proof does not disprove.

Choosing to believe that God doesn't exist is every bit an act of faith as believing He does exist.

Which forms the basis of a religion.

That said, I kinda like Bev's word - "apathist."

It just slides off the tounge. [Big Grin]

-Trevor
 
Posted by skillery (Member # 6209) on :
 
quote:
share a strong belief that there is no god
...or perhaps a strong hope that there is no god.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
I believe that the sun will rise tomorrow, whether i can see it or not.

I believe that the next time I eat salmon, I still won't like it.

I believe that in order to sing well you shouldn't eat chocolate beforehand.

I should probably apply for my religion certificate, right?
 
Posted by The Pixiest (Member # 1863) on :
 
No, skillery, I would LOVE for there to be a god.

I'd love to have him appear to me right now and tell me all about it and prove to me he exists.

It would clear a lot of things up and allow me to right the "error of my ways."

But he won't do that. Because he doesn't exist. And no ammount of my wishing will make it true.
 
Posted by Kama (Member # 3022) on :
 
quote:
I believe that the sun will rise tomorrow, whether i can see it or not.

That's good. If we all stopped believing it, it would fall down.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
quote:
I'm sure there are some atheists who put some real thought and science behind their reasoning. The rest, and I believe the majority, are just a bunch of lazy addicts (fools).
And this distinguishes athiesm from Christianity, how?

You know, it's not all that productive to just out and out disparage an entire group of people, but when the group you belong to is as bad or worse, it doesn't even make sense.

There's plenty to be learned from the conflicting worldviews of atheists and theists, but calling the other group bad as the entirety of your argument is just immature and dumb.
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
My Kama has come back to haunt me! [Eek!]

[Big Grin]

-Trevor
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
Sigh. I know I shouldn't nitpick, but...
quote:
Of course, there are plenty of self-proclaimed "apatheists" who admittedly just don't really care. They don't put thought into it because it's not worth giving their thought too.

Or they've put a great deal of thought into it, and decided they don't have enough reason to make a decision. [Wave]

I've recently reread a quote from OSC's Xenocide which describes my religious status perfectly. It's where Han Fei-tzu is talking about the Life of Human.
quote:
"I can't be sure, no. Nature has done many strange things, and there is a chance that the Life of Human is genuine and true. Thus I neither believe it nor disbelieve it. I hold it in abeyance. I wait."
That would be me.

Does anyone else see the irony of Jay quoting a God that atheists do not believe in to tell them that they're fools for not believing in Him? I'm reminded of the classic definition of Heck, which is where people go if the only reason they believed in hell is because they were afraid they'd go there if they didn't.

[ April 01, 2005, 05:10 PM: Message edited by: Chris Bridges ]
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
I forgot, I also believe in K.A.M.A.
 
Posted by saxon75 (Member # 4589) on :
 
quote:
Or they've put a great deal of thought into it, and decided they don't have enough reason to make a decision.
I would submit, then, that the word "apatheist"--which sounds like "apathy" and therefore seems to connote not caring--is probably not the best word to describe such people, and maybe they should just call themselves "agnostic."
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Yup. "Apatheists" is indeed a play on the word "apathy" which means to not care.
 
Posted by Alcon (Member # 6645) on :
 
quote:
Lack of proof does not disprove.
No it doesn't. But thats only becuase it is impossible to truely disprove the existance of anything.

There isn't any proof that big foot doesn't exist.

There isn't any proof that the lockness monster doesn't exist.

There isn't any proof in that there aren't still dinosaurs living in the jungles of Africa.

Or that aliens haven't visited Earth in secret.

At the same time, there is little substantial evidense that any of those do exist. And there is even more evidense for some of these things than for the existance of a god.

Therefore, that argument holds no water. Until you have evidense that something exists, it is a safe assumption that it does not.

However, that doesn't mean that should evidense present itself, it should not be examined. And if it ever does, I'll be sure to keep an open mind.
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
More accurate in my case would be "unconcerned," but apatheist sounds better. Or at least funnier.

Because I've called myself an agnostic for many years now, and the usual reaction from believers and nonbelievers alike is that I'm wishy-washy, unable to commit, or intellectually lax. I know the work and the sacrifice I've made to get to where I am, listening to people call me wishy-washy gets boring so I've decided to relax and pick the more whimsical label.

[ April 01, 2005, 05:21 PM: Message edited by: Chris Bridges ]
 
Posted by skillery (Member # 6209) on :
 
There are innumerable masses in this world, who deny the existence of god and are perfectly content to wallow in filth. They are probably too lazy or too stupid to even consider posting on Hatrack. These are also atheists. You thoughtful Hatrack scientists are not in good company, and you ought to change the title of the flag that you rally under, just as good Christians ought not to rally under the same flag as the Spanish Inquisition.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
I don't see where this assumption that a non-belief in God allows you to have all sorts of orgies comes from. I mean, I am myself a moderately strong atheist, yet I have never done drugs (even alcohol) in my life, and I'm continually not getting invited to orgies. Is there a mailing list I should have signed up for, or something?

Incidentally, since pop-psychology analysis of other people is apparently OK in this thread, perhaps the believers who think this of atheists should take a good long look at what their own desires are. Are you sure you're happy as believers?
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
Safe assumption is still that - an assumption.

There might very well be dinosaurs living in the jungles of Africa and aliens could have used the Earth as a tourist spot to nature watch.

Granted, I'm not waiting on a Brontosaurus steak anytime soon, nor do I expect to have little green men ask me for directions to the nature preserve.

In the same vein, I don't actively believe in God.

But the basic tenet still holds true, reasonable assumption or not - the lack of proof for the positive does not substitute as proof of the negative.

-Trevor

Edit: For semantic structure.

[ April 01, 2005, 05:31 PM: Message edited by: TMedina ]
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
skillz,
I'd argue that you'd do well to disassociate yourself from the masses of evil-bearing, ignorant Christians, both historical and current. Many/most christians are as bad as you are making athiests out to be.

I think it's a mistake to assume a lack in people who don't belive the same as you do. Most people are immature, ignorant, ignoble, and igniferous. Well, maybe not that last part. Most Christians are christians because they are weak, immature people, and it shows. The same can be said for most athiests.

You can discuss the differing ideas and their implications or you can look at the way that people hold their beliefs, but trying to establish your superiority because you just assume that people who disagree with you must be fools or delusional or whatever other bad thing you can come up with is silly circular reasoning.
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
quote:
Until you have evidense that something exists, it is a safe assumption that it does not.
And this is why I'm not an atheist, at least not one of the "there is no god" ones. I don't see a need or reason to declare such an assumption.

If it cannot be proved, it remains in abeyance. It remains in a state of is/not is. The eigenstate has not yet collapsed, if you want to get all quantum about it. Does it make the slightest bit of difference to you if Bigfoot exists or not? If not, if it's not keeping you awake or anything, then why assume his nonexistence?

I find the fewer assumptions I make, of any kind, the fewer unwelcome surprises I encounter. The facts I know are solid and dependable, although I still check them against new evidence to make sure they're up to date. The rest remains in a delightful state of not-knowing, and that's just one of the things that keeps the world interesting.
 
Posted by skillery (Member # 6209) on :
 
quote:
Most Christians are Christians because they are weak, immature people, and it shows. The same can be said for most athiests.
I agree. But this statement brings me no joy nor feeling of superiority.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
Well, Chris, that's fine when it comes to Bigfoot. Nobody ever declared a crusade over the proper way to hunt for Bigfoot. But belief in God has large implications for the way we structure society, and as I've said before, I think any form of religion, organised or not, is a net loss. That's why it's worth fighting the believers, because they inflict harm.
 
Posted by Telperion the Silver (Member # 6074) on :
 
*sings some more*

I'm an atheist and I'm OK.
I sleep all night and I work all day!
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
You're sure acting like it does. I can't see how the line of argument you're pursuing leads down any other path.
 
Posted by Alcon (Member # 6645) on :
 
quote:
But the basic tenet still holds true, reasonable assumption or not - the lack of proof for the positive does not substitute for proof of the negative.
I actually agree with you here. But here we must separate proof with what can be considered practically proven.

It isn't actually proven gravity is a forever enduring force. For all we know, it could suddenly disappear at any time. However this has never happened, to our knowledge. You can't disprove that it won't happen. We must assume it won't, becuase as far as we know it has never failed.

Science has to make a lot of assumptions like that. You can never truely prove anything, just as you can never disprove anything. At any time, it could be hit with a counter example that totally rewrites the rules governing it. However, there comes a point where enough evidense has built up for it that you can pretty much call it practically proven. In other words, safe to assume. By the same means, there comes a point where the lack of evidense is consistant enough that it is safe to assume that the lack of evidense will remain that way.

The lack of substantial evidense for God is pretty consistant.
 
Posted by saxon75 (Member # 4589) on :
 
quote:
listening to people call me wishy-washy gets boring so I've decided to relax and pick the more whimsical label.
Seems like you're kind of screwed either way. If you're an "agnostic" then you're "wishy-washy," but if you're an "apatheist" then apparently you're "lazy." But after giving it a good five minutes I'm still not clever enough to come up with anything better. [Dont Know]

Edit: quote

[ April 01, 2005, 05:41 PM: Message edited by: saxon75 ]
 
Posted by Glenn Arnold (Member # 3192) on :
 
Now that I'm a Christian, I'll begin by posting words of love from the Bible. For example:

Ps 137:9 Happy shall he be, that taketh and dasheth thy little ones against the rock.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
For the record, I never called "apatheists" lazy. And I don't think agnostics are wishy-washy.
 
Posted by skillery (Member # 6209) on :
 
quote:
the line of argument you're pursuing
...which is that it's silly for thoughtful, scientific-minded people, who don't know that there is a god, to rally to a thread that equates fools with atheists. Did you think Jay was talking about you? I had hoped to demonstrate that the majority of atheists, and I must concede believers as well, are indeed fools.
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
quote:
Nobody ever declared a crusade over the proper way to hunt for Bigfoot. But belief in God has large implications for the way we structure society, and as I've said before, I think any form of religion, organised or not, is a net loss.
I disagree. I strongly suspect that humanity as a race became civilized faster because of religion (among other things) and that religious beliefs still help people become and remain useful members of society.

Before you can remove religion, you need to find a belief structure that teaches correct behavior, offers solace to those in need, and binds a community together. This isn't all that religion provides -- and religionists would surely argue for much, much more -- but it's the bare mimimum that a society needs. Take away all organized religion and you'd have an awful lot of confused, terrified, aimless people if there isn't anything comparable to offer.
 
Posted by Glenn Arnold (Member # 3192) on :
 
Here's another one:

Lu 14:26 If any man cometh unto me, and hateth not his own father, and mother, and wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters, yea, and his own life also, he cannot be my disciple.

Boy, being Christian sure is fun! I'm glad Jay showed me the error of my ways. And he pointed out how important it is to cite the Bible!
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
beverly - I know. No worries.

I just hadn't seen agnostics mentioned as anything positive yet and I wanted to get a word in for my homies.
 
Posted by saxon75 (Member # 4589) on :
 
quote:
If it cannot be proved, it remains in abeyance. It remains in a state of is/not is. The eigenstate has not yet collapsed, if you want to get all quantum about it. Does it make the slightest bit of difference to you if Bigfoot exists or not? If not, if it's not keeping you awake or anything, then why assume his nonexistence?
I can't speak for anyone else, but for me it's a simple matter of not being able to help it. If I stop to think about it rationally I am forced to admit that there is no way to prove that there is no God, but my natural inclination is to believe that there isn't. I'd like to think that I'm reasonable enough that if I were presented with evidence to the contrary that I found compelling I'd change my mind, but in the absence of such evidence I find myself believing in the absence of deities.

I do, of course, recognize that that is a statement of faith.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
But that's a failure of finding evidence for God in the scientific domain. Plenty of people have found evidence for God outside of this domain.

Peopel have used their religion to decribe things that are up for scientific analysis, and they've pretty consistenly gotten housed, but that's neither limited to reliigous ideology nor necessarily ecidence that what they don't believe in doesn't exist. It could just be that they've overextended their stuff that may be valid in the domains of values and subject into the scientific domain. Now many of them have made the objectively testible ancillarly parts of their religion central to their beliefs, but that could just be because they lack understanding of what is important. People have an orientation towards trying to get power over the objective world and many people pollute their religious thinking with this orientation.

The converse could be said for some atheist scientists. Their domain doesn't translate over into the spiritual one, but they inappropriately apply it there anyway.

Of course, I bleieve that both atheism and theism are valid ways of approaching the world but don't really subscribe to either, so maybe I don't fit into this conversation.
 
Posted by Telperion the Silver (Member # 6074) on :
 
Also, religion in the ancient past was an attempt at science (or at least philosophy). It tried to explain the natural world around us. However it also grew ritual and nearly unchangeable dogma... When I hear the word atheist I think of people who have cast off this trapped, old way of thinking for the scientific method. But for some reason nowadays people seem to think of it as a quasi-political party... maybe because religion has become a quasi-policical party.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
skillz,
Jay (and the quote he posted) were definitely trying to talk about anyone who's an athiest and how christians are by default categorically superior, much like if someone started a thread saying that all people who believed in religion were self-deluding fools, it would actually mean all atheists. You may notice that I talked directly to the idea of any side in any disagreement automatically assuming that the other side is necessarily deficient.

And, to turn it around, why are you aligning yourself with Jay, who is a pretty good example of a christian with some pretty severe failings?
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
Chris,
I disagree, provisionally. You appear to be starting from a viewpoint that I don't think is necessarily valid, which is that people are intrinsically bad people who need to be taught and forced through a set of rules to be good. I don't believe that this is accurate and in fact, I think that one of the main effects of the moralistic religious systems is to sell that myth and keep the world in such a way that this is true.

I do what I do because I choose to, because it springs out of who I am. My guiding moral principle is empathy, whcih comes from inside me. I think that the externally imposed reward/punishment systems that the religious hold up as what keeps us from killing and raping at the drop of a hat actually usually serve to destroy empathy and teach people that they are unable to be good.

[ April 01, 2005, 06:01 PM: Message edited by: MrSquicky ]
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
and teach people that they are unable to be good
If people aren't able to consistently do good without external help, then your philosophy is fatal to human decency.
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
You can certainly argue that we cannot prove that Gravity works the way the theory speculates and that it will always function the way we expect it.

Until a better answer comes along, however, we are willing to accept and work within the constraints of the notion.

Accepting that notion, God falls in the same category. Until a better notion comes along that forces a change in the thought process, there is nothing to adequately disprove the existence of God.

I tend to agree - until God or an agent I cannot deny makes His will manifest in such a fashion I cannot blame a bit of undigested bit of beer or an underdone potato, I cannot cast my lot in with the believers.

However, lack of practical proof does not change the existence of God. Long before we had any understanding of how science worked and man clung to sacrificing chickens to make fire work, fire still worked. Rocks, when dropped, fell. We couldn't prove how it happened or why - but we knew it did.

-Trevor
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
As opposed to religion's long record of encouraging decency?
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
And while nobody has organized a crusade over Bigfoot, I will submit that the occasional government has attempted to squash, squelch and otherwise suppress if not outright exterminate religious beliefs and those who practiced them.

Sweet Goddess, I'm arguing for the theists now. [Taunt]

-Trevor
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
Decency as defined by the social values of the time?

-Trevor
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
No, I don't think that all people are bad. I do think that many people need or want guidance above and beyond "you shouldn't do that" to overcome their own self interests for the benefit of the society in which they live.

A common question when the subject of agnosticism comes up is "but if you don't believe in God and eternal judgment, what's keeping you from running around shooting people?" All that question does for me is point out the obvious collorary: that the belief in God and eternal judgment just might be the ony thing keeping some people from doing just that.

I don't think people are naturally good or bad. I think they're people. I imagine you've worked with plenty of different people in your life. Tell me, how many needed to-do lists and constant nudging and how many worked because they saw what needed doing?

Note to my religious friends: yep, this is a horrible disservice to religion. I'm aware of that; I'm just arguing a small aspect.

[ April 01, 2005, 06:11 PM: Message edited by: Chris Bridges ]
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
As opposed to religion's long record of encouraging decency?
Or, if people are that bad even with some help, they would be worse without it.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
Chris,
But I'm also well aware of the often drastic negative effects of external reward/punishment systems on motivation and performance. I don't think you can reasonaly argue that because people inside a system display exactly the attributes that I'm saying that system causes, that people outside that system would need the system.

Peopel are naturally selfish, but they're also naturally empathetic. What we have now enervates empathy while generally encouraging mere repression of selfishness.

Trevor,
The distinction I'm drawing is not between relgious versus non-religious systems, but rather between systems that rely on external reward/punihsment systems of morality, which I believe encourage the dehumanization of "evil" people, versus those that do not.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
Yeah Dag, the only way I could counter that was if I, who don't hold myself to an external moral system, wasn;t the depraved would be murderous rapist who is only held back by the threat of the police that I must be under your philosophy. Or if there were any examples of all at people who lived empathetic lives without such an system imposed on them. Oh woe, my position is so untenable.

The description of the effects of external reward/punishment systems on motivation and peformance I'm describing aren't limited to morality. There's plenty of scientifically valid evidence that they have these effects in a very wide variety of situations. I'm apply the principles discovered in other places to the question of morality and it seems to make a pretty good fit to me.

---

edit: That people are intrinsically evil who must be forced to behave decently is an assumption and one that I think is pretty ridiculous in face of the evidence. Pelagius logically demolished Augustine's (who has even by his own admission an pretty morally weka person) arguments, but Augustine's philosopy appealed to the same people who then turned around and slaughtered the Pelagian "heretics" and burnt their books. So somehow, Augustine must have been showing the path to righteousness. THe simple observable fact remains that people don't have to Christian to be good. That pepole in many societies who don't have a monotheistic or even an external god religion nonetheless are able to form communities that function as well or better than the western European ones and that when they came into contact, it was the western Europeans who often showed themselves morally inferior.

[ April 01, 2005, 06:40 PM: Message edited by: MrSquicky ]
 
Posted by Glenn Arnold (Member # 3192) on :
 
Now that's ironic. Who would think there would be serious discourse in an April Fools thread?

APRIL FOOL!

(and apologies to anyone who was offended other than Jay. Geez, I tried hard.)
 
Posted by skillery (Member # 6209) on :
 
MrSquicky:

quote:
Jay, who is a pretty good example of a christian with some pretty severe failings?
That's me.

*is intrinsically bad*

It's a good thing that I believe in God and see the possibility of incarceration as a deterrent. There are plenty of people out there who need killin'
 
Posted by Megan (Member # 5290) on :
 
quote:
*sings some more*

I'm an atheist and I'm OK.
I sleep all night and I work all day!

Telp, I think I love you. [Kiss]
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
Yeah Dag, the only way I could counter that was if I, who don't hold myself to an external moral system, wasn;t the depraved would be murderous rapist who is only held back by the threat of the police that I must be under your philosophy. Or if there were any examples of all at people who lived empathetic lives without such an system imposed on them. Oh woe, my position is so untenable.
That's not a counter at all, since it's very possible that the benefits of religion, and more specifically, of God's help, extend to those who do not consciously profess faith in Him.

For someone so scientifically minded, it's surprisingly easy for you to ignore the effect of a system on those who are alongside, rather than within it.

Oh, except when the consequences are negative. You're very willing to impute those consequences to the system and its supernatural Source.

Dagonee
P.S., I'm not going to bother dealing with your continuing definition of religion as a system of rewards/punishments only. We've been down that road and, frankly, it's boring.

[ April 01, 2005, 06:48 PM: Message edited by: Dagonee ]
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
skillz,
I don't actually think you're intrinsically bad, but who knows, you may be. I don't know you. The thing is, even if you are just a bad person, you're way overstepping the bounds of reason to assume that I and everyone else is as well. I don't feel constrained by external laws and yet I choose to do as much good as I can, because that's how I fully express who I am.

By your system, I would necessarily be your moral inferior. I'd repond that by my fruits you will know me. I don't think that I (or many others like me) act like your moral inferior or that (unless you define morality as many do as professing a belief in Jesus) we are immoral people. If we aren't, your system logically falls apart, unless you are willing to say that God overrides our free will.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
Dag,
I don't just not profess belief in the Christian god. I've renounced him. If he exists, I don't want his help. If I can't be moral on my own, I will not be moral. Likewise, I've renounced the Christian basis of morality. I choose my actions and not against external constraints. I've organized my approach to the world on very different principles. I am a better person than is average for my society because I reject the system.

There are plenty of societies that weren't exposed to what we understand as religion but existed in harmony nonetheless. If God is willing to grant him enough grace to be moral without them believing in him, the argument still falls apart. They are examples of people who didn't need a belief in God nor an externally imposed moral system to be moral.

If you're going to make an argument against what I'm saying, make an argument, don't just keep throwing assumptions at me.

P.S. I've never said that religion is only reward/punishment, only that it plays are huge role in contemporary and historical religion and that it inextricabily tied to the assumption that people are intrinsically evil without external intervention.

[ April 01, 2005, 07:02 PM: Message edited by: MrSquicky ]
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Naw, Chris. Keep a low profile. You might not have your praises sung, but you won't be pounded by the playground bullies either.

I'm pullin' for ya, buddy.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
If you're going to make an argument against what I'm saying, make an argument, don't just keep throwing assumptions at me.
That's all you're doing - throwing assumptions. I've got different assumptions.

Dagonee
 
Posted by Erik Slaine (Member # 5583) on :
 
Well, when I posted earlier, I was just pointing out how impolite and assumptive the whole thread to that point had been.

Its a matter of manners. I expect better of that here, regardless of what I believe.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:
I do what I do because I choose to, because it springs out of who I am. My guiding moral principle is empathy, whcih comes from inside me.
Mr. Squicky, I disagree with you, at least slightly, if not completely. Some people are born with a gift for empathy. But a lot of people aren't.

*raises hand*

And while being taught isn't a guaruntee of learning, I think it makes a huge difference. This has nothing to do with religion, this has to do with the belief that the ideologies that we are raised with shape us in powerful ways. I think we need to be taught to be moral. I think religion *can* do an excellent job of that (I agree it has failed monstrously at times too). I also believe that you *can* teach morality without religion (aka humanist ideology).

I will take a moment to point out that humanist morality will in some places differ from religious morality, and thus people coming from those two different ideologies will look at each other, point, and accuse: "Immoral!" Some of this is reconcilable with understanding. Sometimes the conflict is not so easy to diffuse (like in the gay marriage debate.)
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:
Likewise, I've renounced the Christian basis of morality. I choose my actions and not against external constraints. I've organized my approach to the world on very different principles. I am a better person than is average for my society because I reject the system.
See what I mean?
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
No, I'm challenging the assumption that people are intrinsically evil by presenting evidence, showing how by what we understand of how motivational systems work, the current conception of morality would actually lead to less, rather than more moral people, and bringing up the Pelagian versus Augustinian original sin debate in a context where it cann't be settled by the "moral" people who believe in origianl sin slaughtering the "immoral" people who don't.

You're saying that because I don't fit your assumptions, I'm either evil or just suprememly deluded.

Christians have been really bad people for most of history. The advances we've made in science, epistemology, government, and morality have come in large part from people who were reacting against and/or rejecting christianity. Our nation nor the ideals of equal justice and individual rights wouldn't exist in their current form witohut people who were against the christian churches. And yet, because of your assumptions, these people must be the moral inferiors to the christians who fought them or else were really christians despite their beliefs to the contrary.

You haven't offered an evidence or even much of an extrapolation for what you're saying. You've just dismissed everything I've said because it disagrees with your assumption. The best you got is that most people believe it, but, as I've said, most people are ignorant and immature, so I'd actually count that against your posiiton.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:

Christians have been really bad people for most of history.

Another fine example....
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
by presenting evidence
You haven't presented ANY evidence. You've stated premises I don't believe and then try to call me to task for not accepting the consequences of those premises.

I don't accept that it's a question of motivation. It is an assumption of yours that motivation is at the heart of morality. NOTHING you present to me about motivation, therefore, is relevant until you prove that motivation is the primary force to be dealt with.

Dagonee
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
bev,
You're super-mormon lady. Why is you not having empathy an argument against me saying that religious systems tend to lead to an atrophy of empathy? That actually supports what I'm saying. If you either had an extraordinary amount of empathy that you felt derived from external sources or you were without external morality but had little empathy (and there are plenty of these people out there), it would be evidence, though hardly compelling.

I love children and I think I'm pretty darn good with them. Here's my thinking. They're haven't been taught morality and you know what, barring psychological damage, they've got a lot of empathy. They'll cry when their pet or even a stuffed animal get hurt. They can be overcome with joy just because you are really happy. They are also terribly selfish. The two things exist next to each other. They don't need to learn compassion; they already have it. They need to mature, to become more aware of others and less selfish and their compassion shines through.

They're not little monsters though. They don't get like that generally until they hit school, which is organized around the external reward/punishment system. They certainly don't learn compassion here, although they may learn to follow rules without reason. They definitely learn cruelty.

Psychologically healthy pre-school age children don't set out to do bad or to hurt other people. At worst, they like to tease and they are struggling for power over their environemnt. But our schools are bredding grounds for this type of cruelty and for the categorization of people who it's okay to do bad things to.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
bev,
I'm talking about historical fact. Most Christians have been ignorant, cruel, bloodthirsty, power hungry savages through most of history. Their history is one of atrocities and exploitation.

edit: I should ammend that, because I really can't say that with confidence. Rather, the majority of Christians and their actions that have been recorded by history have been pretty atrocious. The vast majority of Christians haven't been considered historically relevant, so saying stuff about them isn't really responsible.

[ April 01, 2005, 07:43 PM: Message edited by: MrSquicky ]
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
Dag,
I don't understand how you can divorce motivation from morality. Morality breaks down into what people do, what people intend to do, or some combination of these. Unless you're either denying free will or saying that what people do is not tied to their motivations, I don't see how motivation isn't the primary force between any of those three.

How do you see morality such that motivation isn't important?
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
My point is, I had to be *taught* empathy. It wasn't inborn.

I'm not arguing about who does the teaching, only that religion has often been THE BIG teacher of those things. Often there just wasn't anything else.

Neither I nor anyone else has said that children are "little monsters". I am a strong advocate for the "dual nature of man" ideology. I had the capacity for good, or I wouldn't have learned it. Just because it is taught does not mean I have to learn. But I have to constantly fight my less noble qualities. It is a choice. And it is a choice that anyone is capable of, belief in God or not. But there must be an example of goodness provided. I do think that when there is no example of goodness, it is *very* difficult for the rising generation to learn it. They may succeed, but they will be in the minority.

Actually, based on LDS scripture in particular, I think that Abraham was such a man. He appeared to have no examples for goodness around him, and yet he wanted goodness so badly, he found it. He found God. I believe that was part of what made him such an amazing man--one God could truly trust--and that that is why he was so highly praised ever after in scripture.

Because I believe in God, I believe that part of what God does is provide a correct role model for goodness. I believe that God embodies goodness and morality by choice, and that His purpose is doing what is best for humanity. I believe that when He has caused destruction, it was for the greater good in the eternal perspective. It is true that when there are stories in the Old Testament that paint Him as doing senseless violence, I tend to question the accuracy of the story or my knowledge of the situation than to assume that God is something other than good and loving.

Perhaps it is in my nature to lean towards trusting the God I already believe exists. Perhaps it is a form of optomism. I don't know.

[ April 01, 2005, 07:45 PM: Message edited by: beverly ]
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:
I'm talking about historical fact. Most Christians have been ignorant, cruel, bloodthirsty, power hungry savages through most of history. Their history is one of atrocities and exploitation.
[Roll Eyes]

*PEOPLE* have been ignorant, cruel, bloodthirsty, power hungry savages. That most of Western civilization was Christian for the last couple thousand years is irrelevant.
 
Posted by AntiCool (Member # 7386) on :
 
quote:
Most Christians have been ignorant, cruel, bloodthirsty, power hungry savages through most of history. Their history is one of atrocities and exploitation.
No more so than non-Christians. The Christians just had the bonus of having more power than anybody else in their corner of the world for a long time.

[ April 01, 2005, 07:50 PM: Message edited by: AntiCool ]
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
bev,
But not all people have, nor have people been so in the same degree. Christian civilizations have, historically, been relatively more ignorant, blood thirsty, and power hungry than many other ones (Consider the description of various aboriginal Americans as peaceloving, gentle, and altruisitic by their Christian European killers and conquerors). They've also been less so than many ones.

America right now is a more violent nation from other nations. People are not equally violent and the cultural and/or religious systems they belong to do a great deal towards determining this. I don't find the handwaving "But everyone is like that" or "But what they profess to believe didn't influence their actions" to be compelling arguments.

edit: I'd be inclined to say that it's more likely that you weren't overwhelmingly predisposed towards empathy and felt the effects of your culture before you consciously were aware of it but it's entirely possible that you didn't have any empathy and had to be taught it. I try not to deal in universals. However, this was not true for me, nor is it true for the kids I interact with. Nor does it seem to be evident in much of the child psych literature that I read.

It comes back to, you may be a bad person or lacking in empathy or whatevern but that is no reason to assume that everyone else does.

[ April 01, 2005, 07:55 PM: Message edited by: MrSquicky ]
 
Posted by AntiCool (Member # 7386) on :
 
quote:
Consider the description of various aboriginal Americans as peaceloving, gentle, and altruisitic by their Christian European killers and conquerors
Also consider the description of various native American cultures as vicious, cruel, and bloodthirsty.

[ April 01, 2005, 07:55 PM: Message edited by: AntiCool ]
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
Ooooh, that's an interesting shift.

What about all the other "Christian" nations in the world? It could be argued that the US is aggressive which need not be tied to the assumption of Christian dominance of the nation.

Do we want to point out the modern genocides in Africa and Cambodia? Stalin's purges? Godwin's favorite child, Hitler? Ghenghis Khan? The Aztecs?

Yes, the Christian faith has produced Crusades and conversions at blade's edge, but no more or less than any other religion.

-Trevor
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
MrS, you know I'm in the nonGod camp. But I gotta wonder where you're getting your information.

None of the South American civilizations were ever cruel or barbaric? Indian tribes that practiced torture, they were fine? Huns, Saxons, the middle east before Christ? For that matter, the middle east after Christ?

Some of the greatest atrocities of the world were committed by people using scripture for justification and vindication, I grant you. Some of the greatest benevolent acts also carried that banner.

People do what they do. Religion hands them a way to channel or form or justify it, but so do politics and patriotism.
 
Posted by skillery (Member # 6209) on :
 
quote:
Most Christians have been ignorant, cruel, bloodthirsty, power hungry savages through most of history. Their history is one of atrocities and exploitation.
Perhaps they weren't truly Christian but were using the organization as a tool to achieve their own purposes.

I think it would be interesting to examine the morals of Japanese society today, compared with morals before WWII. The Japanese turned their back on religion en masse about 50 years ago. They are now in the third and fourth generation of raising their children without religion. Sure there remain some religious zealots, and there is still the tradition of going through the motions of religious observation on holidays and in rites of passage, but the majority of Japanese are without religion in their everyday lives. Do you want to see some scary stuff?

Secular humanism does not transfer well from one generation to the next. The rules are constantly being rewritten, and the trend is toward a broader definition of what is acceptable.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
porter,
That's irrelevant to my argument. There were peaceful, altruistic cultures, who the christian europeans slaughtered, often under the moral dehumanizing reasoning that they were bad because they weren't christians. That there were other violent, blood-thirsty peoples doesn't take away from that.

And actually, I'd argue that it's precisely because Christians were so powerful that there are so many odious parts to the belief system. Christian theology historically was aimed towards the powerful, at least starting with Augustine and Constantine. Power corrupts and because power was the central office of Christianity for so long, the immature power seekers and those who appealed to them guided must of Christian theology. Often times, more peace loving, caring interpretations sprang up to have the central factions of the church (or in the early years, just the ones who weren't pacifistic*) put them down by force.

* - not recorded fact, only informed speculation.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
don't understand how you can divorce motivation from morality. Morality breaks down into what people do, what people intend to do, or some combination of these.
I didn't say it wasn't tied to their motivations. I said it wasn't the primary driving force.

quote:
Unless you're either denying free will or saying that what people do is not tied to their motivations, I don't see how motivation isn't the primary force between any of those three.
I know you don't see that. I think motivations are one of the least important things in the causal chain of what people do. This doesn't deny free will - it means most people don't develop the moral fortitude to make effective, moral use of their free will.

I'm saying that altering motivations is not sufficient to bring about moral living.

Dagonee
 
Posted by AntiCool (Member # 7386) on :
 
MrS -- then I misunderstood your point. Let me direct your attention to Chris' post.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
Chris,
I never said that there weren't some terribly savage (even more savage, those on a lesser scale than the Europeans) cultures in the Americas. Again, I don't think that's relevant. There were also plenty of peaceful ones, although the peaceful ones usually were relatively isolated, which generally leads me to speculate that there were likely many more peaceful cultures that got destroyed by the expanding aggressive cultures. You can see the same phenomena in a huge number of variations in the antropology of the Indonesian islands.

---

Could you give me examples of these wonderful things that the historical Christians did?

---

And for what it's worth, I'm not in the non-God camp. I'm not even in the anti-Christian camp. Some of the people I know are Christians. I consider some priests (a couple of whom I grew up with) friends. I'd be happy if the current mainstream interpretation of it went away, but that's largely because I consider it a perversion of what the much more enlightening and beenficial version that it could be.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Yeah, Squicky, your facts just don't ring true at all. They smack of a strong bias.

There are some examples of peaceful aboriginal groups. One might say that people getting together in large civilizations is what causes these undesirable qualities.

As for my level of empathy as a child, I was not without empathy. But it was not my strongest motivation, and thus was not usually the choice I went with. But in my dual nature, I had to be taught to choose good over evil.

I have observed that if I leave my children unguided for too long, the "digress" into greater and greater contention and cruelty. The more involved I am in teaching and guiding them, the better they behave. This strongly supports my theory in the need for moral teaching and guidance.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:
Christian theology historically was aimed towards the powerful, at least starting with Augustine and Constantine. Power corrupts and because power was the central office of Christianity for so long, the immature power seekers and those who appealed to them guided must of Christian theology.
And how does this have anything to do with Christianity? It has everything to do with the powerhungry wanting to oppress the masses. They twisted Christianity and used it as a tool to that end. (Some did, I'm not saying those specific men you mentioned did.) Any twisting that came from such behavior is *NOT* part of what Christianity was originally about.

But it has tainted the name of Christianity and has turned many sour against it. You included, apparently. It doesn't matter that those behaviors slowly died out over the past few centuries while Christianity as a religion is as strong as ever.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:

Could you give me examples of these wonderful things that the historical Christians did?

I am not well qualified to answer this question since I don't know enough about history, but I have little doubt that evidence is not difficult to find.

Some things that come to mind: The fall of the Roman Empire did a lot to bring about ignorance and dearth. The Catholic Church helped minimize the damage from this by making an effort to preserve civilization and education. There are some instances of "keeping people in the dark", but that just isn't the whole story.

Many "social programs" were started by Christians.

Orphanages were started by Christians.

Charities were started by Christians.

These things were started because the Bible teaches us to love and care for our fellow men. People read the Bible, felt moved by those teachings, and did something about it.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
bev,
Could you show me where you think my facts are terribly biased instead of just claiming that they are? I'm always looking to refine my way of looking at things, but you're not giving me much to work with.

---

I have a somewhat different interpretation of why it's the large societies that seem to be more violent. Certainly there are a ton of factors about the large society that foster selfishness and violence, but there's also the underlying similarities in the groups that go on to form large and violent societies and those that don't. It's no accident that the three levantine religions (Christianity, Islam, and Judaism) fostered violent, empire building, power seeking societies.

---

I think you may have misunderstood me about the empathy thing. I'm not saying you need to leave kids alone and they'll do the right thing. That's crazy. Rather it's that they contain within themselves the qualities that, if they are strengthened and the opposing ones weakened, will lead to good behavior. I don't think that you necessarily disagree with this point, as it was specifically against the idea that people are intrinsically evil without the external imposition of morality.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
skillz,
Ok, I'm curious. How is Japan this amazingly immoral country?
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
bev,
When exactly did people read the Bible? I assume you're talking about post Reformation. Up to that point (well, at least from the fall of the Roman Empire) the Bible was specifically kept out of people's hands by the leaders of the Church. And the communities that Luther and Calvin were hardly marked by their charity. Luther himself regarded it as the least of virtues and calvinist thought usually regarded it as against God's plan.

I'm not trying to suggest that christianity is/was this monolithic evil, but I'm willing to stand by the statement that the historical record has it as being bad guys in the majority.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Actually, I don't think Japan is terribly immoral at the moment. I think they do a pretty decent job, though their morals are placed slightly differently than ours. Though I do wonder about some of their treatment of POWs during the war.

Mr. Squicky, others pointed out the bias for me. I didn't see a need to repeat what they said. The point is, you are blaming Christianity for the evils committed in the last 2000 years when humanity has been plenty evil in the absence of Christianity. We have already seen that while some aboriginal peoples are peaceful, some are quite the opposite.

You yourself admit that there are people more peaceful than the Christians of history, and there are people more evil. So they fall somewhere in the middle. Might that have more to do with people being people than Christianity having an evil influence?

See my post that we might as well assume that large civilizations cause evil as to assume Christianity does.

There is no evidence here to say Christianity makes people evil. That is your bias.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:
but I'm willing to stand by the statement that the historical record has it as being bad guys in the majority.
Yeah. There is a reason for this. It's because most of the PEOPLE in that era and location were Christians.

People read the Bible after the invention of the printing press and the subsequent distribution of the book. I don't know how this lines up with the Reformation. But people in the locations we are discussing were still quite predomintately Christian up till... well, up till now!

So if people have gotten better, who's to say a better understanding of Christianity did not directly *cause* this change?
quote:
And the communities that Luther and Calvin were hardly marked by their charity. Luther himself regarded it as the least of virtues and calvinist thought usually regarded it as against God's plan.
So? That doesn't change the fact that social programs were started by Christians. Of course, we could say again that this is only because the vast majority of people in this location and time were Christians. It does go both ways.

But considering the teachings that are actually in the New Testament, it is not illogical to conclude that those teachings encouraged people to help their fellow man.

[ April 01, 2005, 08:41 PM: Message edited by: beverly ]
 
Posted by jebus202 (Member # 2524) on :
 
quote:
Though I do wonder about some of their treatment of POWs during the war.
BAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.

Good one!
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
I don't recall us skinning people alive....

[Roll Eyes]

Sometimes I think people have forgotten just how cruel humans can be.

I am not trying to justify torture of our POWs. But the comparison pales.

[ April 01, 2005, 08:43 PM: Message edited by: beverly ]
 
Posted by jebus202 (Member # 2524) on :
 
So I guess it's ok to throw stones then. [No No]
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
bev,
There's plenty of evidence that aspects of the structure and beliefs of Christianity are shared by other aggressive, violent, savagish cultures. Most of the things I'm talking about are applied from anthropology, sociology, and psychology after the fact. That is, they were developed without Christianity in mind, but where either applied to Christianity in later sutdies or I'm just doing it here. For example, I've brought up in a couple of thread thats up until at least 1975 (the last study I read was then) American religious tested as significantly higher than American non-religious in prejudicial and authoritarian thinking.

There are reasons for why people and societies take on a certain aspect. It's not responsible to use dismissive handwaving "It's just people" to ignore this when you want to defend a group, especially in a thread that where it was implied that atheists and people like me are necessarily morally inferior because of their beliefs. Other people and peoples don't act this way and it has a lot to do with the patterns and mythologies they are in.

I know my history. I also know my theology and my comparative religion and quite a bit of anthropology. I don't say these things because I think christianity is bad. I think christianity has many negative influences that go unacknowledged because of all these things that I know. If you want to accuse me of bias, do me the curtesy of having facts and interpretations that disagree with mine, not just an accusation.

edit: And jeez, bev, you're agruing with my bias in the history of christianity and you don't even know how the printing press lines up with the Reformation? What the heck do you know that you're basing this on?

[ April 01, 2005, 08:52 PM: Message edited by: MrSquicky ]
 
Posted by jebus202 (Member # 2524) on :
 
A serial killer goes crazy and kills 100 people then says he did it for his wife. Do we blame the wife? Especially if the wife says "love your fellow man"?
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
I wish most Christians lived by the lessons of the New Testament (well, parts of it are icky - kings rule by divine right and all that - , but I still maintain that Paul is a really good guy taken in context). Heck, I wish that most Christians even knew the New Testament, but even on Hatrack, people's knowledge of the bible sucks. Christianity is so much more than what's in the bible, even if we're just talking about doctrine instead of including other central factors like social patterns, organizational structure, ancillarly mythology, etc.

In this particular instance for example, where we're talking about original sin, that's not actually in the NT, unless you stretch some of Paul's writings. But I'd argue that this is more central to mainstream christianity than "Love your neighbor as yourself" which Jesus held up as, combined with "Love God" which it is equal to, the highest law.

[ April 01, 2005, 09:04 PM: Message edited by: MrSquicky ]
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
Man, you really are on your high horse today, aren't you, Squick?
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:
And jeez, bev, you're agruing with my bias in the history of christianity and you don't even know how the printing press lines up with the Reformation? What the heck do you know that you're basing this on?
When did I ever claim history was my strong point? It soooo isn't. Just because I don't know how things line up doesn't discount my knowledge entirely. I provided examples and you have not attempted to refute them. So let's try again. In your boundless historical knowledge, do you agree that social programs such as orphanages and charities were started by Christians? Could this be due to their trying to better live their religion? If this were true (and it will have to remain hypothetical since it cannot be proven) ould this be construed as a positive influence directly from Christianity?

You say that you wish more Christians would live their religion. Well, when I speak of Christianity, I am referring to what I believe Christianity is *supposed* to be. I am speaking of the ideal. I assume you are speaking more of the practical--the reality of how people live it. I will agree with you that in practice it often is far from the ideal. But it just drives me crazy when people blame the problems of the world on religion when the evidence just does not support this. I have quoted you in this thread doing just that--making blanket statements about Christians being evil.

So you have problems with some of the ways Christianity is "carried out". You know what? So do I.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Ooo! I almost forgot.

*throws stones at jebus*

[Razz]
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
quote:
Could you give me examples of these wonderful things that the historical Christians did?
Cathedrals
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
I think I want to become a Quaker. I am not exactly an atheist, more of a mystic, mor eof a believer that religion and action should be the exact same thing.
 
Posted by kaioshin00 (Member # 3740) on :
 
I think you oata become a Quaker too [Razz]
 
Posted by urbanX (Member # 1450) on :
 
For some reason I always thought the quakers died out. Which is funny since I live down the street from a quaker school.
 
Posted by jebus202 (Member # 2524) on :
 
Quakers were the group that gave the greatest help to the Irish during the famine.
 
Posted by skillery (Member # 6209) on :
 
quote:
How is Japan this amazingly immoral country?
Well, most of what I have seen is sexual immorality. That wouldn't help to make my case here, since we Hatrackers are a fairly sexually liberal crowd.

The other example that I could state is my first-hand knowledge of corruption in the business world. That too doesn't make a very strong case, considering the insider-trading stuff we've seen here lately. Let's just say that unethical behavior in the business place is rampant and eclipses anything we've seen here. It's more like all out war than business.

"So what," you say. Well, when we shrug stuff like that off, it's just an indication of how far we've slipped.
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
Skillery, Japan has a religion. Two in fact. Shintoism and Buddhism.
Most people in Japan are buried in a Buddhist way though...

Must be thinking about the Shakers.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
I was talking to my bro-in-law the other day about Japanese culture (he was there on a mission). He was telling me about how strictly the people follow their code of honor. The result being that you can drop your wallet in the middle of a crowded street and no one will touch it (except to return it to you maybe.) You can go back an hour later and found it where you left it.

He talked about a boy who was loitering around a magazine stand and eventually couldn't bear the temptation and snitched one. He was caught, and everyone was shaking their heads and tsk tsking about how he had tossed his whole life away over a magazine. It seemed that once you have done something even so minor as that, it colors you for life.

Just some interesting stuff like that. I mean, maybe they have their own *forms* of corruption, and as I said before, their morality is not identical to ours (putting emphasis in different areas--e.g.: I don't like the pressure to conform in their culture) but I am totally impressed with what they are doing right.

Talking to my sister-in-law (who is Japanese) has also shed some interesting light on the customs there. They are horrified at the idea of guns. Even the cops often will not have them. And because their whole society is that way, there is *very* little violence due to guns. I don't think you could take our culture and make it be that way (too set in our ways), but I do admire the Japanese for it.

Also, they have a very powerful sense of hospitality and gift-giving. They are so very thoughtful! If you are sick, they will freely give you money to help you with your costs. At least, this is what I have experienced within our family, and what I have heard from others.

These are all "Christian values" that our American society isn't nearly as good at as the Japanese are. Obviously, these values are not unique to Christianity nor do they require Christianity to exist.

Take from that what you will.
 
Posted by urbanX (Member # 1450) on :
 
You do not want to mess with Japanese cops. I believe they all are blackbelts in some form of martial arts.
 
Posted by AntiCool (Member # 7386) on :
 
While it is not true that they are all "blackbelts", I have heard that the #1 martial art that they teach the police in Japan is Aikido.

[ April 01, 2005, 11:36 PM: Message edited by: AntiCool ]
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
It is safe to say that in Japan, on average, officers receive more hand-to-hand combat training than their US counterparts and the average Japanese officer takes that training more seriously.

-Trevor
 
Posted by AntiCool (Member # 7386) on :
 
I'll bet that American officers receive more training with firearms and are correspondingly more proficient with them.

But then, they need to, since they have to deal with an armed populace.
 
Posted by TMedina (Member # 6649) on :
 
*grins* Opinions differ on that point.

I will concede that the average US officer receives more experience with firearms and that as a result, the average US officer is probably more proficient with his weapon than his Japanese counterpart.

But considering a firearm is only meant to be a weapon of last resort, you would think that LE programs would put a greater emphasis on the big three: Shooting, Driving, Hand-to-Hand than you see otherwise.

-Trevor
 
Posted by Crotalus (Member # 7339) on :
 
Just a comment in regards to the original post.

Jay, for a joke that's pretty harsh. From my first post that you replied to I could tell that we held common beliefs. I'm also a Christian and hold a lot of conservative views. I think your Terry Shaivo post where you stated simply "legal murder' and then provided a link to the news was right on. But in this case I just want to say "dude, what's the point?"

I don't know you, how old you are, your background, anything. But I do know that you remind me something of myself when I was younger. I'm 36 now and just shake my head at some of the things I've said before. For the most part I'm an introverted guy, but when you get on a subject that is near to my heart, well I've been known to get on a soapbox and rant.

Funny thing is, in the past I used to do this a lot more than I do now and would actually alienate people without meaning to. I mean, I had what i felt was the truth on my side and I felt like I just had to blast folks with it. I remember an abortion speech i gave for speech class, there was a lot that i said that was good, but a lot of what i said was coming from a very harsh place.

Let me make a long post short (may be too late) and just say this: if your goal is to reach people for Christ, then calling them fools isn't going to do it. I've never won anyone to Him by saying "YOU ARE GOING TO HELL!"

It may very well be true that they are going to hell, but I have to remember that I was loved into the kingdom, not beaten into it. What drew me in was the kindness I received from strangers, not their judgment. Just a few things you might want to think about.

peace, Crot
 
Posted by Morbo (Member # 5309) on :
 
Jay, I don't find your original post funny at all. When KoM started the "Oh, the irony..." thread, I thought the original post was a little funny, and ironic. Some people complained they were offended, and he changed it fairly quickly. You, on the other hand:
quote:
Seems that pretty much every joke is offensive to someone. So maybe we should outlaw jokes....[or humorless posters--Morbo]

Oh well. I knew there’d be some who couldn’t take the joke. Figured it was worth it none the less. And yeah, it is intended to be more then just a joke. ...

If it's "more than a joke" then I guess people could be right to take it as an offense. [Big Grin] --Anna ...

I guess if they’re offended something in their heart is bugging them that maybe they need to think about. Good.

...could care less if you offend anyone. You say "if they’re offended" yadda yadda "Good."

Uncool. Very Uncool. But hardly surprising. [Frown]

edit to add: Well said, Crotalus. [Smile]

[ April 02, 2005, 04:24 AM: Message edited by: Morbo ]
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
I can't believe this thread has gone on so long while remaining unproductive. [Frown]

I'd like to say, though, that I categorically disagree with Dagonee and Beverly on fundamental human nature: I believe most people are naturally good and empathic, and possess the ability and fortitude to make good choices, but that some people are not properly trained to take advantage of this natural aptitude.

This training can take many forms, one of which can be disguised as religion. There's no reason for religion to be the only effective method of social conditioning, of course, but for years it was one of the few that possessed internal justification.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
I'd like to say, though, that I categorically disagree with Dagonee and Beverly on fundamental human nature
Yeah, but we knew that. [Smile]

At least you don't seem to go around proclaiming how much better you are than other people.

Dagonee
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Tom, just out of curiosity, why do you think, then, that humans throughout time have been so, bloodthirsty, powerhungry, cruel, oppressive, and unkind?

Because they lacked the proper training?

I agree with you that all humans have the capacity to be good--though I concede that there may be a few exceptions. I also believe that all humans have the capacity to *do* evil. I won't say "be" evil because it just seems too strong. While Christianity teaches that all people are fallen, I think that the word "evil" as most of us use it, is too strong to define the actual phenomenon.

"Evil" as most use the word actually doesn't describe very many people. Most people are drawn towards "goodness" as they perceive it, and despite their weaknesses, yearn for it and try to acheive it. Few humans are true monsters--though they do exist. They usually cannot function in civilized society, though.

Edit: A prime example of how, while part of all humans longs for goodness, when left to their own devices, they will not choose it:

Elementary school playgrounds.

We've all been there. When the cat's away the mice will play. When the kids go out for recess and there isn't direct teacher-interaction, they start to behave more unkindly to each other than when the teacher is with them or watching.

I believe in the "Lord of the Flies" model. The longer they are left without supervision, the more cruel children become. Children want to *be* good, but quite often they want to *act* in ways we consider "bad". They aren't very good at being good without guidance.

[ April 02, 2005, 10:14 AM: Message edited by: beverly ]
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
Humans are hierarchical. It's something I really hate about this species, the constant need to assert dominance and to hurt others, all the while using the excuse of religion, "God wants us to!" Patriotism. "They are a threat to our way of life!"
When none of this stuff really works. On some level we are meant to be compassion, to have empathy and sometimes that completely gets teased out of us by the time we enter school.
Of course, it doesnt have to be that way. We can, instead, choose to listen to Buddha, Jesus, Ghandi and anyone who speaks of compassion instead of violence, because it really is becoming an epidemic in our culture alone.
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
quote:
The longer they are left without supervision, the more cruel children become.
I agree this is true with some children. However, others in the absence of adults merely become more and more anxious that everyone does the right, grown up thing. I think that usually these two halves balance.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
"Tom, just out of curiosity, why do you think, then, that humans throughout time have been so, bloodthirsty, powerhungry, cruel, oppressive, and unkind?

Because they lacked the proper training?"

No. I think it's because they were actively trained to be bloodthirsty and cruel.
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
Crot,
Yeah, I know. I thought about it for a while before posting and knew it would generate a lot of debate. But figured that was good in the long run. Plus I’m not the one calling them fools. So why they’re mad at someone they don’t believe in is the true irony here. Their hearts are very hard, so reaching them is next to impossible and I guess my hope was in some way to get them thinking. But anyway, done is done. Thanks.

KoM,
I hadn’t heard about the ERV debate. Very interesting. I had trouble finding out some “good” information on the topic. And had to send some emails to a buddy of mine who has some connections and got these back which are very interesting articles from AIG’s Technical Journal:
http://www.answersingenesis.org/tj/v14/i3/psuedogenes.asp
http://www.answersingenesis.org/tj/v14/i3/pseudogenes.asp
I should really subscribe to TJ. They have so much great info all the time.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
Ho hum. I'm no biologist, and even I can spot the flaws in that little lot.

quote:
Failure to observe pseudogenes coding for a product under experimental conditions is no proof that they never do so inside an organism.
Yes, yes, and absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. Come on, people, applying this argument to God is one thing, but it gets a bit thin for gene expressions.

quote:
The persistence of pseudogenes is in itself additional evidence for their activity. This is a serious problem for evolution, as it is expected that natural selection would remove this type of DNA if it were useless, since DNA manufactured by the cell is energetically costly.
Well, that's just plain wrong. DNA is not so expensive that the disappearance of any one chunk, even a fairly large chunk, will make a difference. And the DNA-copying process cannot very well check whether the bit it's copying at the moment is important or not - these are chemical processes, after all, they do not think.

The advantages of having an extremely accurate copying process are obvious. That it carries the minor disadvantage of copying some parasite DNA along is just too bad. And in any case, the rest of the article argues that this DNA is not useless! I mean, you can have it one way, or the other, but not both. Either this is useless DNA that natural selection should have taken away (and hey, it's being worked on - it just takes time! You don't see us sharing useless sequences with birds, do you?) or it is useful and natural selection should work to preserve it.

quote:
A large fraction of most pseudogenes differ considerably from their alleged parent genes which makes the interpretation of the data questionable.
Well, yes, when you differ in twenty of a thousand bases, gosh, I guess you could question the lineage. If you were really, really desperate to find a flaw. Here's the abstract of the article that reported the discovery of the Vitamin C gene :

"A comparison of these exons with those of their functional counterparts in rat showed that there are two single nucleotide deletions, one triple nucleotide deletion, and one single nucleotide insertion in the human sequence."

Six nucleotides different, yes, that's surely a 'considerable difference'.

quote:
Although some pseudogenes such as LINEs and Alus appear to be hierarchically shared between primates, others clearly are not. An example of such a discordancy is the sharing of SINE elements between evolutionarily more-distant organisms to the exclusion of animals of intermediate evolutionary derivation, despite the presence of intact homologous genetic loci in the latter.

Pseudogene sequences are frequently exchanged. This complicates any interpretation of phylogeny.

So, um. One moment he argues that since humans share 'pseudogenes' with species further away than chimpanzees, we cannot reason from pseudogene sharing to ancestry. The next, he points out that there can be horizontal transfer, invalidating his previous argument.

Moreover, note the very clever parsing of that sentence : "Although some pseudogenes such as LINEs and Alus appear to be hierarchically shared between primates, others clearly are not." Yes, quite so. And the LINEs and Alus are the ones that do not transfer horizontally, and which therefore are used as evidence of common descent, unlike the SINEs, which do transfer horizontally. That's a nice, honest argument, that is.
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
I guess we all have our own biases!
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:
No. I think it's because they were actively trained to be bloodthirsty and cruel.
What do you mean by "actively"? Were they actively trained with the intent by their trainers that they become bloodthirsty and cruel? Or was it a more subtle teaching that happened because those things were prevailent in the culture and there was a dearth of good role models?

If people are innately good more than they are innately evil, why did people not overcome and balance these influences? Why is it so difficult to get humanity on track for goodness? Is this also the fault of religion--even though those religions usually started out trying to turn humanity from it's more nefarious tendancies?
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
quote:
Plus I’m not the one calling them fools. So why they’re mad at someone they don’t believe in is the true irony here. Their hearts are very hard, so reaching them is next to impossible and I guess my hope was in some way to get them thinking.
Sigh.

When you post something intended to be offensive to a class of people, slap smilies and laughing figures around it to point out how funny you think it is, add comments about high horses to let everyone know you don't care if it offends people, and then act surprised and puzzled that people in that class might somehow find it offensive, I really have to wonder about you.

There's a difference between joking with someone and insulting them. Really, there is.
 
Posted by kaioshin00 (Member # 3740) on :
 
quote:
Their hearts are very hard, so reaching them is next to impossible and I guess my hope was in some way to get them thinking.
So if someone is happy in what they believe in, and you don't agree with it, you offend them? Very respectable.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
Well, Jay, that's a really good argument in a scientific discussion, isn't it just? I reply point-by-point to your link, and you accuse me of bias? Even if that were true, how does it invalidate the points I made?

Moreover, if you're going to say 'my bias is as good as yours', how then can you justify calling people fools on the basis of their bias? Either there is a correct point of view, or there isn't. If the latter, you have absolutely no call to go around calling people fools. If the former, just accusing people of bias is not going to convince anyone you are right. In fact, it is much more likely to convince people that you know absolutely nothing of the subject, and just fling out whatever silly articles happen to suit your - dare I say it? - bias.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
And speaking of hard hearts, I would like to make exactly the same comment on the hardness of some people's heads.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:
Plus I’m not the one calling them fools. So why they’re mad at someone they don’t believe in is the true irony here.
Jay, you just don't get it. You are talking to a group of people who don't believe in God. So they believed that a man said that, nothing more, and that now you are choosing to call them fools for (in their mind) no good reason. How is any good to ever come of that?

If I were to quote scriptures that insult you, it wouldn't matter if they are true or that God said them of you. It doesn't change the fact that I am being rude and offensive. I (being Mormon) have a whole set of scriptures that you most likely believe do not come from God at all, but from man. I probably I could find an insult in there that refers accurately to you. Would me quoting it to you help convince you to believe that my scriptures are from God?
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:
And speaking of hard hearts, I would like to make exactly the same comment on the hardness of some people's heads.
Aye.
 
Posted by Wowbagger the Infinitely Prolonged (Member # 7476) on :
 
Well said Beverly
 
Posted by Morbo (Member # 5309) on :
 
quote:
Plus I’m not the one calling them fools. So why they’re mad at someone they don’t believe in is the true irony here. Their hearts are very hard...
Ummm, yeah, you are calling them fools. This thread was not virgin birthed--you did it, Jay.

And you call them hard-hearted, presumeably just because they disagree with you.

Before you dismiss your critics with a flippant "I guess we all have our own biases!" (not the best debate comeback), many of your critics here criticized KoM in the irony thread.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
I'm wary of posting arguments when I'm mildly drunk in a thread where any mistep will be pounced upon, so I'll leave that till monday. However, I would like to say, esepcially to bev, that you don't need to come up with this whole elaborate explanation for why I believe the way that I do which is different from my stated reasoning.

I'm certainly open to biases, but I also really do try to lead the examined life. If you feel the need to dismiss the idea that I may actually put a lot of time into looking at and thinking about the evidence and then still come up with a different conclusion than you based on some fantasical explanation that you may create, go right ahead. You're certainly not going to stand out here if you prefer attacks on my character or reasoning faculties instead of logical refutation. But besides being extremely disrespectful when you do this, you're also wrong.

---

Oh and bev, I never said that christians didn't do good stuff. I just asked for examples.
 
Posted by gnixing (Member # 768) on :
 
quote:
I just asked for examples.
most examples of good christians do not show up in the history books. most good christians choose to keep it that way. they don't need the praise from mankind. mother theresa was a good christian that did make it to the history books. my friends and neighbors are good christians that won't.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
quote:
I think it is very beautiful for the poor to accept their lot, to share it with the passion of Christ. I think the world is being much helped by the suffering of the poor people.
Very nice, yes. Exactly the sort of attitude that gives Christianity its wonderful reputation. Not to mention the belief that AIDS is punishment for sexual immorality.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Squick, feel free to correct me on my interpretation of what you think. I am not saying "this is definitely what Squicky thinks," it is more, "it sounds to me like this is what you think. Is that right?" I am trying to understand where you are coming from, not tell you what you think.

So I will await your explaination when you aren't drunk. [Wink]
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
Ok, ok. How about a compromise? I took away the smiley faces and post text to try and make it less offensive. How’s that? I know, to little to late. But figured it was worth a try. If nothing else it’s been an interesting thread.

KoM,
Well, I was really saying both of us have our biases. Meaning that no matter what I say you wouldn’t change your mind that over millions of years and lots of evolution man came to Earth. And no matter what you say I won’t change my mind that God over 6 days about 6 thousand years ago made man and all of creation. That was why I said that. To be truly honest I’m not even close to being qualified to debate you point by point though.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
Evidently. So why do you feel you are qualified to hold an opinion at all, if you cannot defend it?

Incidentally, could I ask how old you are? Not really relevant to the argument, just curious.
 
Posted by ClaudiaTherese (Member # 923) on :
 
Thanks, Jay. It helped a lot. [Smile]
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
It does, actually. Takes away a lot of the "It's funny because it's true! Ha ha ha!" feeling. Thanks.
 
Posted by Megan (Member # 5290) on :
 
quote:
So why do you feel you are qualified to hold an opinion at all, if you cannot defend it?
Well, now, that's kind of rude. [Razz] Jay played nice in his last post; you try to do the same!

Everyone is entitled to have an opinion (you know what they say opinions are like, after all)--regardless of whether not they have the rhetorical skill and/or knowledge to defend their opinions.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
quote:

What do you mean by "actively"? Were they actively trained with the intent by their trainers that they become bloodthirsty and cruel? Or was it a more subtle teaching that happened because those things were prevailent in the culture and there was a dearth of good role models?

It's a more subtle teaching than that, even. We actively train people to be ambitious, selfish, to "kill" in the name of God and country, to value coin and competition. These things produce people who are bloodthirsty and cruel -- as side effects, and not as the primary objective.

quote:
If people are innately good more than they are innately evil, why did people not overcome and balance these influences?
I believe that, by and large, we are overcoming these influences. It's a work in progress.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
If we are overcoming them now, what caused the change?
 
Posted by ClaudiaTherese (Member # 923) on :
 
Relative prosperity has to figure into it. Having less limitations on the general resources means fewer persons must act out of desperation to survive.

Mind you, that's only a part of the story, but I think it factors in. Note, too, that the most consistent risk factor for violence is poverty. That is far from claiming that "all poor people are violent" or "only poor people are violent" -- just that where poverty goes, problems tend to follow.

Of course, this is modulated by expectations -- poverty means different things in different contexts. The margin of sustenence is a pretty clear key, nonetheless.

[ April 03, 2005, 10:16 AM: Message edited by: ClaudiaTherese ]
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Yeah, I think that is a good point. It would seem that to some extent we have technology to thank for that.

So are we really headed to a ST:TNG universe rather than a Brave New World? I wonder. [Smile]
 
Posted by ClaudiaTherese (Member # 923) on :
 
I'm still more than a bit torn about this claim. Can I add a caveat that violent actions are just one subset of immoral behaviors? This is but one possible piece of it all.

[ April 03, 2005, 10:23 AM: Message edited by: ClaudiaTherese ]
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
I was just thinking, it is pretty common for Mormons to assume that prosperity will usually lead to wickedness, because this is a very strong reoccurring theme in the Book of Mormon.

The idea is that prosperity brings complacency and idleness. People stop being grateful for what they have and begin obsessing about things that aren't important. Their perspective gets more and more skewed because of it. Over time, chaos ensues.

BTW, this doesn't mean we should squealch out that evil prosperity! It means when we do prosper, we need to watch ourselves, especially to think of helping our fellow man, since we are in greater power to do so.

[ April 03, 2005, 10:45 AM: Message edited by: beverly ]
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
I think even other immoral behaviors are, by and large, declining. In general, I think people are more self-aware and more capable of rational thought than they were even a century ago. We still have unquestioned assumptions, but I think we have fewer of them.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
Tom, that, of course, depends on what you consider immoral.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Tom, I think that might be true to some extent. I also chalk it up to an increase in education. Not just formal education, but our amazing technology allows us to "get the message out" so easily. People watch the news and see what is going on on the other side of the world. Our children are being raised to value wearing seat-belts because the idea has been pounded into them from a very early age.

Dora the Explorer: "SEAT BELTS! So we can be safe!!"

If we ever try to drive off without buckling them in ('cause we forgot) they cry! They make a complete hissy-fit! We are very grateful for that.
 
Posted by jebus202 (Member # 2524) on :
 
If only Tom had said "I think" at the begining of his sentences to make it clear it was a matter of opinion.

[ April 03, 2005, 10:47 AM: Message edited by: jebus202 ]
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
Well, Megan, I see your point; but evolution versus creation is a question of fact. On morality or faith, I will agree that one might hold an opinion just because "well, that's the way I feel about it". But this is a scientific question, and Jay insists on going against all evidence, without being able to give a good reason for it.
 
Posted by Megan (Member # 5290) on :
 
Yes, but that's his right. I'm not arguing his correctness; I'm arguing his right to do so, as long as he doesn't harm anyone else in the process.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
I believe that he does do harm, in that his teachings encourage a close-minded, anti-scientific attitude. This is not what we need in the world's most powerful nation.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
As opposed to encouraging a close-minded, anti-religious attitude?
 
Posted by Megan (Member # 5290) on :
 
Ah, you said nothing about teaching or preaching. You questioned his right to hold that opinion.

And he has just as much right to have a close-minded opinion as you have.

[ April 03, 2005, 11:24 AM: Message edited by: Megan ]
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
Well, I won't object to what he thinks in his inmost heart, but I do feel he shouldn't try to propagandise for things he admits he cannot argue rationally for.

And Dags, you may not like anti-religious attitudes, but at least they have no history of encouraging warfare and poverty as 'good for the soul'.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
No, but you've specifically advocated for rounding us all up in camps.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
And Dags, you may not like anti-religious attitudes, but at least they have no history of encouraging warfare and poverty as 'good for the soul'.
Communism had intensely anti-religious attitudes which caused much suffering and oppression throughout most of the 20th Century. It continues today in China, Cuba, and North Korea.

Oh, but those aren't your anti-religious attitudes? Well, Jay's religious attitudes (or anti-nonreligious attitudes, if you will) aren't the ones that led to those wars, either.

Dagonee
 
Posted by jebus202 (Member # 2524) on :
 
Yea never have religious people ever been persecuted for their beliefs!

Except for like the holocaust and junk, but no one cares about that.

Edit: Bah, stupid Hitler claimed to be christian though, now that I think about it.

[ April 03, 2005, 12:40 PM: Message edited by: jebus202 ]
 
Posted by Jay (Member # 5786) on :
 
Well, KoM, Yes I have opinions and so do you. I’m not sure where the actual line is drawn though for where facts and theories come into play. We could each argue till we’re blue in the face about which such theories can be considered facts. I’m sure you have theories you believe are facts as do I. I can’t begin to tell you the development stages of a baby in the womb other then the basics, but to me it’s murder at anytime to abort the baby. Yes yes, life of the mother, but you can do that in a way that isn’t actually killing the baby and more them dying on their own. But anyway…… What I’m trying to say when I sat I’m not qualified to debate you on this is that you’re getting into details that I really have limited education on. I’m sure if you emailed the author of the article they’d be thrilled to answer all your questions and be light years ahead of me in qualifications of knowledge on the subject. I really don’t think I have to have a doctorate in something in order to have an opinion or belief on it. Plus time constraints have to come into play sometime! Anyway….
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
People are making equivilences that just aren't true. It is not true that all other people were just as bad as whatever group you belong to. Cultures and peoples differ in the structure and nature of their beliefs and these differences have direct consequences in the actions and behaviors those cultures.

For much of its history, even in comparison to the Islamic world, which shared many of its cultural components, the Christian world fared poorly in regards to the "badness" of their behavior. (Which is not to say that weren't things about it that were "good" or "better" than other cultures. Cultures - and individuals - are complex systems that interact with their environments and with themselves and it would be a huge mistake to treat them as monoliths that could even be broken down into good or bad). And the statement that because there were cultures better and worse then them, they can be considered in the middle is frankly ridiculuous. Besides intercultural comparisons, there is the fact that, as with any culture, at various times, individuals or subcultures arose within the Christian world that offered changes in the existing structure. Whether they were adopted or which of the competing changes won out and the methods by which a viewpoint won tells us a great deal about the character of the culture.

The idea that all cultures are just as bad is wrong in another way, in that it implies that they are all bad in the same way. Obviously, all societies have major problems, but these problems, just like their virtues, differ. Again, these differences are in part determined by the different ways these cultures are constituted. Asian cultures have such a different outlook on the world that even the way they physically perceive it is different from the way we in European derived cultures do.

For the past 150 years or so, we've been struggling towards a systematic and sometiems even scientific way to study people and culture. This process has been riddled with problems, but it has also developed information and methods of analysis that appear to yeild greater confidence that has otherwise been available. As with any systematic study, one of the central pursuits has been to try and identify the underlying reasons for the similarities and differences among the objects of study, in this case persons and cultures. In some cases, we've been able to say with varying degrees of certainty that a person or a culture that has component X will likely also have component Y and will likely exhibit behavior Z.

Using this sort of process, we can test things such as the central difference between the Augustinian and Pelagian worldviews. That is, is it possible for people to behave well (for a defined value of well) without God's grace. If we assume that God's grace is, as most Christian sects hold true, best or exclusively obtained through being a Christian and participating in Christian rituals, then we can ammend that statement to be "Is it possible to behave well while not being a Christian?" or, to recast it, "What is the effect on being good of being versus not being a Christian?" Put that way, the question is trivially easy to answer. Augustine was wrong, even by his own defnitions. That Christian world regarded many of the people in the Jewish scriptures, who were not Christian, as virtuous. From our lens of history, we can see that not only did other cultures contain virutous people, but that the Christians cultures were far from being the most virtuous. Thus, not only is the initial axiom that only Christians can be virtuous false, but also either being Christian was worse at promoting virtue than some alternatives or virtue was determined by something other than being/not being Christian. And yet, the Pelagian view of the world is still considered a heresy, while the Augustinian view was central to Christianity through much of its history and is still prevalant today, in a watered-down form.

Again using this process, people like Gordon Allport studied aspects of personality that we consider "bad", such as prejudice and authoritarianism. I've gone into it before, but one thing they found was that, in America, self-identifying religious people score significantly higher on tests of prejudice and authoritarianism than non-religious people (keep in mind that this was done in the 50s and 60s, so the social context is somewhat different).

For many reasons, not the least of which that Allport was himself a religious person, they probed further than this. What they found was that the degree of commitment to the religion was a strong determiner of people's scores. Those who were not all that committed tended to score higher than non-relgious, those who were moderately committed tended to score much higher, and those who were strongly committed tended to score about the same or sometimes lower than average non-religious. However, as the moderately commited were by far the largest group in the religious population, taking the mean of that population resulted in a higher scores being inappropriately inferred across the population.

A throw-away part of that description that is actually very important was defining the population as American. The same measures used in other countires turned up similar results, but with a very different aspect. In America, self-identified religiousity was correlated with relatively higher scores on measures of authoritarianism and prejudice. This was also true in other countries like say The Netherlands. However, correlation can be a tricky thing. In a case like this, it's entirely possible that one of correlated factors actually determines the other correlated factor, in this case the level of authoritarianism would account for the levels of prejudice or vice versa and the religiousity actually just keyed the one. To check this, we run equations that attempt to account for the variation in the things observed. In most European studies, authoritarianism, regardless of religiousity, was shown to account fully for prejudice. However, in America, this was not the case.

Suffice it to say, something more was going on here than the brainless religion implies prejudice. Allport, after years of study, came up with a way of categorizing religiousity based on it's components. His conception of intrinsic and extrinsic religion, did an even better job of distinguishing between those religious who had high scores on tests of prejudice and authoritarianism and has become a central idea in the study of religion. Further studies have shown it to be a good predictor of a whole host of other negative psychological traits that religions have traditionally been plauged by. Translations of Allport's ideas to fit the study of more general ideologies have also yielded quite a bit of fruit in terms of predicting certain types of bad things.

There are reasons why people take on these characteristics. We even have a relatively good ideas what some of them are, if only people would actually look at them. I'm going to jump into a brief (for me, anyway, the psychology of morality formation and maintence and its effects is one of my interests. I could (and have) gone on for pages and pages) my conception of morality in my next post.

[ April 07, 2005, 01:40 AM: Message edited by: MrSquicky ]
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
Two experiments that I'm going to reference a great deal are The Milgram Experiment and Muzafer Sherif's Robber's Cave experiment (scroll down past the Asche thing to find it), so I might as well link them and get them out of the way here.

I tihnk the best place to start is with some assumptions. My basic view of people's morality is that there are two interrelated (empathy and selfishness) but often competing systems at work, much like that yin-yang relationship expressed by the Daoist mandala. Selfishness is easy to establish. Not only is it enshrined in the thinking of nearly all religions and secular moral systems, but I wager that we all see it pretty clearly almost everyday.

Empathy, on the other hand, is a bit less of a given. Certainly it exists, but can someone really say that it is a near universal human trait. I think that you can, not through cataloging the good things people do, but rather by examining the bad ones. Consider, people will almost never intentionally do bad things to people that they see as equal to themselves. In order to do so, they must provide some justification to themselves as to why the other person deserves it or is in some way less of a person than they are. The central belief of nearly all negative prejudices is that the concerned group is "subhuman".

You can set up a situation, like the Milgram experiment, where other forces influence people to do bad things to those they consider equals. This almost invariably results in a great deal of emotional distress. Some of various conditions in the Milgram experiment involved changing the perception of the other as a suffering person (in some cases, giving the subject and confederate who was to be fake tortured time to get acquianted, in others making the pain caused more or less visible) showed results that suggest that this distress is engendered by transgressing our empathetic nature. Much of our intial understanding of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder came from studying soldiers who escaped from their careful training in how to dehumanize the enemy and suffered the attendent mental breakdown. One of the unintended consequences of the Milgram experiment was that it gave us a window into a bsaic form of morality formation. In some of the cases, some subjects explained that they conceptualized the confederate as transgressing some rule, or looking for reasons to dislike him and be annoyed with him, so that he actually deserved what he got.

A similar reaction can be seen in the Robber's Cave experiment. The two groups of boys (or girls in other permutations) quickly form a ad-hoc morality that makes the competing group out to be bad people. Oftentimes, they'll sieze upon some irrelevant and previously morally neutral aspect of the other group as an excuse to demonize them. This moral system is almost always attended by a dehumanization where they recognize the diversity of individuals in their own group but insist that the other group is largely homogenous. Later, wehn the groups are brought together by the impinging super-ordinate threat, this moral system and view of the others as being all the same go away.

Extrinsic morality often works like this. It provides a rationale for treating people as less than human. It separates the world into groups. The people like you who you can trust and you can help and the people who it's okay to screw over. This sort of morality, rather than being the device by which we are encouraged to behave, instead serves the purpose of helping us supress and overcome our natural empathetic urges. Those who humans would destroy, they first make not human anymore.

As I've shown, oftentimes this desire to do bad things comes before the formation of morality. It is what drives it.

Consider empathy again, and the highest commandment regarding treatment of others given by Jesus "Love your neighbor as you love yourself." It's the same thing. The central Christian commandment should be to always act with empathy. Why then have Christians historically been so darn bad at it?

In large part, it comes from the followup to Jesus's statement, i.e. "Master, who is my neighbor?" The biblical message was, I think, very clear, but the question got murky as soon as theologians needed reasons to justify doing bad things to people they wanted to do bad things to. It's not fair to lay this all at one person's door, as it was a vast cultural tendency, but a central choice point came with Augustine. One of the central issue of this time period was Christianity's growing power as it was becoming integrated into the Roman society. The pacifism Jesus preached didn't work for a religion or a culture that had become accustomed to expanding through the use of force. One of the concepts Augustine codified was the idea of a just war. While still affirming that an individual had a obligation to pacifism, Augustine posited that it was a ruler's job to strive for justice, first through peaceful means, and failing that, using violent ones. This idea was adopted very quickly and the idea of injustice soon took on the meaning of "not being Christian, or the right type of Christian". To my way of thinking, it's no suprise that Augustine was the one who also codified the idea of Original Sin and that of anyone who was not Christian was doomed to eternal torment.

But weren't there people who were commited to the ideals of pacifism? Of course there were. During the first 3 centuries, Christianity had an enormous number of interpretations. There are some indications that the sects that didn't feel such a strong commitment to pacifism killed some of the others who did and destroyed their writings. Makes sense. We know that this is what happened to some of sects that insisted on what became labeled as the Pelagian heresy.

If you take a look at institutional psychology, you'll find that there is a tendency for any organization to, over time, end up with a certain power-oriented type of person in their leading positions. This tends to not be a great thing for the organization. For one thing, the power-oriented person is usually good at obtaining and maintaining their power but not for much else. For another thing, these people tend to assume that other people have exactly the same motivations as they do. For one more, they tend to prefer things as simple as possible and favour mechanistic explanations and view other people as objects to be manipulated.

A partial cause of and result of this type of person in positions of power is the reward/punishment motivational structure. I imagine people are familiar with this. It's one of the central aspects to American business, religion, and education, along with so many other things. It's manifestation in psychology, behaviorism, is by far America's largest contribution to the field of psychology. It's one of the planks of our shared mythology. It also doesn't work.

We've known that for over forty years. People who set out to see how much we can improve task performance and persistence pretty consistently come back with the opposite result. Applying a reward/punishment structure leads to decreases in the quality of performance and the time people spend doing something.

Consider the classic example of a child who likes to play the piano. If you start rewarding him for playing the piano, you're likely to see a shift from the child enjoying it, throwing himself into, spending hours at it, to him playing just enough, both timewise and effortwise, to get his reward, without expressing much enjoyment of it, and, if you stop providing the reward, they stop playing.

The problem is, you've killed their motivation. Before, I talked about intrinsic versus extrinsic religion. Here we've got intrinsic versus extrinsic motivation. My personl thinking is that intrinsic motivation is much more fragile in large part because it relies on constant outlays of effort and yields largely long term benefits. The extrinsic motivation can, in a person who doesn't have a very strong sense of self and attachment to the task, easily overcome this and recast the situation. Where before the person was doing it as something that grows out of himself and it's a form of play, now he's doing it because it's work assigned by someone else for which he will be rewarded or punished. The reward or punishment and getting it or avoiding it, respectively becomes the thing, and the person stops experimenting and learning and playing. There's an old joke about a man who got kids to stop taunting him by oferring to pay them per insult, then paying a little less, and then a little less. When he stopped paying them at all, the kids stopped insulting him, because he had successful cast the situation as them doing it for the reward.

In order to justify using this type of motivational system, people assume that people don't want to work and that children don't want to learn. They have to assume that the motivation to do these things aren't in them. But that's not true. Pre-school aged children delight in learning. It's pretty much what they do, all the time. Experietial Sampling Method (ESM) studies pioneered by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi show that despite people's understanding to the contrary, they enjoy work, especially when their work is meaningful, while the average emotion people have while watching tv is mild depression.

The main thing reward/punishment structures have going for them is that they seem almost designed for the way a power-oriented person sees the world. They confirm their power (or their authoritarian submission to the people who have power over them), they divide your subordinates and turn them against each other, so they're not gunning for you, they remove the focus from the actual thing being worked on and make understanding it irrelevant (all you need to do is wave the carrot and shake the stick), and it is a completely mechanistic process that let's you turn poeple into things.

Alternative motivational techniques that reverse each of these aspects have consistently shown, when properly applied, to be tremendously better. Children learn more and retain a love of learning. Employeee's productivity sky-rockets while sick days plummet (partially because they're actually healthier and partially because people look forward to going to work).

These same things transfer over into extrinsic morality. People come to believe that they have no empathy, that they must be forced to do good against their will. Meaning now comes to be seen as something that only exists outside (I shudder every time someone claims that without God life would have no meaning). They become innately suspicious of other people. They aren't engaged in the rules; they don't try to understand them, only to follow them. The energies that exist in them are blunted by an Ecclesiastical depressive outlook, but find release in the liberating action of attacking others. They become innately selfish and don't even come to realize that other people are like them.

You want to know why I think people, despite having a strong innate capacity for empathy and good, have been savage and bloodthirsty throughout history. That's it in a very brief, thumbnail sketch.
 
Posted by punwit (Member # 6388) on :
 
That was impressive. You've given me alot to think on. Thanks, Mr Squicky!
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
That's some serious food for thought, Squick. *munches*

Thanks.
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
It's a rare day when you write something with which I cannot disagree, Squicky. [Smile]
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
I don't know Tom. From my perspective, while we may not like each other that much and we have near completely opposite tastes in entertainment, if there were a simplistic Hatrack ideology poll, I think we'd fall into boxes pretty near each other.

And all this is really mostly a bump so that bev might see it.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Thanks for the bump. I only just now saw it.

I don't really think I disagree with what you have said here.

I suppose the question we must ask ourselves is this. What was it about the culture of the Europeans that caused the message of Christianity to be twisted so? I think we can all agree that you have to twist things in order to get hate messages from the New Testament. And it does seem pretty clear that many Christians have managed to do that.

So why did this happen? Is it because early on the scriptures were not allowed to be viewed by the common man, so they were distanced from the actual message? Is it because people just weren't ready to let themselves be that vulnerable, that truly good? Is it that people who were power-hungry saw the potential to further their agendas and used it to guilt people or seduce them into less than honorable paths?

Remember, I believe Christianity is true. I believe that it was nothing but goodness from the source. That people have used it for evil, for me, does not reflect Christianity at all. It reflects the twisted, mutated version that has all too often been taught and accepted by the masses.

Remember, as a Mormon, I believe there was a great apostacy where the true church was entirely lost from the earth and those trying to follow after it either stumbled in darkness or found some light of inspiration by trying to get closer to what was actually written in the Bible. You really don't have to sell me on the idea that Christianity was abused.

But I don't see how that is the fault of Christianity.

[ April 07, 2005, 11:13 PM: Message edited by: beverly ]
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:
People come to believe that they have no empathy, that they must be forced to do good against their will.
This would not be the case for me. I was just more selfish than I was empathetic. I saw the lack in myself and hated myself for it. Especially when I was brought up in a large family full of kind people to whom I was unkind. I was taught to be kind--by example. They were always willing to forgive and accept me. But I didn't feel empathy like they did. I began perceiving myself as a black sheep all on my own.

As I felt like an outcast in the world outside my family, I began to feel particularly empathetic towards outcasts. This feeling remains with me till today. My sense of empathy radiated out from there, maybe because I realized that everyone has an aspect of the outcast in them.

But mostly, I recognize that empathy is good, or I believe it to be. I have saught after it with a lot of energy--to the point where today one of my strongest motivations is to truly understand others.

[ April 07, 2005, 11:29 PM: Message edited by: beverly ]
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
bev,
But, as you suggested before, you and I are using different definitions of Christianity, or rather we're talking in very different scopes. I'm talking about as a concrete social entity and you're talking about an idealized platonic form. edit: I don't believe in this platonic form, or rather, I don't think it's relevant even if it exists. Christianity to me is what it was, what it is, and what I see it becoming. I don't have this ideal conception of it that I can judge it's present state against./edit

That's a common thing for Christians to do. The only thing is that you need to keep straight that this platonic form is not the state of christianity now. That confusion seems to me around as common as the inital idealized thing. That is, "Of course Christianity used to be bad, but now it's all pretty much fixed."

It's not my job to judge the validity of other people's faith qua faiths, nor do I have to capacity to do so. However, the impinging of that faith into the testable world is someting I can responsibly look at and talk about. And from a concrete, testable standpoint, I don't think you can support a statement that Christianity is all fixed.

One of the biggest things I think Christians could do to help this process along (besides approaching morality from a data-driven as opposed to theory driven perspective) is to acknowledge that this is true.

One thing that may not come across is that I have no intrinsic problem with Christianity, nor is it my main focus. My central concern is the social and mental health of the human species. As I said, I don't say these things because I don't like Christianity. I have problems with Christianity because I see these things in it. I'd be very happy if it turned into this mostly good organization. I just don't think that it is right now nor do I think that it's exactly heading that way.

[ April 07, 2005, 11:41 PM: Message edited by: MrSquicky ]
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Many people tell me that Mormons aren't really Christians, and it is true that we are quite different from the mainstream. I am curious to know if my particular branch is "sick" with the weaknesses that trouble you in the mainstream.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
bev,
It's not really my place to say. Despite what it may seem, the psychology of religion and religious isn't really a big interest of mine. Any observations I would make of LDS would be that of a somewhat informed but non-professional perspective and even then, most of the LDS interaction I've seen has been on this board. To me, you all don't shine like a diamond in a dark world, but what the heck do I know?

---

Just as an aside, from a perspective of the god you worship, I can totally see how mainstream Christians wouldn't consider you like them. You call god by the same names and regard some of the same stuff as from him, but your god is a fundamentally different type of being than theirs. In a lot of ways, their theological perspective is closer to Muslims and Jews than it is to you. To me it doesn't really matter, but no doubt you've seen some of the in-group/out-group effects that comes from them considering you on their team or not.

[ April 07, 2005, 11:57 PM: Message edited by: MrSquicky ]
 
Posted by Tstorm (Member # 1871) on :
 
Squicky, I definitely got something out of what you wrote. I should also get out and read some of your sources, apparently.

quote:
My personl thinking is that intrinsic motivation is much more fragile in large part because it relies on constant outlays of effort and yields largely long term benefits.
Good way of explaining things. [Smile]
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:
You call god by the same names and regard some of the same stuff as from him, but your god is a fundamentally different type of being than theirs. In a lot of ways, their theological perspective is closer to Muslims and Jews than it is to you.
So I've heard. [Smile] And it makes sense to me.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
If people are interested, I could go into something longer. There's so much more I wanted to put in there.
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
I would read it.

[Smile]
 
Posted by punwit (Member # 6388) on :
 
I'm all... umm eyes. I would enjoy reading your thoughts.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
So I haven't had a lot of free time lately. I had a little bit of time today. Figure I'll try to do this in installments. Here's the first one.

Before, I tried to establish that perspective is one of the most important things when talking about morality. But I didn't really get into how either selfishness or empathy is increased or decreased. So that's what I'll try to do here.

I think it can help to take a wider view, so I'm going to look at overall motivation in order to throw some light on the specific case of morality. I think (in the interests of not going on incredibly long, I'm just going to posit this) that human motivation can be roughly understood as an interplay between what I'm going to call safety and challenge. That is, there is a drive towards establishing a safe, stable environment (taken to the extreme, this could be seen a the desire to do away with all mental and physical activity) and an interrelated and often contradictory drive towards exploring and creating novel aspects of the environment (or the urge to employ one's mental and physical abilities to their fullest). If you think about it from a design perspective, these drives are what you'd want in a machine that is going to be dealing with an incompletely understood, volatile environment. The safety drives do their best to keep the organism intact and provide a stable state, while the challenge drives enable learning and shaping of the environment. As in any daoist type interrelated system, the yin and the yang (here safety and challenge) both oppose and enable each other. Pursuing safety provides the stability and control to allow in-depth challenging interaction with the environment and pursuing challenge leads to a greater ability to predict and control and thus increases an organisms ability to protect itself.

I think this is a good place to introduce Abraham Maslow's hierarchy of needs. To simplify, Maslow held that motivation can be seen as existing in a pyramidal structure consisting of layers where the more basic a need is to survival, the lower and thus wider it is. Maslow held that in this structure, the higher levels depended on the lower ones. For example, a need for food is more necessary than one for love, so starving people will be largely unable to even feel that they lack love. Developmentally, if a person throughout a lifetime is constantly without adequate food, they will be unable to develop love-type relationships. The relationship is rarely as starkly one-dimensional as this (i.e.people, at least currently, are rarely at a state where obtaining food or any other one of the d-needs is the most

One other aspect of Maslow's model is that he divides needs into two categories: deficiency (or d) needs and being (or b) needs. The difference between them being that the d-needs come into play only when some stable state is disturbed, which results in the need imposing itself onto a person's consciousness, while the b-needs are permenantly in existence, i.e. insatiable, but are vaguer and tend to need to be developed and discovered. Also, hierarchically, the d-needs are lower than the b-needs, and thus the pursuit of the b-needs is dependent on meeting the d-needs at some adequate level.

Although Maslow is most famous for his hierarchy, it doesn't actually reflect his primary concern – I'll be getting into that later – and in my opinion, it doesn't do a great job of really explaining what's going on. I'm going to try to build off of the relevant things I think are poorly covered (keep in mind, Maslow was a certified super genius who earned his respect and I'm just some guy).

First off, the standard reaction to threats, even ones as basic as lack of food, is more complex than I think is suggested by this model. People don't actually respond directly to a lack of food. Rather, systems in their body that monitor conditions that are related (closely we hope, but twiddle around with someone's hypothalamus and they could feel desperately hungry after eating a 3 foot hoagie) having adequate nutrition send signals to the brain that provokes an unpleasant sensation. People initially act to quiet this sensation, usually by obtaining food. Second, through the wonders of consciousness, there's a cognitive response where they are able to reflect on what the hunger means and possibly augment, modify, or even, say if they're on a diet, disregard their natural impulses. Third, each instance of this threat contributes to general conscious and unconscious representations of the future in terms of food-havingness/not-havingness.

An important point there that I want to re-emphasize is that it's not the actual threat that is directly responded to. Rather, it's the perception of this threat. Trust me, this'll be important later.

Second, there is bleed among the systems. That is, threats to one d-need can actually provoke responses usually associated with one of the other d-needs. The classic example of this is eating in response to a food unrelated stress. This suggests that besides the specific threat response systems, there is a more general threat perception and response system, a hypothesis that has been borne out by research.

An interesting consequence of this (coupled with cause-effect reasoning) is the growth of second order responses to threat. So, for example, getting hungry prompts you to get food, which is, in contemporary society, generally obtained by using money. Where in a less complex society, people would pursue knowledge of how and where they could get food in the future, modern man now turns most of this into the pursuit of money. So money and the lack thereof develops as a second order response system and threat, initially because it indicates a potential inability to deal with primary threats, but later it also usually takes on an existence of its own.

Mary Ainsworth studied this sort of thing in her “Strange Situation” experiments testing infant attachment. Basically, infants presented with a new situation showed how strong their trust and attachment was to their (in the initial experiements) mother. If it is a secure bond and they understand that she is around, they jump right into the new situation. The potential threats of a new, not understood situation are countered by the second order safety system of “Mom'll be there if I need her.” Children who don't have a secure attachment display a great deal anxiety of or detatchment from the strange situation.

I imagine that all of us can remember at least one time when, as child, you got separated from your parents in a strange place like a store and the dread that this engendered. That's the natural response of a young child. The world is this big scary place that is held at bay by their god-like parents. That's one of the reasons I find the suggestion that because kids left alone for awhile will tend, over time, to get in fights, they need to be taught empathy mistaken. They're in a state where their natural threats are increasing (I like to call this Maslovian calculus) and are also coming into conflicts that they don't have a good resolution strategy for and their primary safety assurance is missing. Of course they're going to act selfish. We expect that from kids that start out cranky. The components of crankiness are building up over time in this situation.

An interesting outcome of cross-cultural research is the realization that contrary to western common sense (and Maslow's hierarchy), other cultures function without regarding self-esteem as an inherent part of humaness. For example, in Japan the word for self-esteem carries with it a strong conotation of selfishness and it is considered something to be avoided.

One of the aspects that Japan and similar cultures carry is a (relative to western cultures) stronger bond and sensitivity to the groups they belong to. A related part of this is the tendency for potentially uncertain or “strange” social situations to have established scripts and rituals. There is an attempt to make the social world as stable as possible, even in the case of approved contexts where it's okay to deviate from the norm. A popular aphorism is “The nail that stands up gets pounded down.” as opposed to the western idea “The squeaky wheel gets the grease.”

It's my belief that this social stability takes the place of the western reliance on the self and concern with self-esteem and that both of them represent, among all the other purposes they serve, highly complex second order systems for dealing with threats.

For me, this idea came partially out of Weisz, Rothbaum, and Blackburn's(1) work on what they called primary and secondary power. To put it roughly, primary power is the ability to change the external world to suit one's self and secondary power is the ability to change one's self to fit the external world, such as by predicting what will happen or realigning personal goals to fit with what has happened. Not suprisingly, these ideas came out of their comparative studies of American and Japanese culture and they found that there was a remarkable degree of difference between the expressed and actual preferences for these types of powers (guess which country preferred which).

Besides offering up this secondary (I don't actually like that way of expressing it. To my western mind, it makes the one sound like it's better than the other.) power, strong social ties and maintainence of cultural homogeneity also provide good resources for dealing with threats.

Of course, so does cultivating a strong sense of self and concerning oneself with personal achievement. And in a country settled the way America was and having the heterogeneity and unpredictible volatility that it does, relying on primary power makes a lot of sense. One of the things I've noticed is that there is often a direct correlation to how unstable something is and how important is to have a sense of person power over it. For example, around 80% of people consider themselves above average drivers. Compare the anxiety people feel about driving as opposed to that about flying (where they have no control) in relation to actual risk involved and people look crazy. But consider the effect of the second order self-esteem system and it makes sense. It's perception of the threat that's important, not the actual threat. Divorced from one of their main tools of dealing with potential threats, people are going perceive flying as scarier than driving.

(1) Weisz, J. R., Rothbaum, F. M. & Blackburn, T. C. (1984). Standing out and standing in: The psychology of control in America and Japan. American Psychologist, 39, 955-969.

[ April 17, 2005, 11:15 PM: Message edited by: MrSquicky ]
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
*bumpity*

That was really interesting, Squick.

[ April 18, 2005, 05:57 PM: Message edited by: twinky ]
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
So I did something stupid and took a minor shot to the head (of mechanical, not human, origin) and now I'm staying up for a bit to ward off the unlikely concussion effects and waiting for the ER's to clear of GSWs, car crash victims, and assorted drunken idiots before heading there to get my head stitched up. Or, in other words, here's the second installment.

There's a basic bit of social psychology called the Fundamental Attribution Error(FAE) that illustrates this view of the self as stable. The FAE is what social psychologists call the tendencies for westerners to attribute people's actions almost entirely to the traits of those people's personality while not acknowledging any situational effects. It's sort of what we saw here, where people were seemingly claiming that cultural influences did not have a pre-eminent role in determining behavior and instead held that people were just being people. While people tend to be more flexible and generous when talking about what causes their own actions, there is still this idea that their behavior is consistent across situations, even in the face of conflicting evidence.

A related phenomenon is the tendency for westerners to hold trait as opposed to incremental views of the self. To define, a trait view is the idea that people either have a trait or don't have it, while an incremental view believes that abilities and aspects of the self can be acquired incrementally, such as through training. An example of these conflicting styles could be a trait and incremental each trying and failing to solve math problems. While the trait person would conclude that he just isn't good at math and likely avoid similar problems in the future, the incremental could conclude that he didn't work hard enough or that he didn't have the right knowledge. Inter and intra-cultural studies have shown that people who have a trait view of the self tend to much less persistence in the face of failure and also show a great FAE effect than people who have an incremental one.

Which brings us back to the FAE and in-group/out-group distinctions. In western cultures, the FAE is pretty consistent whether or not the person being evaluated is part of your in-group. The in-group person is seen as having more positive traits (and in-group people are seen as having a larger variety of traits) than the out-group person, but their behavior is held to be pretty much equally determined by these traits. In eastern cultures, however, there is an enormous distinction made between in-group and out-group members in terms of the FAE. In-group people are seen as very situation dependent, while out-group ones are seen as almost entirely driven by the same (generally non-complimentary) traits. While the eastern view of in-group members is significantly less affected by the FAE, that of out-group members is significantly more FAE-affected.

At first glance this eastern acceptance of those closest to you varying their behavior widely according to the situation may seem strange in light of what I held up as their reliance on social predictability and stability. However, if you consider that easterners tend to be highly sensitive to the people around them, I think it makes more sense. They are likely to think in terms of situational factors and to not find this threatening because they are very aware of the effect of situation factors and able to easily gauge and empathize with another person's emotional state.

In epistemology, there's a fundamental divide between what are called nomothetic and ideographic systems of knowing. A nomothetic system (like science) tries to derive overarching abstract rules that can then be applied in specific cases. An ideographic system looks for deep knowledge mostly only applicable in an isolated, specific case. A good marriage would be an illustration of ideographology. (As an aside, these two styles represent a minor controversy in the study of personality and culture. My own take is not surprisingly that they are best melded together in a mandalic relationship.)

From this perspective, one could say that westerns tend to take a nomothetic approach to other people, while easterners tend towards an ideographic one (Even in language. Compare the abstract, utilitarian Roman alphabet with the large, poetically expressive Chinese system of ideograms.) Consider, for example, the traditional english-derived legal system compared to the traditional chinese folk conflict resolution. The english system is based on abstract laws which are applied across all situations. Following the laws (and having laws that are well designed to work across nearly all cases) and determining who is right and who is wrong is the central goal of this system. On the other hand, the chinese folk system involves a third-party mediating between the two people in conflict with the main goal of reaching a mutually agreeable settlement and restoring harmony between them.

This difference in orientation also exists in many other contexts that are relevant here. Westernerr developed logic, which is the apotheosis of nomothetic thinking. It's an abstract system completely devoid of context. One of the central rules of logic is the law of non-contradiction (a<>!a). Easterners, on the other hand, approach the world through a more holistic viewpoint and have no problem accepting contradictory statements as valid.

One of the perennial Hatrack and Ornery (and apparently any other place OSC is discussed) is (cleaned up to remove the often engaged in unjustified exaggerations of "hate-filled" and "bigotry") "How can OSC write such amazingly empathetic works and then engage is such blatant demagoguery? Which one is the real OSC?" To which an easterner would reply: 1) different contexts and 2) he's both. They don't have a problem with people acting in seemingly contradictory ways. They can also do the Maslovian calculus.

I may be coming off as thinking that the eastern way is superior to the western. That's not how I think. I'm a dyed-in-the-wool individualist and a hard-core abstracting scientist. I couldn't have come up with these ideas or written them if I weren't. However, I have been trying to show the weakness in the western system. Also, while I think they both have strong and weak points, I think the western second order system of self-esteem tends to be inherently weaker and less flexible than the eastern one of social stability and connectedness.

<Start exageration and extreme speculation>I think evidence is pretty clear that our culture pretty much fails to develop genuine self-esteem. One of the big benefits of the emphasis on the individual self is that it allows one to go beyond the inherently conservative limits of social stability. Rather than quality being determined by socially accepted standards, it can be determined by an individual's perspective and even by actual reality testing. Individuality makes creativity and novelty much more accessible than collectivism.

I feel like it's almost over-kill to give examples of why I think we're largely missing these things. People consistently rate "speaking in front of people" as their biggest fear. Value is determined by what other people think. Conformity is the norm. Anti-conformists, besides basing their anti-conformity not on their individual perspective, but rather on rebelling from the norm, also quickly form conformist groups. We have freedom of speech, but few people say anything interesting and dangerous (unless their anti-something else). We have freedom of information, but people remain ignorant. We have almost shocking affluence, but we don't build, we don't create. We are afraid of our individuality, of our creative potential, and we're desperate to give them away.

And the group that we're conforming to isn't even one that is going to look out for us or even cares if we're alive. It's barely relevant to our lives. It's not cohesive. It doesn't have group patience and wisdom. It's just this amorphous generalized collection of unconnected individuals who are themselves afraid of and subject to the group. We're afraid of appearing foolish and being laughed at, we desperately want other people to not think bad things about us. And these people barely even care. The biggest sin in America is to break cover, to step out from the "what everybody is doing" camouflage, to show enthusiasm and the punishment is to be laughed at by people who don't know you and you won't ever see again.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
Oh, in case you couldn't tell, this stuff is currently making up the basis for a book I'm writing that I'm looking to publish in a couple of years. It's obviously abbreviated a great deal, but I'd welcome criticism and people letting me know where I'm not conveying my point well or what sounds interesting but that I don't really go into.
 
Posted by Telperion the Silver (Member # 6074) on :
 
Again... [Hail] MrSquicky
 
Posted by Shigosei (Member # 3831) on :
 
Thanks for sharing your ideas. I found the difference between the Western abstract, broad knowledge and the Eastern specific, deep knowledge to be particularly interesting.

Take care of yourself. Blows to the head are scary!
 
Posted by Tstorm (Member # 1871) on :
 
I'm enjoying your posts, MrSquicky. I don't have a good education in the fields you're discussing, but I am able to follow your flow of ideas. The explanations are working for me. [Smile]
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
I've written the post that supposed to go here like 3 times and it hasn't come out right yet. I promise I'll get to it. Honest.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Sorry about your accident!

Here is what I got from what you said. Feel free to tell me if I am wrong: Most children don't need to be taught empathy because it is innate. But they have to feel safe from threats, have the "tools" at their disposal to deal with threats in order to choose to act in an empathetic way rather than a selfish way. I guess I can see that being the case some of the time.

I do believe that people in general have an innate empathy and desire to do good. I believe that they also have innate desires to be selfish. I believe that people will rationalize in order to act in selfish ways and still believe that they are being "good" because most, if not all, people want both. (To be "good" and to be gratified.)

As for me as a child, you might say that I lacked empathy because I didn't have the proper tools to deal with threats. But when you look at the facts, that just doesn't jive in my case. I grew up in an extremely consistent, loving, safe, kind, atmosphere. I probably had a bit of "princess" complex as well. It wasn't until I entered the frightening, threatening outer world that I was so unequipped to deal with for so long that I really began to learn empathy.

Remember, I believe religiously that this life is a test. The test is to see if we will choose empathy over selfishness in the presence of threats. Therefore, threats are designed by God to be an innate part of this mortal life.
 
Posted by AC (Member # 7909) on :
 
bev-
"What do you mean by "actively"? Were they actively trained with the intent by their trainers that they become bloodthirsty and cruel? Or was it a more subtle teaching that happened because those things were prevailent in the culture and there was a dearth of good role models?"

most of the nice people were killed off by the mean ones.

Also, being being cruel/power-mad/oppressive is biologically RIGHT. Someone like Genghis Khan, who rose from being a minor tribal leader to building one of the greatest empires the world has ever seen in his lifetime, is as near perfection from a biological standpoint as possible, because having that power, and the willingness to do whatever it to get and maintain that power give him the greatest chance to procreate and then protect his offspring. Children fall into patterns of cruelty and selfishness because they are biologically programmed to do so. People who are inherently more emapthetic than selfish are flawed, but our intellect has allowed us to reverse that flaw into a beneficial characteristic.

Our ability to forsake selfish feelings and concern ourselves with the well being of others is our fundamental difference from other forms of life. That is what makes us human. Empathy is humanity.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
bev,
A large part of what I've been trying to write for installment #3 is direct relevant to what you describe. If you don't mind, I'm going to hold off answering until I get that out. (I do feel like kind of a jerk saying that, but I really do think it'll be much easier to answer after I get past the tying everything together stage.

edit: And the accident wasn't really a big deal. Four stitches and I got them taken out today. It was more annoying than anything else. I appreciate people's concern tough.

[ May 03, 2005, 12:51 AM: Message edited by: MrSquicky ]
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
I can't help but have problems with both of those concepts...
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
AC,
That's one of the socio-biological viewpoints that I think is very wrong-headed. When Nietzche said "A man is a wolf to another man." he was maligning both wolves and men. We're herd creatures. Just like our primate ancestors, we naturally form communities and those who have stable communities have access to a world of resources and safety nets that aren't available to the monopolar selfish man of socio-biological myth. Empathy most definitely has served to increase the spreading of people's (and animals') genes.

edit: Syn, so tell us what your problems with them are. We'd be interested in reading them.

[ May 03, 2005, 12:30 AM: Message edited by: MrSquicky ]
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
I'm just bothered by the concept that life is a test. If God is so omnipotent, wouldn't such testing be unnessasary? Wouldn't he already know how we are and how we'd react?
And the idea of human beings having a biological program that makes us violent and cruel is upsetting because even if this is the case, is it really a valid excuse? Such as the way kids pick on each other in the playground, why do they do this?
Because it's uncool not to. It's uncool to be different, picking on people is a way of regulating behaviour. It's really outmoded and unnessasary and should be changed somehow.
Also, I think animals have compassion and empathy, not just humans, why else can dogs sense if a person is in pain about something?
Also, there are musk oxen to consider, I don't think humans are the only one who can put aside their own needs for others,
 
Posted by Portabello (Member # 7710) on :
 
quote:
If God is so omnipotent, wouldn't such testing be unnessasary? Wouldn't he already know how we are and how we'd react?
Of course He does. The purpose of the test isn't for God to discover something.

edit: But I'm pretty sure you knew that idea.

[ May 03, 2005, 03:11 AM: Message edited by: Portabello ]
 
Posted by KarlEd (Member # 571) on :
 
I'm not so sure that violence and cruelty is such an ingrained part of our biological make-up. The playground example, to me, is more illustrative of an ingrained sheep-like mentality, which likely aids us in forming cooperative groups.

In a group of kids picking on another kid, you can bet there is a ring-leader egging the group on. I don't think this is necessarily indicative of the violent, cruel, or just plain mean nature of the group as a whole. Those same kids would just as likely emulate a strong personality who was kind and inclusive.

The motivating factor here is fear. Kids follow the bully because they don't want to be the next kid picked on. Picking on the outsider solidifies their position in the bully's group. Alternatively, if a kind kid stands up to the bully successfully on behalf of the "outsider", other kids will be less likely to follow the bully's example. This is because the motivating fear has been at least partially neuralized by the presence of a protector.
 
Posted by KarlEd (Member # 571) on :
 
Oh, and:

quote:
If God is so omnipotent, wouldn't such testing be unnessasary? Wouldn't he already know how we are and how we'd react?
The quality you are attempting to illustrate here is omniscience rather than omnipotence. It is not at all illogical that an omnipotent being might feel the need to do some testing. However, an omnicient one shouldn't need to since by definition he already knows the outcome.

/quibble
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
quote:
Someone like Genghis Khan, who rose from being a minor tribal leader to building one of the greatest empires the world has ever seen in his lifetime, is as near perfection from a biological standpoint as possible, because having that power, and the willingness to do whatever it to get and maintain that power give him the greatest chance to procreate and then protect his offspring.
Well, that's just plain wrong. Genghis had four children, not bad but hardly spectacular. In a similar vein, Alexander had one child, who was swiftly assassinated. The ideal, from this point of view, is the welfare mom who pumps out ten children paid for by the state. Power doesn't really come into it, unless you accumulate a harem and actually get all of them pregnant. (It's a tough job, but someone has to do it.)
 
Posted by TomDavidson (Member # 124) on :
 
"Genghis had four children, not bad but hardly spectacular."

Actually, I'm pretty sure I read something not too long ago which postulated based on genetic markers that eight percent of the population of central Asia -- about a half-percent of the entire world's population -- is now descended from Genghis Khan.
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
I read that too.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
That would likely be an article in Discover on genetic studies. I don't know if the whole thing is available.
 
Posted by Portabello (Member # 7710) on :
 
Genghis Khan was the Captain Kirk of his world!

Khaaaaan!!!!!
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:
Actually, I'm pretty sure I read something not too long ago which postulated based on genetic markers that eight percent of the population of central Asia -- about a half-percent of the entire world's population -- is now descended from Genghis Khan.
Just out of curiosity, wouldn't this be true for nearly any person who left a progeny at the time? From what I understand, given enough time everyone is related to everyone else, and everyone who left progeny from that time has a large percentage of the population that is now their descendants.

Edit: And wasn't Genghis Khan a whole lot nicer and cooler guy than most people are aware of? --his name having been "sullied" by those who wished to discredit him? Or am I thinking of someone else?

Synesthesia: I think that while God might know the outcome of the test, the test must play itself out. It has been discussed here repeatedly that the LDS "version" of God is not nearly so omnipotent as the "version" of most believers. He has natural limits. He can't just download wisdom into our brains Matrix-style and have us suddenly go, "I know Kung Fu!"

Edit: Can't or won't. I do not necessarily believe that God is incapable of it. But I do believe that God holds our free will sacred and lets us choose our own path. In the end, we will see that we are responsible for the choices we made--though God will be merciful in taking into account our weaknesses and how difficult things were for us.

As for selfishness being a part of us and empathy also, I agree with this. This is what I have been trying to say all along. I believe man has a dual nature and we are here in this life to see which nature we will embrace. In the religious model I believe in, in the end nearly all of humanity (who made it this far) will be better off in the end than in the beginning--because the faith in which I believe doesn't end with most people burning in Hell. The only people that *really* end up in that state are the ones who would not accept God's help and guidance *at all*.

[ May 03, 2005, 11:04 AM: Message edited by: beverly ]
 
Posted by Altáriël of Dorthonion (Member # 6473) on :
 
I'm starting to like this thread....
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Squicky, that's fine. You answer when you are ready. [Smile]

KarlEd: But why do people bully? Surely these individuals cause a great deal of suffering and display a great lack of empathy? The ones who follow the bully are likely acting out of fear, but what motivates the bully? I honestly wonder. I never bullied and I don't understand the behavior.
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
Weakness and a fear of having the weakness exposed? They are posturing and pretending to be tough.
 
Posted by Portabello (Member # 7710) on :
 
quote:
Weakness and a fear of having the weakness exposed? They are posturing and pretending to be tough.
Those who are strong and know they are strong don't need to posture and pretend to be tough.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
To Syn: And yet they hold a position of power already and continually cause suffering to others. Do they fear that if they weaken for a moment, they will receive the same cruelty? I guess we don't see the world how it is, we see it how we are.

A question to ponder--if for the sake of experiment we removed those from a school situation that had overt bullying tendancies, would new bullies find their way to the surface? Or would we get to a point where the school population would be more kind and empathetic because the remaining children are more likely to act in that manner?

[ May 03, 2005, 11:06 AM: Message edited by: beverly ]
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
Indeed, and most bullies do not realize that.
 
Posted by no. 6 (Member # 7753) on :
 
quote:
We're herd creatures. Just like our primate ancestors, we naturally form communities and those who have stable communities have access to a world of resources and safety nets that aren't available to the monopolar selfish man of socio-biological myth.
I really don't see how you can back up this statement. In fact, from what I've read, our social structure seems to have much more in common with wolves than herbavores, or herds of any sort. Even so, I would never absolutely claim that that was the case unless I was sure of that. I really think that those stable communities rejected quite a few that didn't want to adhear to such principals, or those communities were taken over by such individuals. "Stability" seems to be seen over time, we look back and see it. That doesn't mean that while the endemic struggle was actually happening that it was "stable". There were purges and killings, to be sure. It seems to me that we are not far from "survival of the fittest", which erks me to no end.

I think we should learn to rise above it, but the will to do so seems to be absent in many.

But I rant. Please continue....
 
Posted by Portabello (Member # 7710) on :
 
quote:
A question to ponder--if for the sake of experiment we removed those from a school situation that had overt bullying tendancies, would new bullies find their way to the surface? Or would we get to a point where the school population would be more kind and empathetic because the remaining children are more likely to act in that manner?
I'll throw my hat in the ring saying that new bullies would pop up.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
quote:
A question to ponder--if for the sake of experiment we removed those from a school situation that had overt bullying tendancies, would new bullies find their way to the surface? Or would we get to a point where the school population would be more kind and empathetic because the remaining children are more likely to act in that manner?
An interesting thought on this. When I was in 5th or 6th grade, I was part of a group of kids that was pulled out of the normal group to do special activities together. I never did learn what this group was for, but it seemed the people in it were the ones that tended to be picked on, sensitive, and intelligent. I loved being in this group! It was liberating. It was a reprieve from the cruel behavior I constantly faced every day. We were kind and friendly to each other. We enjoyed each other's company. We were all very glad to be there. It was cool. [Smile]
 
Posted by no. 6 (Member # 7753) on :
 
*agrees with Porter*
 
Posted by Portabello (Member # 7710) on :
 
Of course, it's not absolute -- there are people that will not make a play for and abuse power.

But I think there are many people who don't abuse powere just because they don't have it (yet!)
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Aye, Porter. And I think probably most people fit into the first category, but that it might take some doing before the power would go to their head.

My first impulse is to say that I would *never* fit into the first group. But then, if the whole world revolved around me, how long before I began to abuse that? I certainly abused that "power" in my family--where they were endlessly kind and patient with me, and I was often a brat in response. I knew no matter how bratty I was, they would continue to be kind and patient.

I really hate thinking about that side of myself. So few ever see those tendancies because I keep them as far from the surface as I can. Most people who know me can't comprehend me being a brat. I tend to be everyone's definition of a "nice girl".
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
You know, the "Somebody should do a study." or "I wonder if they did a study." thing is terribly frustrating for me. If you can come up with it in like 10 seconds, chances are the study has already been done. Bullying, for example, has been extensively and productively studied for quite some time as has social dynamics and group formation among school-aged children.

In the case of removing the bullying group, results are mixed. Without knowing more about the situation, I couldn't tell you with any certainty what would happen. Sometimes a new (or existing) hierarchical power dynamic grows up. Sometimes the children left utilize a conflict-avoidance strategy, which is what I'm willing to bet bev is talking about. And sometimes other things happen.

One thing I can be pretty sure about is that most people who talk about this sort of thing with sweeping generalizations don't know the first thing about it
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
We need to stop viewing empathy and compassion as a weakness.
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
It's possible that if our happy little group was allowed to continue like that long enough, new bullies would have popped up. But in the short time we had that group, it never happened. It was an elementary school utopia for the picked on. [Smile]
 
Posted by Bokonon (Member # 480) on :
 
To most bullies, using brute strength/intimidation is probably the only "tool", in Squick's parlance, that they have been taught/discovered to cope with threats. A related issue might be that their threat detection ability may have been skewed by nature and/or nurture.

See Bonzo as an example.

-Bok
 
Posted by beverly (Member # 6246) on :
 
Our oldest has tendancies towards bullying. From what I can tell, he enjoys weilding power over others. It *seems* to me that it isn't so much a lack of other tools that is the issue but the desire for the end result of having power.

He isn't overtly cruel about it, but I have seen him cause some suffering in his siblings and "enjoy" it. Certainly the capacity for cruelty is there if unchecked. Again, from my perspective, it seems that his pleasure in that power overrides his sense of empathy. The empathy is there, and we try to bring his attention to it, but his stronger impulse is to seek and maintain power over others.

So I feel like what we need to do with him is help and encourage him to deny this impulse that tends to be so strong in him in favor of the impulses that will help those around him and make the world a better place.

Edit: On a side note, our youngest has bullying tendancies also. But they are... different. Our middle child, on the other hand, wouldn't bully a fly. She just has no desire for it.

[ May 03, 2005, 12:54 PM: Message edited by: beverly ]
 
Posted by Jon Boy (Member # 4284) on :
 
quote:
Actually, I'm pretty sure I read something not too long ago which postulated based on genetic markers that eight percent of the population of central Asia -- about a half-percent of the entire world's population -- is now descended from Genghis Khan.
The most notable of these, of course, was Mr. Prosser, the nervous little man who knocked down Arthur Dent's house.
 
Posted by MrSquicky (Member # 1802) on :
 
Why do we seem to generally lack that strength of self? Why, as our society's level of affluence been rising – to the highest in recorded history – has its level of depression and other anxiety related conditions also been on the rise. Why is the U.S. one of the most violent countries in the world? None of this makes sense according to a strict reading of the hierarchy of needs.

I think that this is in large part due to Maslow (and many others) neglecting the paramount role of perception in human motivation and instead supposed that they were talking entirely about actual, objective things.

Simple experiment: fill two bowls, one with cold water, one with hot. Then dip your hands in each and take note of how different they feel. Then hold your hand in the hot one for around 3 minutes and then switch over to the cold one. You'll notice that it now seems much colder than it did before.

This is a consequence of some of the many adaptive, homeostatic systems that make you up. You became acclimated to the hot so that it shifted the baseline you compared the new “cold” sensation to. This process holds sway over more than mere physical sensations.

One of the parts of Maslow's theory that I disagree with most strongly* is the idea that a person who is and has been fully satisfied in some need is necessarily going to react better to a deprivation of it than someone who had been deprived in the past. Empirically, I'm sure we can all think of plenty of examples of “spoiled” people who regard going without things most people don't even have access to as an unbearable hardship. Ask yourself, would an 18th century American pioneer react to going without food for a day or a host of other threats better than his present day contemporary? In the field of preventative psychology, one of the most successful areas is in inoculation therapy (sometimes called Stress Inoculation Therapy). Just like in preventative medicine, this inoculation involves presenting the patient with a weaker example (in this case of some threat or idea) in order to protect them from the more virulent cases they're likely to encounter in the future.

Besides the perceptual benefits of providing a realistic baseline and removing the threat of the unknown, moderate deprivations encourage the development of strategies, knowledge, and abilities that allow one to deal with threats. It's like the difference between natural growth, say during childhood, which, given an environment with sufficient nutrients, just sort of happens as compared to the growth that comes from exercise, where you literally tear apart your muscles so that they are rebuilt bigger and stronger. Of course, that doesn't mean that any reaction to a threat is going to be a healthy or productive one. Rather, much depends on how the threat and the reaction to it are approached.

In the realm of motivation, threats are not actual; they exist only when perceived. This is especially true when we move beyond the realm of the purely physical. One of the basic assumptions of much of motivational theory is that there is a natural, primitive (or first order) drive for self-esteem. As I've said, I disagree with this idea, and regard it more as a second-order drive towards the primary goal of safety. As such, I see this conception of a “natural” drive to self-esteem as riddled with potential problems.

Maslow regarded it as a deficiency need in most ways analogous to the lower d-needs. Thus, it was a necessary, atomic thing to have for proper health and there was a level at which it would satisfied and would then more or less disappear. I don't think that either of these assumptions are necessarily true in all cases. In fact, I say that in most cases, there are not true.

I'd like to introduce the concept of teleology, which is basically a fancy way of saying the study of goals. Telos – a term that should be familiar to anyone who's read Thomas Aquinas – is a Greek word that can be translated a purpose or goal. So, a common way to talk about activities to is classify them as autotelic (i.e. done for their own sake) or exotelic (i.e. done to achieve some other purpose. Two categories that are less popular – probably because as far as I know, I made both the words and the categories up - are antitelic (i.e. a goal that cannot be achieved by pursuing it) and it's subcategory, countertelic (i.e. a goal that pursuing actually makes it less likely to be achieved).

Consider, what is self-esteem, really? That's a question that requires an answer with a great deal of complexity, most of which I'm going to largely ignore right now in favor of the simple answer of “the condition of feeling powerful, worthy, and competent and not feeling weak, unworthy, and incompetent”. The key word in that, right now, is feeling, or to put it another way, perception. Self-esteem is a matter of how a person perceives himself.

If we're going to talk about it in teleological terms (and we better or that telos paragraph is just a pointless digression) we need to talk about how this perception is achieved and, if it is directly pursued, what character does this pursuit take. I'm also going to cheat a little bit by dismissing the autotelic argument for self-esteem and positing that it is for a purpose by asking why should we seek self-esteem or what does it allow us to do?

To answer that first, and again ignoring the enormous complexities that a complete answer would have, I'll say that self-esteem allows to do, period. That is, it is an essential component of taking any action. The belief that any undertaking is going to useful or successful relies on actively believing that one is a person who can perform useful and successful acts.

Or does it? I think that there is a unstated (and flawed) assumption to that statement, which is that people's base state is to doubt their abilities. In a third option where people are not consciously thinking about their abilities for good or for ill, I think that they would quite capable of doing stuff without having active self-esteem. Of course, that's pretty much just restating the whole “Self-esteem is not a goal in and of itself, but rather a second-order system to deal with threats.” thing that I've been saying from the beginning. I'm coming at it here from the angle of saying that doubts come first and the self-esteem is there to deal with the doubts.

But wait, I've got some evidence that sorta kinda supports this idea. Namely, Julie K. Norem and others has been researching what has been termed Defensive Pessimism for some time now and one of the things they've found is that there are people out there who enhance their performance by worrying over all the things that could go wrong and have a negative response to the normal self-esteem boosting techniques. When the time comes to act, they are able to act without thinking of the things that they've considered would go wrong and have prepared for. I think this could, but doesn't necessarily, work like other types of practice, where the thing practiced slips out of the consciousness as it is mastered. Certainly, the work on Flow, which I've mentioned above, suggests that flow activities come about when a person is not focusing on himself, but rather on the task.

But the question remains, how can we effectively pursue this perception? Most of the pop-psych ideas for self-esteem are based on the idea of pursuing it directly, be it from taking a non-critical, approving approach to others, a la the more empty-headed “We must build self-esteem in schools.” programs or the Stuart Smalley type direct affirmations “I'm good enough. I'm smart enough, and gosh darn it people like me.” Many (I'd say most) of the non-systematic methods that people naturally fall into follow the same path. For example, studies have shown that threats to self-esteem are met with direct attempts to bolster self-esteem (sometimes by throwing oneself back into the task but often by deliberately choosing easier goals that people would be sure to succeed at), excuses or strategies to provide excuses (such as self-handicapping), or distracting oneself from self-contemplation (of which more later when I get to the TV section).

* Again, keep in mind, Abe Maslow was a certified super genius. Also, I've read just about everything he's ever written and I'd say that he'd be disappointed if the thing he was best and in many cases only known for was his hierarchy of needs. His main concerns were elsewhere.

(to be continued...)
 
Posted by Darth Ender (Member # 7694) on :
 
The good ol evil days
 
Posted by Darth Ender (Member # 7694) on :
 
How the years have gone by!
 


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