This is topic Taking advantage of VT to 'promote' faith in forum Books, Films, Food and Culture at Hatrack River Forum.


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Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
Yes, well, the douchebags and the scum we will always have with us. Fortunately there are articulate atheists to give the other side. This is powerful writing.
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
It is indeed. Although the first writer wsan't so much promoting faith as denigrating the lack of it.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
Hence my quote-thingies.
 
Posted by Liz B (Member # 8238) on :
 
Thanks for the link.
 
Posted by dkw (Member # 3264) on :
 
That is indeed beautiful writing. And the person he is responding to is indeed a twit.

Although unfortunately not the worst of them I've heard on this theme in the last few days.

[Frown]
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
quote:
That is why we have science, and novels, and friendships, and poetry, and practical jokes, and photography, and a sense of awe at the immensity of time and the planet’s natural history, and walks with loved ones along the Huckleberry Trail, and atheist friends who keep kosher because, well just because, and passionate reverence for both those heroes who believed and those who did not, and have all this without needing a god to stitch together the tapestry of life.
[Smile]

We need more writing like this.
 
Posted by Samprimary (Member # 8561) on :
 
Dinesh D'Souza is an idiot, and I half expected this to be about the Scientology brigade.
 
Posted by stihl1 (Member # 1562) on :
 
I would just like to break up this back patting, self congratulatory session to say that I couldn't disagree more. Try not to break your arms.

[Big Grin]
 
Posted by rollainm (Member # 8318) on :
 
Uh huh...
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Well the plain and simple truth is, theism has something to offer-whether it's True or Not-in situations like this, but atheism, in and of itself, has nothing to offer at all.

But I've always been more interested in what kind of person a theist is, than in what kind of theist a person is if you catch my drift. The same is true for me in regards to atheists.
 
Posted by Leonide (Member # 4157) on :
 
Well, atheism doesn't claim to "offer" anything. It's just a belief that there is no god. Most theisms, though, claim there is a purpose, and a divine one. Unfortunately, a lot of times that *doesn't* instill a sense of peace in the ones left behind after a tragedy like this. Just because there's "something to offer" doesn't mean that something is useful or helpful, or enough for certain people.

But generally I agree with you, and I especially like your last statement [Smile]
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:

But I've always been more interested in what kind of person a theist is, than in what kind of theist a person is if you catch my drift. The same is true for me in regards to atheists.

Yep; and this gets to the crux of the issue.

Atheists are so often thought of as people who reject religion, period. Nothing else; their rejection of religion is the sum total of their thinking and morality. Not so.
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
And I don't remember Dawkins ever saying that "the main characteristic of the universe is pitiless indifference" or anything like it.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Leonide,

I wasn't trying to fault atheism for not "offering" anything, it was just a statement of fact, and pointing out that in at least one specific area of comparison, theism does something atheism does not: offers something, whether that something is true or not. Just because I point out that tabasco is spicy and whole milk is not, doesn't mean I'm saying that tabasco sauce is superior to whole milk.

I'm not a Dawkins fan, nor have I read much of his work, but if he did say that, I would think it was pretty silly. A system devoid of any intent, purpose, meaning, etc., pick your word, cannot be pitiless, it just is. There has to be the possibility of pity before there can be pitilessness.
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
Well the plain and simple truth is, theism has something to offer-whether it's True or Not-in situations like this, but atheism, in and of itself, has nothing to offer at all.

This is a false argument, because there are alternatives to religious faith for drawing comfort, meaning, and solace from tragedies great and small. Religion does not hold the corner market on these things, just the corner market on the mouthpiece.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
If I said that religious faith was the only means of offering comfort, meaning, and solace in the face of tragedies, you would be right, that would be a false argument.

That is not what I said, though.
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
Then it was a straw man.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Jutsa,

No it wasn't. Please read what I have to say more carefully before labeling my posts that way.

Theism can say that in response to a tragedy, it offers some sort of meaning: this too shall pass, they're in Heaven now, God has a plan, many potential responses. Tell me what atheism offers, in and of itself, in response to a tragedy Jutsa. Then label my position a straw man. For my idea to be a straw man, there must first be a misrepresentation of atheism in something I had to say. There was not.

So how's about you taking that back, please?
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Theism can say that in response to a tragedy, it offers some sort of meaning: this too shall pass, they're in Heaven now, God has a plan, many potential responses. Tell me what atheism offers, in and of itself, in response to a tragedy Jutsa.
From the Wikipedia entry on Straw Man:
"Present a misrepresentation of the opponent's position, refute it, and pretend that the opponent's actual position has been refuted."

Your original statement was the same straw man that Dinesh D'Souza engaged in.

Do you really want to know what else can be offered beyond religious faith? Read the article:
quote:
You can find us next week in the bloodied classrooms of a violated campus, trying to piece our thoughts and lives and studies back together.

With or without a belief in a god, with or without your asinine bigotry, we will make progress, we will breathe life back into our university, I will succeed in explaining this or that point, slowly, eventually, in a ham-handed way, at risk of tears half-way through, my students will come to feel comfortable again in a classroom with no windows or escape route, and hell yes we will prevail.

You see Mr D’Souza, I am an atheist professor at Virginia Tech and a man of great faith. Not faith in your god. Faith in my people.

That is what else is out there. It is in no way connected to or dependant on the existence or lack of a religious faith. Your straw man was in making a highly shortened but essentially same argument D'Souza made.
quote:
So how's about you taking that back, please?
No. [Smile]
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Jutsa,

Strange, how you've seen this glaring flaw in my statements and no one else has (or at least hasn't remarked on it yet)...

quote:
Your original statement was the same straw man that Dinesh D'Souza engaged in.
I couldn't say what straw man Dinesh D'Souza engaged in. I haven't read what he wrote. I read what the atheist professor had to say though, and appreciated it.

quote:
That is what else is out there. It is in no way connected to or dependant on the existence or lack of a religious faith. Your straw man was in making a highly shortened but essentially same argument D'Souza made.

You'll have to point where I said that the things you quoted aren't present in atheists. I didn't say that at all. Show me where I said that, Jutsa. Show me. You can't show me, because I didn't say that. "Faith in my people" is something completely seperate from atheism. Atheism has nothing to do with having faith in people whatsoever, so you can hardly bring that up and point to it as something atheism brings to the situation.

Please note, and I point this out to head off a potential 'misunderstanding' of what I said, that I am not saying that someone can have faith in humanity in spite of atheism, or that atheism detracts from virtue.

All I am saying is precisely what I said: atheism, in and of itself, does not offer anything in response to tragedies such as the one which happened at VT. For you to link the professor's atheism to his faith in humanity, does that mean I get to link a theist's faith in humanity to his theism? Hardly.

quote:
But I've always been more interested in what kind of person a theist is, than in what kind of theist a person is if you catch my drift. The same is true for me in regards to atheists.
Read what I actually said. I dare you. Respond to the things I said, for a change.
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:

All I am saying is precisely what I said: atheism, in and of itself, does not offer anything in response to tragedies such as the one which happened at VT.

Sure. Atheism is a statement of unbelief, and is really a word which shouldn't even exist.

Why bother saying such a thing though? I can't think of a single person who would disagree with that point.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Why bother? People compare atheism and theism frequently, assigning benefits and drawbacks to each. It's a question of benefits.

Do you feel there is a benefit to having solace in the face of tragedy, whether that solace is founded in truth or not, Euripedes? Please note I'm not asking if you think that it's a good thing to have solace from an untrue basis, just whether or not you feel there is any benefit to it.
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
"Faith in my people" is something completely seperate from atheism. Atheism has nothing to do with having faith in people whatsoever,

I agree.
quote:
so you can hardly bring that up and point to it as something atheism brings to the situation.
I didn't bring it up. You did. Hence the strawman.

quote:
All I am saying is precisely what I said: atheism, in and of itself, does not offer anything in response to tragedies such as the one which happened at VT.
And what you are saying is a regurgitated form of what D'Souza said. Hence straw man.

quote:
quote:
But I've always been more interested in what kind of person a theist is, than in what kind of theist a person is if you catch my drift. The same is true for me in regards to atheists.
Read what I actually said. I dare you. Respond to the things I said, for a change.
I suggest you begin thinking about what you say before you say them. For instance:
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh on April 21st at 10:07 PM:
Well the plain and simple truth is, theism has something to offer-whether it's True or Not-in situations like this, but atheism, in and of itself, has nothing to offer at all.

[Smile]
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
Do you feel there is a benefit to having solace in the face of tragedy, whether that solace is founded in truth or not, Euripedes? Please note I'm not asking if you think that it's a good thing to have solace from an untrue basis, just whether or not you feel there is any benefit to it.

This is not dependant on whether one believes in a god or gods. Solace in the face of tragedy is not dependent on theism or lack thereof. You keep rewording the same straw man.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
quote:
We atheists do not believe in gods, or angels, or demons, or souls that endure, or a meeting place after all is said and done where more can be said and done and the point of it all revealed. We don’t believe in the possibility of redemption after our lives, but the necessity of compassion in our lives. We believe in people, in their joys and pains, in their good ideas and their wit and wisdom. We believe in human rights and dignity, and we know what it is for those to be trampled on by brutes and vandals. We may believe that the universe is pitilessly indifferent but we know that friends and strangers alike most certainly are not. We despise atrocity, not because a god tells us that it is wrong, but because if not massacre then nothing could be wrong.

-mapantsula

This serves as another answer to your question, Euripedes. If as you say atheism is a statement of unbelief, then how can it possibly also be something that helps people to despise atrocity, believe in people, believe in compassion?

An atheist can believe in all of those things. I know many who do, who believe strongly and act consistently on those beliefs. Not in spite of their atheism, but certainly not because of it either. Atheists must, like everyone else, find their own meaning to life. Just as a theist might find some meaning to their life by choosing to believe in a system of theism, so too might find some meaning to their life by choosing to believe in things like compassion and mercy as virtues in and of themselves.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Jutsa,

No, I didn't bring it up. See my 2:16am EST post. manpantsula brought it up before I did. I was replying in a thread about his remarks.

quote:
And what you are saying is a regurgitated form of what D'Souza said. Hence straw man
No, it's not. See above.

quote:
This is not dependant on whether one believes in a god or gods. Solace in the face of tragedy is not dependent on theism or lack thereof. You keep rewording the same straw man.
Who said I thought that solace in the face of tragedy was dependant on gods or gods? I didn't say that. I said that atheism is not in the business of offering solace to anything. It is, as Euripedes points out, a statement of unbelief.

Repeating the phrase 'straw man' does not make it true (note that I do not say "truer", because it was never true in the first place). Your objections to the statement I made are specious. When you actually examine the things I've said carefully, and what they were in response to, your claims of straw man fall apart.

You don't really have to look very carefully, either. If you did, someone else would have noted it before you.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Let's examine all these claims of straw man carefully, just for fun!

quote:
This is a false argument, because there are alternatives to religious faith for drawing comfort, meaning, and solace from tragedies great and small. Religion does not hold the corner market on these things, just the corner market on the mouthpiece.
--------
If I said that religious faith was the only means of offering comfort, meaning, and solace in the face of tragedies, you would be right, that would be a false argument.

That is not what I said, though.
--------
Then it was a straw man.

I did not misrepresent anyone's position with my posts.

quote:
That is what else is out there. It is in no way connected to or dependant on the existence or lack of a religious faith. Your straw man was in making a highly shortened but essentially same argument D'Souza made.

I did not claim there was nothing else out there, I made a simple comparison between theism and atheism. No more, no less. If I say that an orange has more vitamin C than a potato, that doesn't mean I hate potatoes.

quote:
I suggest you begin thinking about what you say before you say them.
Hmmm...perhaps I should complain about a ToS violation!
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:

Why bother? People compare atheism and theism frequently, assigning benefits and drawbacks to each. It's a question of benefits.

Well to me, it's firstly a question of truth-value.

I don't know of anyone who have weighed the benefits and drawbacks of theism vs atheism in strictly those terms. There is always the assumption that the atheist possesses the moral framework present in much of civilisation, that they will be a secular humanist, etc.

quote:
Do you feel there is a benefit to having solace in the face of tragedy, whether that solace is founded in truth or not, Euripedes?
Yes. However, if the premise is untrue, I think that benefit is shallow and patronising.

I don't see how this makes the benefit comparison any less faulty, since there are other ways of drawing that comfort. The implication of your post was that this was one of the benefits of theism and the failing of atheism in itself. The comparison is fallacious because those two things shouldn't be compared, since it leads to the incorrect conclusion that only theists enjoy these benefits. It's kind of like comparing the whole of secular ethics with the Christian belief that there are no other gods but Yahweh, or comparing a Mercedes to an Aston Martin steering wheel.

[Edit: typo]
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
]Who said I thought that solace in the face of tragedy was dependant on gods or gods? I didn't say that.

You did.
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh on April 21st at 10:07 PM:
Well the plain and simple truth is, theism has something to offer-whether it's True or Not-in situations like this, but atheism, in and of itself, has nothing to offer at all.

What you are now doing is a different term than 'straw man'. It is called 'backpedaling'. [Smile]
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
quote:
We atheists do not believe in gods, or angels, or demons, or souls that endure, or a meeting place after all is said and done where more can be said and done and the point of it all revealed. We don’t believe in the possibility of redemption after our lives, but the necessity of compassion in our lives. We believe in people, in their joys and pains, in their good ideas and their wit and wisdom. We believe in human rights and dignity, and we know what it is for those to be trampled on by brutes and vandals. We may believe that the universe is pitilessly indifferent but we know that friends and strangers alike most certainly are not. We despise atrocity, not because a god tells us that it is wrong, but because if not massacre then nothing could be wrong.

-mapantsula

This serves as another answer to your question, Euripedes. If as you say atheism is a statement of unbelief, then how can it possibly also be something that helps people to despise atrocity, believe in people, believe in compassion?
It isn't; well, it can free you from religious misconceptions which might otherwise lead to immoral consequences, but that's it for atheism itself.

The post author starts, "We atheists do not believe..." and then adds, but "We do believe..." He never said that atheism in and of itself led atheists to believe those things.
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
Hmmm...perhaps I should complain about a ToS violation!

Personal insults, no matter how obliquely referenced, are not going to make your statements any more valid. [Smile]
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Euripedes,

Heh, I remembered your opinions on truth-value, which was why I was so careful to add qualifiers. [Smile]

quote:
I don't know of anyone who have weighed the benefits and drawbacks of theism vs atheism in strictly those terms. There is always the assumption that the atheist possesses the moral framework present in much of civilisation, that they will be a secular humanist, etc.
As I quoted from his own words, mapantsula himself was comparing theism and atheism in terms of its response to tragedy. Or at the very least, proposings atheism's benefits in those terms. Now, granted, he was doing so responsively...but so was I.

quote:
Yes. However, if the premise is untrue, I think that benefit is shallow and patronising.

I disagree, because I do not believe that something must be true to be deep, or that if untrue it is automatically shallow. I also think that for there to be patronizing, there must be intent, something neither of us can judge at all. I do agree, though, that if it is untrue, the benefit is of course much, much, much smaller, just by nature of being untrue.

quote:
The implication of your post was that this was one of the benefits of theism and the failing of atheism in itself. The comparison is fallacious between those two things shouldn't be compared, since it leads to the incorrect conclusion that only theists enjoy these benefits.
I agree that one could read that implication into my post...if one ignored the rest of my post, where I said that it was more important to me the kind of person someone is, atheist or theist, that that has more meaning and importance.

quote:
It's kind of like comparing the whole of secular ethics with the Christian belief that there are no other gods but Yahweh, or comparing a Mercedes to an Aston Martin steering wheel.
Of course. The steering wheel is not meant to be a whole car, whereas the Mercedes is. Thus-if you're just asking the question, "Which is a better means of transportation?" your answer will obviously be the Mercedes and not the steering wheel. But if someone comes along and says, like mapantslan did, that the steering wheel offers a host of benefits that it clearly doesn't--such as internal combustion--then there's a problem.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Jutsa,

Show me where I have said that solace in response to tragedy depends on gods. Quote me. You can't, because I didn't. Oh, wait, I get it now. You must think that I believe that there are only two ways to view the world, either atheist or theist! Well, now I can understand where you're drawing your erroneous conclusions about what I've said.

Because I do not believe, nor have I ever said, that there are only two ways to view the world.

Oh, and I wasn't being oblique.

-------

Euripedes,

quote:
He never said that atheism in and of itself led atheists to believe those things.
Are you the only one who gets to respond based on implication, then? [Smile]

J4
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
quote:
The implication of your post was that this was one of the benefits of theism and the failing of atheism in itself. The comparison is fallacious between those two things shouldn't be compared, since it leads to the incorrect conclusion that only theists enjoy these benefits.
I agree that one could read that implication into my post...if one ignored the rest of my post, where I said that it was more important to me the kind of person someone is, atheist or theist, that that has more meaning and importance.
The "kind of person someone is" is also separate from their belief in a deity, hence separate from your statement preceding it. Also hence my statement that you should keep watch on your own wording. So, either what you meant and what you said were two different things, or you are continuing to backpedal.

I am willing to accept that you misspoke, if that helps. [Smile]
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
Oh, and I wasn't being oblique.

So you were directly insulting? Okay, whistled.
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
Well, now I can understand where you're drawing your erroneous conclusions about what I've said.

And yet Euripides has read your statement the same as I have. You are the one who gave atheism and theism as the only two choices. As of this point, I have not brought it up except to point out the error of your own two dimensional scenario.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
It's not seperate at all, because--and this is the last time I'll say this--I never said nor did I imply that the theist/atheist divide was the only thing about a person that could help lend solace to a tragedy.

You can be willing to accept whatever you like, Jutsa. It has no bearing on what I actually said, and you can only infer my meaning based on your (very flawed) interpretation of what I meant.

On an unrelated note, should I whistle you for the smilies? Clearly sarcastic and abusive. Hmmmmm.
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:

quote:
I don't know of anyone who have weighed the benefits and drawbacks of theism vs atheism in strictly those terms. There is always the assumption that the atheist possesses the moral framework present in much of civilisation, that they will be a secular humanist, etc.
As I quoted from his own words, mapantsula himself was comparing theism and atheism in terms of its response to tragedy. Or at the very least, proposings atheism's benefits in those terms. Now, granted, he was doing so responsively...but so was I.
That's really not what he was doing. He was comparing atheists to theists in their response to tragedy. Essentially, he was saying that unbelievers are just as horrified by Virginia Tech as theists are, and do have ways of responding thoughtfully and respectfully to the tragedy; that they have means of securing emotional comfort and confidence from other sources.

quote:
quote:
The implication of your post was that this was one of the benefits of theism and the failing of atheism in itself. The comparison is fallacious between those two things shouldn't be compared, since it leads to the incorrect conclusion that only theists enjoy these benefits.
I agree that one could read that implication into my post...if one ignored the rest of my post, where I said that it was more important to me the kind of person someone is, atheist or theist, that that has more meaning and importance.
I didn't ignore that bit; I quoted it just to agree. [Smile]

It's not an implication that is hard to read into the post; since there's really no other useful conclusion that could arise from it. I wanted to set the record straight, because the implied statement leads directly to the erroneous conclusion that D'Souza was espousing.

quote:
quote:
It's kind of like comparing the whole of secular ethics with the Christian belief that there are no other gods but Yahweh, or comparing a Mercedes to an Aston Martin steering wheel.
Of course. The steering wheel is not meant to be a whole car, whereas the Mercedes is. Thus-if you're just asking the question, "Which is a better means of transportation?" your answer will obviously be the Mercedes and not the steering wheel. But if someone comes along and says, like mapantslan did, that the steering wheel offers a host of benefits that it clearly doesn't--such as internal combustion--then there's a problem.
Sure. Yet I don't see where the author did that. He was talking about atheists and the way they respond to tragedy and suffering, not just atheism.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
quote:
And yet Euripides has read your statement the same as I have. You are the one who gave atheism and theism as the only two choices. As of this point, I have not brought it up except to point out the error of your own two dimensional scenario.
No, he hasn't. He said that atheism/theism should not be compared as I compared them, which was one of the points I was trying to make in the first place. Just because I compared atheism and theism with regards to solace in tragedy, doesn't mean I feel they're the only two choices.

This is not remotely a difficult concept to grasp. Just because I compared the two, does not mean I feel they're the only two.

And ironically, I had made my remark about your sarcastic smilies before I read your post about whistling me for my insult. But now it's even more appropriate [Smile]

I guess that's just what I'm like, a mean-spirited Fox News fan.
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
quote:
He never said that atheism in and of itself led atheists to believe those things.
Are you the only one who gets to respond based on implication, then? [Smile]
Ah, but the implied message of the essay, I believe, was 'Atheists can be good, decent, respectful people too, and have ways of responding to tragedy.'
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
It's not seperate at all, because--and this is the last time I'll say this--I never said nor did I imply that the theist/atheist divide was the only thing about a person that could help lend solace to a tragedy.

Yes you did:
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh on April 21st at 10:07 PM:
Well the plain and simple truth is, theism has something to offer-whether it's True or Not-in situations like this, but atheism, in and of itself, has nothing to offer at all.

quote:
On an unrelated note, should I whistle you for the smilies? Clearly sarcastic and abusive. Hmmmmm.
Nope, just smiling to show I mean no malice. [Smile]
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Euripedes,

quote:
Sure. Yet I don't see where the author did that. He was talking about atheists and the way they respond to tragedy and suffering, not just atheism.
Well, he said "we atheists". If I were to say "we Mormons", and then list a variety of behaviors "we Mormons" engaged in, would you think I was just talking about how Mormons behave, or would you also think I was talking about how Mormonism guides Mormons to behave?
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Ahh, I see. So you do believe that if one compares two seperate things and finds one--for the purposes of a very specific comparison--more beneficial, then those are the only two situations that are possible!

So, let me ask you this: if you want something spicy, do you reach for the whole milk, or the Tabasco sauce, Jutsa? Answer carefully!

As for 'malice', I didn't say you were being malicious. I said your use of smilies as sarcastic and abusive. If you say it's not, I'd think you're lying, Jutsa. And don't you dare whistle me on that, you've made almost exactly the same statement to me in the past.
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
quote:
And yet Euripides has read your statement the same as I have. You are the one who gave atheism and theism as the only two choices. As of this point, I have not brought it up except to point out the error of your own two dimensional scenario.
No, he hasn't. He said that atheism/theism should not be compared as I compared them, which was one of the points I was trying to make in the first place. Just because I compared atheism and theism with regards to solace in tragedy, doesn't mean I feel they're the only two choices.
Then say what you mean instead of what you said. What you said only brought up two things. If you mean differently, then you misspoke. Correct?

quote:
This is not remotely a difficult concept to grasp. Just because I compared the two, does not mean I feel they're the only two.
You admit to only comparing the two. Only the two. If you meant differently, do you not think you should have included the others at least in passing with your comparison?

quote:
And ironically, I had made my remark about your sarcastic smilies before I read your post about whistling me for my insult. But now it's even more appropriate [Smile]

I guess that's just what I'm like, a mean-spirited Fox News fan.

Why must you persist in the personal attack? I am not going to fight with you over this.
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
I think we're all essentially reasonable people here, and don't want to get into anything remotely resembling a flame war. It would also be sadly ironic after PJ's recent thread; so what do you say that we all--including me--drop any ad homs, whether implied, veiled, sarcastic, or otherwise?

I also think that once we get past the 'what I said was' part, we'll find that we all agree that the comparison D'Souza was making was a fallacious one; that atheists can have ideals and morals, and a way to respond to tragedy, in the absence of a god. And that's really what lies at the crux of this argument.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Bedtime.
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
Ahh, I see. So you do believe that if one compares two seperate things and finds one--for the purposes of a very specific comparison--more beneficial, then those are the only two situations that are possible!

No, I don't believe that. Your statement implied that:
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh on April 21st at 10:07 PM:
Well the plain and simple truth is, theism has something to offer-whether it's True or Not-in situations like this, but atheism, in and of itself, has nothing to offer at all.


 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
You haven't made any ad-homs or sarcastic remarks or insults in this thread at all, Euripedes. I'm enjoying talking about this with you. If Jutsa would withdraw his false claims of straw-men and backpedaling, I'd happily leave him alone about this and all else in this thread.

But I didn't put up a straw man, and I'm not backpedaling. Unless, of course, if I were to say I reached for the Tabasco sauce, that clearly means that Tabasco sauce is the only choice for spiciness.
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Euripides:
I think we're all essentially reasonable people here, and don't want to get into anything remotely resembling a flame war. It would also be sadly ironic after PJ's recent thread; so what do you say that we all--including me--drop any ad homs, whether implied, veiled, sarcastic, or otherwise?

I also think that once we get past the 'what I said was' part, we'll find that we all agree that the comparison D'Souza was making was a fallacious one; that atheists can have ideals and morals, and a way to respond to tragedy, in the absence of a god. And that's really what lies at the crux of this argument.

I agree completely. [Smile]
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
quote:
Sure. Yet I don't see where the author did that. He was talking about atheists and the way they respond to tragedy and suffering, not just atheism.
Well, he said "we atheists". If I were to say "we Mormons", and then list a variety of behaviors "we Mormons" engaged in, would you think I was just talking about how Mormons behave, or would you also think I was talking about how Mormonism guides Mormons to behave?
I would, yes. I think the key difference is that Mormonism is a specific religion and system of ideas, whereas atheism is essentially a statement to the effect of 'I don't see any good reasons to believe in religion or supernatural entities'.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
No you don't, Jutsa. You've made it abundantly clearly in the past that you don't feel I'm a reasonable person. You've made it clear in this thread, as well. You may be a fan of making obviously untrue statements in favor of being nice. I am not.

And now, before I actually go to bed (bit of a flurry of activity here) answer me this simple question, Jutsa: which bottle do you get when you want something spicy? Do you get the bottle of Tabasco sauce, or the bottle of whole milk?

It's a very simple, obvious question, so I'll answer if for you. You get the bottle of Tabasco sauce. By the unreasonable reasoning you're using in this thread, I could with as much merit as you've had here claim that you felt that the only choices when it came to spicy liquids were whole milk or tabasco, just by virtue of comparing the two together.
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Euripides:
I think the key difference is that Mormonism is a specific religion and system of ideas, whereas atheism is essentially a statement to the effect of 'I don't see any good reasons to believe in religion or supernatural entities'.

Exactly. [Smile]
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
No you don't, Jutsa. . . You may be a fan of making obviously untrue statements in favor of being nice. I am not.

You are stating what others believe even when it isn't true. I would rather you cease attempting to turn this into a flame war.
 
Posted by Nato (Member # 1448) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
Well, he said "we atheists". If I were to say "we Mormons", and then list a variety of behaviors "we Mormons" engaged in, would you think I was just talking about how Mormons behave, or would you also think I was talking about how Mormonism guides Mormons to behave? [/QB]

But there is no Atheism structure to guide us. We have prominent atheist thinkers, but there is no cohesive ethical guidance other than the limited rational conclusions one can draw about behavior in the absence of a deity. Atheism allows these conclusions (many people may have even reached the same ones), but it does not preach them.
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Nato:
But there is no Atheism structure to guide us. We have prominent atheist thinkers, but there is no cohesive ethical guidance other than the limited rational conclusions one can draw about behavior in the absence of a deity. Atheism allows these conclusions (many people may have even reached the same ones), but it does not preach them.

Once again, exactly. [Smile]
 
Posted by Nato (Member # 1448) on :
 
quote:
Rakeesh said:

And now, before I actually go to bed (bit of a flurry of activity here) answer me this simple question, Jutsa: which bottle do you get when you want something spicy? Do you get the bottle of Tabasco sauce, or the bottle of whole milk?

I'm not sure this question will get you anywhere. It seems like you're translating it to "When you are looking for a source of consolation in a situation like this, do you turn to faith, or to atheism?"

I agree that some people find consolation through faith in a higher power. But I don't think anybody would consider "turning to atheism" as a source of answers or (specifically) consolation/healing. That would be as foolish as thinking you are going to satisfy your desire for spiciness with milk.

I can only offer anecdotal evidence for what an atheist might turn to in the absence of a belief in an all-powerful god that listens to prayers. I, like the professor who wrote the linked essay, believe there is no meaning inherent to the world, but that there can be meaning in life. The destruction of life that happened on Monday is, from my perspective, the destruction of the most important resource in the world. Each of those who died represented an incredible potential for meaning in the world. Who could tell the contributions that each of them could have made to the lives of others?

I read the killer's plays, and I watched his video. I struggled to interpret what his emotions were, and why he might have done what he did. I couldn't get very far in this, besides recognizing the presence of his overwhelming feelings (seemed like a high sense of betrayal, and distrust).

But my thoughts really lie with the people who are left. How can we help people to understand the beauty of life and share our desire to protect and nurture it? How can we reach out to hurting people and make them understand our love for them as a fellow occupant of Earth? How should we treat (and follow-up on) people we recognize to have mental/emotional problems? (What kind of public resources are necessary to successfully reach these people?)

I don't ask anything of atheism, although I am asking many questions. I ask myself, and I ask others. I read what people I respect have to say about the matter at hand, but I don't respect these people because of their atheism. I respect them because they might have answers to some of my questions, or they might help me to think of my own.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jutsa Notha Name:
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
]Who said I thought that solace in the face of tragedy was dependant on gods or gods? I didn't say that.

You did.
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh on April 21st at 10:07 PM:
Well the plain and simple truth is, theism has something to offer-whether it's True or Not-in situations like this, but atheism, in and of itself, has nothing to offer at all.

What you are now doing is a different term than 'straw man'. It is called 'backpedaling'. [Smile]

Jutsa, you are making unwarranted leaps not supported on their face by what Rakeesh is saying.

You've quoted this many times now, so I'll assume you've actually read it: "Well the plain and simple truth is, theism has something to offer-whether it's True or Not-in situations like this, but atheism, in and of itself, has nothing to offer at all."

I've bolded the part that it appears you haven't read, or at least understood.

Rakeesh said that theism provides a mechanism for providing solace through Gods and that atheism does not provide a mechanism for solace. But that does NOT mean that the only way to achieve solace was through God. Merely that atheism - whether defined as the lack of belief in the existence of God or as the belief that no god exists - does not contain within itself a mechanism analogous to solace through God.

The only way to get from what Rakeesh said to what you have repeatedly insisted that he said is to add an intermediate premise, namely that all possible mechanisms for solace can be found within the superset of atheism and theism. He said no such thing. He said that (i) theism has an attribute that can provide solace and (ii) atheism, in and of itself, does not.

I actually disagree with Rakeesh on (i) - it's easy enough to imagine a form of theism that does not contain within itself a mechanism for solace. So solace is not inherent to theism.

Additional philosophies that have atheism as a founding premise do have mechanisms for solace.

But that's a statement that is in no way precluded by that statement Rakeesh initially made (and which you have taken such pains to repost so many times).

[ April 22, 2007, 10:18 AM: Message edited by: Dagonee ]
 
Posted by Chris Bridges (Member # 1138) on :
 
I kinda skimmed over most of this thread after it became obvious that the same thing was being said over and over. But I agree with Dag's post.

Atheism has no solace to offer. That's sort of the point.
Atheists, however, have plenty of comfort, sympathy, and support to offer, because atheists are also people who feel pain, love, and compassion. That's sort of also the point.
 
Posted by Liz B (Member # 8238) on :
 
This reflects what Dagonee said above:

Does belief in god/gods (theism) necessarily imply belief in an organized, purposeful universe, a god who cares about individual human tragedy, and/ or an afterlife?

I'm reeeeeeally hoping no, so that we can say that neither atheism nor theism have any solace to offer the suffering, but that perhaps some theist religions and atheist philosophies do.
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
You don't have to hope, Liz. [Smile] The answer is no.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Hmm. I hadn't thought of it Dagonee, but you're quite right: theism in and of itself isn't a guarantee of the ability to find solace in tragedy. I have yet to hear of a theistic system which didn't, that I can recall, but by no means does that guarantee there isn't one.

quote:
Atheism has no solace to offer. That's sort of the point.
Atheists, however, have plenty of comfort, sympathy, and support to offer, because atheists are also people who feel pain, love, and compassion. That's sort of also the point.

Exactly.
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
Jutsa, you are making unwarranted leaps not supported on their face by what Rakeesh is saying.

You've quoted this many times now, so I'll assume you've actually read it: "Well the plain and simple truth is, theism has something to offer-whether it's True or Not-in situations like this, but atheism, in and of itself, has nothing to offer at all."

I've bolded the part that it appears you haven't read, or at least understood.

I read it, I understand it, and as I said it is a regurgitation of a straw man. You see, no one else brought it up as if it had. The writer of the response to D'Souza didn't bring it up as if it had.

Do you understand what I am saying, Dagonee? No one had argued that atheism contained such. With the parts "the plain simple truth" it is implied that someone has either claimed or inferred otherwise. So, since no one in this thread or the original link had claimed or inferred otherwise, either Rakeesh misspoke or he was setting up a straw man.

quote:
Rakeesh said that theism provides a mechanism for providing solace through Gods and that atheism does not provide a mechanism for solace. But that does NOT mean that the only way to achieve solace was through God. Merely that atheism - whether defined as the lack of belief in the existence of God or as the belief that no god exists - does not contain within itself a mechanism analogous to solace through God.
But no one else said otherwise. Can you agree with that?

quote:
The only way to get from what Rakeesh said to what you have repeatedly insisted that he said is to add an intermediate premise, namely that all possible mechanisms for solace can be found within the superset of atheism and theism. He said no such thing. He said that (i) theism has an attribute that can provide solace and (ii) atheism, in and of itself, does not.
No one argued otherwise. That is why it was a straw man or a mistake in wording.

quote:
I actually disagree with Rakeesh on (i) - it's easy enough to imagine a form of theism that does not contain within itself a mechanism for solace. So solace is not inherent to theism.
I agree as well, but no one said otherwise.

quote:
Additional philosophies that have atheism as a founding premise do have mechanisms for solace.

But that's a statement that is in no way precluded by that statement Rakeesh initially made (and which you have taken such pains to repost so many times).

You pretty much just made my case. [Smile] Since no one said otherwise, Rakeesh's statement was a comment on a statement no one else made. That is a straw man, unless he was trying to say something else (like he claims) and worded it improperly.

quote:
Originally posted by Chris Bridges:
I kinda skimmed over most of this thread after it became obvious that the same thing was being said over and over. But I agree with Dag's post.

Atheism has no solace to offer. That's sort of the point.
Atheists, however, have plenty of comfort, sympathy, and support to offer, because atheists are also people who feel pain, love, and compassion. That's sort of also the point.

I agree. [Smile] However, since comparing atheism and theism with regard to those things has nothing to do with the price of tea in China or the statements prior to Rakeesh's post (including the link), my point about his post being a straw man or a misstatement remains. [Smile]

See, considering his later posts, it would have been far easier to say "that isn't what I meant, let me rephrase that." No one was arguing that atheism in and of itself provides comfort, solace, or anything else. As I understand it, no one is arguing that still.

So I ask:
Can we all agree that no one has argued that atheism in and of itself provides any such mechanism?

If yes to the above, can you explain how making a statement against something no one else has claimed is not a straw man?

From the wiki link earlier:
quote:
An example of a straw man fallacy:

Person A: I don't think children should run into the busy streets.
Person B: I think that it would be foolish to lock children up all day.

By insinuating that Person A's argument is far more draconian than it is, Person B has side-stepped the issue. Here the "straw man" that person B has set up is the premise that "The only way to stop children running into the busy streets is to keep them inside all day".

Here is what I observed within this thread:

Original link and posts in the thread: Atheists can still have methods for overcoming tragedy in the face of incidents like the VT shootings.

Rakeesh's statement: Atheism in and of itself contains no such method.

Rakeesh's statement sidestepped the whole point of the original link and subsequent posts because no one, through direct or inferential statements, claimed that atheism provides such a thing. Since we generally seem to agree that atheists still have the ability to utilize methods for seeking comfort facing such a tragedy, what is the point of making a comparison like what Rakeesh made? Was it a straw man? It's possible, as it contains the properties of one. Was it a misstatement? It's possible, but I see no admission of such as of yet.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Jutsa,

quote:
You are stating what others believe even when it isn't true. I would rather you cease attempting to turn this into a flame war.
Oh, so you do think I'm an 'essentially reasonable person'? *laugh* In the past, you've called me a liar, you've called me intolerant, you've hinted that I'm some sort of sheep following the Fox News crowd, and a variety of other things. So, pardon me if I somehow arrive at the conclusion that you don't think I'm reasonable.

For the record, I'm not interested in having you think I'm reasonable, but I am interested in pointing out something ridiculous, like when you say that you do, and then accuse me of "flaming" for saying you don't.

-----------

quote:
I read it, I understand it, and as I said it is a regurgitation of a straw man. You see, no one else brought it up as if it had. The writer of the response to D'Souza didn't bring it up as if it had.

We atheists do not believe in gods, or angels, or demons, or souls that endure, or a meeting place after all is said and done where more can be said and done and the point of it all revealed. We don’t believe in the possibility of redemption after our lives, but the necessity of compassion in our lives. We believe in people, in their joys and pains, in their good ideas and their wit and wisdom. We believe in human rights and dignity, and we know what it is for those to be trampled on by brutes and vandals. We may believe that the universe is pitilessly indifferent but we know that friends and strangers alike most certainly are not. We despise atrocity, not because a god tells us that it is wrong, but because if not massacre then nothing could be wrong.

Now, you can go on and on and on and on for as long as you can draw breath about how the quote I've bolded doesn't at least imply that atheism brings something to the tragedy table, but you'll still be wrong. The implication is very possible to draw.

quote:
See, considering his later posts, it would have been far easier to say "that isn't what I meant, let me rephrase that." No one was arguing that atheism in and of itself provides comfort, solace, or anything else. As I understand it, no one is arguing that still.
[Smile] Let's just be clear about something: I am not deceived by your frequent use of smilies as you've been using them in this thread, Jutsa. I consider them a form of sarcastic emphasis, and I am responding as such. If you say they are not, I will not believe you.
 
Posted by BlackBlade (Member # 8376) on :
 
*ahem* Jutsa, the phrase is, "the price of rice in China."

[Wink]
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
Here is what I observed within this thread:

Original link and posts in the thread: Atheists can still have methods for overcoming tragedy in the face of incidents like the VT shootings.

Rakeesh's statement: Atheism in and of itself contains no such method.

Rakeesh's statement sidestepped the whole point of the original link and subsequent posts because no one, through direct or inferential statements, claimed that atheism provides such a thing. Since we generally seem to agree that atheists still have the ability to utilize methods for seeking comfort facing such a tragedy, what is the point of making a comparison like what Rakeesh made? Was it a straw man? It's possible, as it contains the properties of one. Was it a misstatement? It's possible, but I see no admission of such as of yet.

quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
If you say they are not, I will not believe you.

So, are you saying that you are intentionally not beginning from the assumption of good faith when responding to me?

If so, then I can understand why this has continued. If not, then I don't see what you are getting at. I will say again that I do not wish a flame war. [Smile]
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by BlackBlade:
*ahem* Jutsa, the phrase is, "the price of rice in China."

[Wink]

No the usage is "the price of tea in China."

[Wink]
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
quote:
So, are you saying that you are intentionally not beginning from the assumption of good faith when responding to me?
When someone tells me, as you have in the past, that they do not assume good faith with regards to me, why exactly should I do so with regards to them, I wonder? It's fascinating the way you imply this is something I have done entirely on my own, as though you have no part in it. As to why I continue, it's because I am unwilling to let your objections stand unchallenged. Also because you have made some irritating accusations that aren't backed up by accuracy.

quote:
Rakeesh's statement sidestepped the whole point of the original link and subsequent posts because no one, through direct or inferential statements, claimed that atheism provides such a thing. Since we generally seem to agree that atheists still have the ability to utilize methods for seeking comfort facing such a tragedy, what is the point of making a comparison like what Rakeesh made? Was it a straw man? It's possible, as it contains the properties of one. Was it a misstatement? It's possible, but I see no admission of such as of yet.
This is good. Way to not reply to the statements I make, thus ensuring your objections remain specious. Also, you have yet to answer my spiciness question. You can't answer, because to do so would weaken your already flimsy arguments.
 
Posted by BlackBlade (Member # 8376) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jutsa Notha Name:
quote:
Originally posted by BlackBlade:
*ahem* Jutsa, the phrase is, "the price of rice in China."

[Wink]

No the usage is "the price of tea in China."

[Wink]

Oh look I can use wikipedia too!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_price_of_rice_in_China

You will note your wiki article contains no citations or links.

The only backing that I can give MY phrase is that I have actually heard it used by Chinese people, whereas I have yet to hear the word tea in lieu of rice. Now it may be a British phrase but again growing up in a British colony I never heard the British folks use it.

You might still be right however, Ill have to look into it further.

edit:
http://tinyurl.com/228kzq
^^ As used in a periodical.
 
Posted by Morbo (Member # 5309) on :
 
I'm going to jump on the Dag-wagon (like a band-wagon but with rigorous logic) and agree that Rakeesh's post was not a straw-man.

I've dealt with Jutsa's passive-aggressive arguments before, and they can be frustrating.
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
BlackBlade, I was not using the term you are trying to argue about. I was not calling it a nonsequitur. I was not calling it an absurd change of subject. I was saying that it is unrelated to the subject. There is a difference. If you are going to correct me, at least be absolutely sure you know the intended usage before becoming defensive. I have no idea where your adamant nature on this is coming from.

quote:
Originally posted by Morbo:
I'm going to jump on the Dag-wagon (like a band-wagon but with rigorous logic) and agree that Rakeesh's post was not a straw-man.

I've dealt with Jutsa's passive-aggressive arguments before, and they can be frustrating.

Can you please counter what I said without insulting me? I have explained my reason for calling it what I did. I even said that I was willing to accept it if it is explained as a mistaken wording. Instead of attacking my character, attack my argument.

quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
When someone tells me, as you have in the past, that they do not assume good faith with regards to me, why exactly should I do so with regards to them, I wonder? It's fascinating the way you imply this is something I have done entirely on my own, as though you have no part in it. As to why I continue, it's because I am unwilling to let your objections stand unchallenged. Also because you have made some irritating accusations that aren't backed up by accuracy.

I have not only explained my statement, I have continually asked you to focus on my statement and not what you deem is my character. You continue to make this about my character instead of about my statement.
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
This is good. Way to not reply to the statements I make, thus ensuring your objections remain specious. Also, you have yet to answer my spiciness question. You can't answer, because to do so would weaken your already flimsy arguments.

What does your 'spiciness question' have to do with what you actually said. I already responded in stating quite clearly, more than once, that NO ONE HAS ARGUED THAT ATHEISM DOES WHAT YOU ARGUED AGAINST.

Original link essay and posts in the thread: Atheists can still have methods for overcoming tragedy in the face of incidents like the VT shootings.

YOUR (Rakeesh's) statement, verbatim: Well the plain and simple truth is, theism has something to offer-whether it's True or Not-in situations like this, but atheism, in and of itself, has nothing to offer at all.

NO ONE ARGUED OR STATED OTHERWISE PRIOR TO YOU MAKING THIS POST! NOT A SINGLE HUMAN BEING MADE SUCH A CLAIM!

I have no idea how I can be more clear. Instead of making personal claims about me, how about you actually address what I have been saying from the start? I would really appreciate that. [Smile]
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
Do you understand what I am saying, Dagonee? No one had argued that atheism contained such. With the parts "the plain simple truth" it is implied that someone has either claimed or inferred otherwise. So, since no one in this thread or the original link had claimed or inferred otherwise, either Rakeesh misspoke or he was setting up a straw man.
It is possible to say something that others have not disagreed with in advance. Just sayin'.

quote:
But no one else said otherwise. Can you agree with that?
I don't care if anyone said otherwise. Rakeesh didn't say anyone said otherwise.

quote:
No one argued otherwise. That is why it was a straw man or a mistake in wording.
That doesn't make it a straw man or mistake in wording unless Rakeesh claimed that someone made that argument. He didn't.

quote:
You pretty much just made my case. [Smile] Since no one said otherwise, Rakeesh's statement was a comment on a statement no one else made. That is a straw man, unless he was trying to say something else (like he claims) and worded it improperly.
No, it wasn't. It was a comment about theism and atheism, presumably inspired by the opening post and the link therein, but not necessarily in response to it.

quote:
I agree. [Smile] However, since comparing atheism and theism with regard to those things has nothing to do with the price of tea in China or the statements prior to Rakeesh's post (including the link), my point about his post being a straw man or a misstatement remains. [Smile]

See, considering his later posts, it would have been far easier to say "that isn't what I meant, let me rephrase that." No one was arguing that atheism in and of itself provides comfort, solace, or anything else. As I understand it, no one is arguing that still.

You mean, it would have been easier for Rakeesh to buy into your unfounded assumption that anything posted about a topic must be in response to a specific statement made in that topic? Depends entirely what you mean by easier. Less frustrating to Rakeesh? Almost certainly, if he could ignore the being dishonest for the sake of not having a bang0his-head-against-the-wall argument with you.

quote:
Original link and posts in the thread: Atheists can still have methods for overcoming tragedy in the face of incidents like the VT shootings.

Rakeesh's statement: Atheism in and of itself contains no such method.

Rakeesh's statement sidestepped the whole point of the original link and subsequent posts because no one, through direct or inferential statements, claimed that atheism provides such a thing. Since we generally seem to agree that atheists still have the ability to utilize methods for seeking comfort facing such a tragedy, what is the point of making a comparison like what Rakeesh made? Was it a straw man? It's possible, as it contains the properties of one. Was it a misstatement? It's possible, but I see no admission of such as of yet.

What's the point? He wanted to say it. It's something else several people have said and agreed with in this thread so far. Your false dichotomy (straw man or misstatement) relies on your assumption that the only possible motive for posting that was to refute something already said.

Here's a hint: many times people will do something for different reasons than the reasons you would have for doing something.

Your reason for posting such a statement in such a thread might be to disagree with the previous posters. That doesn't mean it's Rakeesh's.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
NO ONE ARGUED OR STATED OTHERWISE PRIOR TO YOU MAKING THIS POST! NOT A SINGLE HUMAN BEING MADE SUCH A CLAIM!
RAKEESH DID NOT ARGUE OR STATE THAT ANYONE ARGUED OR STATED OTHERWISE PRIOR TO HIS MAKING THIS POST!

Got that? It's a very simple concept. HE DIDN'T SAY THAT THEY DID.

quote:
I have no idea how I can be more clear. Instead of making personal claims about me, how about you actually address what I have been saying from the start? I would really appreciate that. [Smile]
If you want to be clear, demonstrate where Rakeesh said that anyone state that atheism, in and of itself, has anything to offer in such a situation.

Not that Rakeesh said that it didn't, but that he claimed anyone did say it did.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Jutsa,

quote:
I have not only explained my statement, I have continually asked you to focus on my statement and not what you deem is my character. You continue to make this about my character instead of about my statement.

Dude. We've been through this, like, a half-dozen times now. This is the last time I'm going to discuss this particular subject with you...and as I've said elsewhere, when I make that claim with regards to you, I mean it.

quote:
NO ONE HAS ARGUED THAT ATHEISM DOES WHAT YOU ARGUED AGAINST.
At the very least, the portion of mapantslan's blog can be said to imply that atheism offers solace. So, yes, yes someone has implied that atheism is superior to theism in this regard. Stop saying that it has not been said. It clearly, undeniably has been at least implied.

As for what my spiciness question has to do with the issue:
quote:
You admit to only comparing the two. Only the two. If you meant differently, do you not think you should have included the others at least in passing with your comparison?
My spiciness question has to do with the rather stupid claim you're making, that when you compare two things, that means you think that those are the only.

I have been addressing what you've been saying from the start, which is basically: 1. no one said that atheism offers solace in response to a tragedy (the author did at the very least imply that atheism does that, so you're flat-out wrong there) and 2. that my comparison of atheism and theism must obviously mean that I think those are the only two things which might have something to offer in response to tragedy, because I didn't mention anything else. This is also completely ridiculous, as illustrated by the spciness question.

You can appreciate whatever you want, you can include as many sarcastic, passive-aggressive smilies as you like, you can pretend that you're the font of reasonability, you can whistle my posts from sun up till sundown. I'm done talking about this with you.

Have a nice day! [Smile] (See how sarcastic that smilie was? You're not fooling anyone)
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
Well, now, Rakeesh has said a form of that.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Euripedes,

quote:
I would, yes. I think the key difference is that Mormonism is a specific religion and system of ideas, whereas atheism is essentially a statement to the effect of 'I don't see any good reasons to believe in religion or supernatural entities'.
This is a noteworthy difference, and for what it's worth, I personally agree that when I examine the behavior of an atheist, I won't have the expectation that another atheist three towns over might share similar sorts of behaviors the way I would if I examined the behavior of a Mormon. For example, Scott R and I. Or for another example, King of Men and you.

But since I think this way, since I acknowledge that there is no unifying belief system or ideology behind atheism (beyond any unification a statement of disbelief might offer), I think that probably an atheist shouldn't say, "We atheists believe in...," or, "We atheists behave like...," and so on and so forth.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Said a form of what, Dagonee?

Oh, I see what you mean. I have said that the author implies that atheism has something to offer in response to the tragedy. To be clear, I am not saying he explictly said that, though. It's just one possible (and I believe quite reasonable) interpretation of what he wrote. Nor am I saying that this is something widely believed by atheists everywhere. How could I say such a thing? The only thing that is guaranteed to be agreed upon by atheists is that they don't believe in god or the supernatural.
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
You know what? You guys win. It isn't worth a dogpile to argue over this. I appreciate you not devolving into personal attacks, though, Dagonee. I disagree with you and still feel that the original statement I commented on was poorly worded at the very least. It isn't worth risking a flame war over, though. [Smile]
 
Posted by rollainm (Member # 8318) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Jutsa Notha Name:
Rakeesh's statement sidestepped the whole point of the original link and subsequent posts because no one, through direct or inferential statements, claimed that atheism provides such a thing. Since we generally seem to agree that atheists still have the ability to utilize methods for seeking comfort facing such a tragedy, what is the point of making a comparison like what Rakeesh made? Was it a straw man? It's possible, as it contains the properties of one. Was it a misstatement? It's possible, but I see no admission of such as of yet.

I think that if you had worded your point in this way earlier on, such a heated discussion may have been avoided. As far as I can tell, the above quote is a pretty accurate summary of your argument, and for the record, I agree. This late in the debate, however, it seems to have been overlooked in lieu of points that others have felt are more important to address.

Also, I feel compelled to point out that your tone is not helping you present your argument, which is a bit disappointing for those of us who actually agree with you. Now I realize you have clearly stated many times what you truly mean by your use of certain words or emoticons, and you expect people to accept that and move on. I personally have no problem with that, but I also see where others are coming from. The problem is that so many people have pointed this out to you that it's no longer a matter of whether you're right or wrong; it's the lack of effective communication. It is clear that you have failed to present yourself in the manner you intended to many people who are obviously not stupid. Why not take a moment to understand just why that is, perhaps make an adjustment or two in how you word things?
 
Posted by rivka (Member # 4859) on :
 
BlackBlade, why is it relevant what version of the phrase is used in China? In the US and several other countries, the phrase used is "the price of tea in China." We also avoid selling coal in Newcastle, and sand in the Sahara.

There are often multiple versions of a common expression. *shrug* So?
 
Posted by Jutsa Notha Name (Member # 4485) on :
 
rollainm: that is why I am bowing out. [Smile]
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
Hmm. I hadn't thought of it Dagonee, but you're quite right: theism in and of itself isn't a guarantee of the ability to find solace in tragedy. I have yet to hear of a theistic system which didn't, that I can recall, but by no means does that guarantee there isn't one.

The Aztec pantheon; also the Norse, Greek, and Roman ones.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Now wait a minute, in the Greek and Roman old religions, if you lived a good life, you (sometimes) at least had a decent place waiting for you in the afterlife. There's solace right there.

If you're Norse, if you die bravely in battle at least you've got a crack at something fun later on.

Aztec, I don't know enough about it to say one way or another, but I wouldn't be surprised if there wasn't anything.
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
Rakeesh,
quote:
quote:
I would, yes. I think the key difference is that Mormonism is a specific religion and system of ideas, whereas atheism is essentially a statement to the effect of 'I don't see any good reasons to believe in religion or supernatural entities'.
This is a noteworthy difference, and for what it's worth, I personally agree that when I examine the behavior of an atheist, I won't have the expectation that another atheist three towns over might share similar sorts of behaviors the way I would if I examined the behavior of a Mormon. For example, Scott R and I. Or for another example, King of Men and you.

But since I think this way, since I acknowledge that there is no unifying belief system or ideology behind atheism (beyond any unification a statement of disbelief might offer), I think that probably an atheist shouldn't say, "We atheists believe in...," or, "We atheists behave like...," and so on and so forth.

While there are many flavours of moral philosophy, I haven't met many atheists in countries like America, Australia, or Japan who couldn't be described using the umbrella term 'secular humanist'. Even when the philosophies they draw from can be disparate, the morals they hold are often very similar; minimise suffering, increase happiness--with no deity as a middle man.

And the things that the author said that atheists believe in, are the sorts of things that most human beings have faith in; it's just that atheists put all their faith in those, rather than investing it in religion. Things like 'other people and their wisdom', 'their joys and pains', the compassion of friends, reprehension towards atrocity; the most discriminating of the items on the list is probably "human rights and dignity", but I'd say that most atheists hold those to be important too. So in that light, I think it was fair enough to start with 'We atheists believe...'
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:

Now wait a minute, in the Greek and Roman old religions, if you lived a good life, you (sometimes) at least had a decent place waiting for you in the afterlife. There's solace right there.

If you're Norse, if you die bravely in battle at least you've got a crack at something fun later on.

Aztec, I don't know enough about it to say one way or another, but I wouldn't be surprised if there wasn't anything.

But not everyone's god is all forgiving, and the equivalent of heaven could be either a very nebulous concept, or a very exclusive kind of place.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Euripedes,

quote:
While there are many flavours of moral philosophy, I haven't met many atheists in countries like America, Australia, or Japan who couldn't be described using the umbrella term 'secular humanist'. Even when the philosophies they draw from can be disparate, the morals they hold are often very similar; minimise suffering, increase happiness--with no deity as a middle man.
Then couldn't the author have properly credited his virtues by saying, "We secular humanists..."? Wouldn't you agree that it was (probably--I don't actually know the guy) the professor's secular humanism, and not his atheism, from which those virtues flowed?

quote:
But not everyone's god is all forgiving, and the equivalent of heaven could be either a very nebulous concept, or a very exclusive kind of place.
Agreed. But even a nebuluous and exclusive heaven would offer solace to some.
 
Posted by ClaudiaTherese (Member # 923) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
Then couldn't the author have properly credited his virtues by saying, "We secular humanists..."? Wouldn't you agree that it was (probably--I don't actually know the guy) the professor's secular humanism, and not his atheism, from which those virtues flowed?

Ah, but nobody expects ... the Hatrack Inquisition! *grin

Yeah, he could have been more specific, for sure. I'm pretty sure the intent is the same: i.e., to contrast the possible responses of his worldview with those ascribed to it by D'Souza. (D'Souza is the one he quotes in the quote-blocks, if that wasn't clear. I can't tell whether everyone was on the same page about that above.)

So I think he is using the term "atheism" to loosely include the secular humanism also a part of his worldview. That is, he is arguing (I think) that atheism can have a response to this which is more than just "Tough luck, bub. The world sucks sometimes," and -- to be more specific for him -- that is because atheism does not rule out such perspectives as secular humanism, that atheists can also find meaning. And still be atheists.
 
Posted by BlackBlade (Member # 8376) on :
 
quote:

BlackBlade, I was not using the term you are trying to argue about. I was not calling it a nonsequitur. I was not calling it an absurd change of subject. I was saying that it is unrelated to the subject. There is a difference. If you are going to correct me, at least be absolutely sure you know the intended usage before becoming defensive. I have no idea where your adamant nature on this is coming from.

I assure you I do not feel defensive about this topic. I understand you were using the phrase to denote an unrelated change in subject, I was questioning the wording not the manner in which it was used.

TBH I thought the phrase was limited to rice and that tea was some sort of bastardization, the price of rice being far more important to the Chinese then the price of tea. I believed the phrase was Chinese as I first heard the phrase in China. Turns out the phrase may not be Chinese though it involves China, remember I said "You might still be right however, Ill have to look into it further." That was my attempt to let you know I was just being friendly about the whole matter, and that I was not certain I was in the right and you were in the wrong.

Don't look at my remarks beyond the point of a friendly correction, that I now believe may be unwarranted.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
CT,

Heh, no kidding. Now, if only we had comfy chairs...

I agree that his intent was probably what is being guessed at here: that is, if you sat the guy down and asked him specifically, "Do you believe it is your atheism which teaches you to believe thus and so?" he would most likely say "no, it's my secular humanism," or some variation of that. Just a guess on my part.

However, if religion does not get credit for the good behavior of individuals--and I don't think it should--why then should atheism? I believed then, and I believe now, that it was an important distinction to make. Mapantsula isn't a good or a bad person because he's an atheist.

quote:
So I think he is using the term "atheism" to loosely include the secular humanism also a part of his worldview. That is, he is arguing (I think) that atheism can have a response to this which is more than just "Tough luck, bub. The world sucks sometimes," and -- to be more specific for him -- that is because atheism does not rule out such perspectives as secular humanism, that atheists can also find meaning. And still be atheists.
I agree that one can still be an atheist and have many things more helpful and less cruel than, "@#$% happens pal, get used to it," and then walk away. But those many other helpful and meangingful things? They don't come from the atheism, nor do they come in spite of it.
 
Posted by Nato (Member # 1448) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:
However, if religion does not get credit for the good behavior of individuals--and I don't think it should--why then should atheism? I believed then, and I believe now, that it was an important distinction to make. Mapantsula isn't a good or a bad person because he's an atheist.

Right on that last point. He's responding to criticism that atheists are unable to appropriately respond to tragedy. He's saying they can and do have a fitting response. The people get the credit, their belief doesn't.

edit: a presumption of deitylessness in the world allows atheists to come to take positions on tragedies, but it is not responsible for their positions. It is like when somebody knows the weather is cold, they might respond by putting on earmuffs. The cold weather didn't put the earmuffs on them.
 
Posted by King of Men (Member # 6684) on :
 
Touching what theism has to offer in such a situation, I would note that many people have, in the past, found solace and comfort in alcohol.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
It's statements like that in part which prompted me to make the comparison I did [Smile]
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
Rakeesh,
quote:
quote:
While there are many flavours of moral philosophy, I haven't met many atheists in countries like America, Australia, or Japan who couldn't be described using the umbrella term 'secular humanist'. Even when the philosophies they draw from can be disparate, the morals they hold are often very similar; minimise suffering, increase happiness--with no deity as a middle man.
Then couldn't the author have properly credited his virtues by saying, "We secular humanists..."? Wouldn't you agree that it was (probably--I don't actually know the guy) the professor's secular humanism, and not his atheism, from which those virtues flowed?
Sure. I think that's really splitting hairs though. In the context of the discussion I think 'atheists' provided an appropriate contrast. It's also a more concise word than 'secular humanists', and what makes it doubly appropriate is that D'Souza was specifically attacking atheists on the basis that their disbelief led them to emotional poverty of some kind.

Were the comfy chairs a Monty Python reference?
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Euripedes,

quote:
Sure. I think that's really splitting hairs though. In the context of the discussion I think 'atheists' provided an appropriate contrast. It's also a more concise word than 'secular humanists', and what makes it doubly appropriate is that D'Souza was specifically attacking atheists on the basis that their disbelief led them to emotional poverty of some kind.
'Secular humanists' is two words. [Wink] I disagree that it's splitting hairs, I feel it's an important distinction to make when a comparison between atheism and theism comes up, as it did here, for the reasons noted above. But even if it were splitting hairs...well, those hairs have been split and resplit so many times in these discussions, I think they need some conditioner or something, don't you?

But all that aside, I don't know much about D'Souza--I saw him once on the Colbert Report--but he doesn't sound like a very well-meaning or especially smart fellow to me. And yup, MP reference.
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
It isn't splitting hairs. Atheism is a denial of something - not something positive in and of itself.

If there is something positive happening, then it is important to identify the source. The source is not the negation of something else.
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
So what IS the source, within secular humanism, of that something positive?
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
Does it matter? If humanism is positive, does it matter why?
 
Posted by Shigosei (Member # 3831) on :
 
I really enjoyed the professor's writing. I found it to be a thoughtful and moving response to a rather nasty rant. Why did D'Souza write something so negative? A similar point could be made without all the hurtfulness by explaining how faith is helping people deal with tragedy in their lives. Was he just trying to score points with his audience? Was he hoping to convince anyone?

I do think it is appropriate to discuss what thoughts and philosophies atheists find comforting in the face of something tragic, even if those things aren't inherently a part of atheism. The post went after both atheists and atheism, after all. At least he isn't actually blaming them for causing it.

Here's a list of things that are being blamed: http://www.cynical-c.com/?p=7191
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
I think that thread is very telling, Shig. I don't think human beings deal well with a member of society going off the rails. If we can find something to blame, then we can maybe prevent it from happening again.
 
Posted by Shigosei (Member # 3831) on :
 
Yeah. And it does make sense to me to try to understand why things like this happen, so that we can prevent them in the future. I don't think it's helpful to do it to try to place blame for this incident, however.
 
Posted by Morbo (Member # 5309) on :
 
I had seen a couple of lists of the nutty things people blamed for this, but your link was just so comprehensive, Shigosei. I was thinking about this earlier, that people have such a desperate need to search out meaning from tragedy. Blaming 50 different irrelevant causes is pointless but inevitable. [Frown] edit: it's mostly pointless, except as Shig says to try to prevent future tragedies.

Then, of course, there are those who, in the words of the governor, mount up their hobby-horses and flog the issue according to their own agendas. They are the ones who make me really mad. [Wall Bash]
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
Does it matter? If humanism is positive, does it matter why?
You just said that if "there is something positive happening, then it is important to identify the source." Secular humanism is a collection of beliefs. If there is something positive happening from secular humanism, it must stem from some of those beliefs. I think it would be important to figure out which beliefs if only to try and determine which beliefs are most important to have.
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
Ah, I see. I was calling humanism the source, and I thought you were asking what the metaphysical source of humanism was. I have an opinion on that, but I don't think it matters what the source of humanism is.

But it seems like now you asking what, specifically, are the positive-outcome-generating parts of humanism. Is that right?

I think that's a good question. I know some people call themselves humanists - what do y'all think are some postive-outcome-generating portions of it?
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Rakeesh:

But all that aside, I don't know much about D'Souza--I saw him once on the Colbert Report--but he doesn't sound like a very well-meaning or especially smart fellow to me.

I hadn't heard of him until now, but based on what he's written about this particular issue, I wholeheartedly agree.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
I've met him - he's actually a very smart guy.
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by katharina:

It isn't splitting hairs. Atheism is a denial of something - not something positive in and of itself.

It seems that way when we take the discussion into an academic debate and tear apart each word. Yet, D'Souza was attacking atheists generally, and secular humanism and a moral abhorrence for suffering is widespread enough among atheists for the author to write, 'We atheists believe...'

It's a perfectly reasonable statement. He didn't even say that atheists believe these things bceause of atheism. In fact, it was worded more like, 'We atheists don't do _____, but we see value in _____ and have meaningful ways of responding to tragedy too.'
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
For that to be true, Euripides, all or even most atheists would have to also be secular humanists and ascribe to his world view. That's a little presumptuous.
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
katharina, take a look at what the author claims atheists believe:
quote:
We believe in people, in their joys and pains, in their good ideas and their wit and wisdom. We believe in human rights and dignity, and we know what it is for those to be trampled on by brutes and vandals. We may believe that the universe is pitilessly indifferent but we know that friends and strangers alike most certainly are not. We despise atrocity, not because a god tells us that it is wrong, but because if not massacre then nothing could be wrong.
These aren't the tenets of a quirky or particularly specific moral philosophy; they are things which somewhere around 99% of atheists would agree on, depending upon what the author means by "human rights and dignity". In fact, a lot of those things apply to most people generally. Please see the statement in context. It's perfectly reasonable.


(it's been a long day; good night for now)
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
Most of the statements in that sentence specifies a source for the belief or a caveat to soften the belief.

Despise atrocity - because if not massacre then nothing could be wrong.
Believe in human rights and dignity - because of what happens when those are trampled.
Universe is pitilessly indifferent - but not friends or strangers most likely. (This last statement is definitely something that is not universal; there are plenty who think that strangers are often indifferent.)

For most of the statements, there is a reason or a source given. Those reasons do not come from atheism.
 
Posted by Euripides (Member # 9315) on :
 
He never said they did. Forgive me if I don't labour the point further. I'm repeating myself from the last page, and I really do need some shut-eye.
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
quote:
It isn't splitting hairs. Atheism is a denial of something - not something positive in and of itself.
The absence of something isn't always a negative thing, just because it's an absence. Sometimes it can even be positive. In this case, it's a perfectly neutral thing. Atheism does not begin with a 'bad' or 'good' universe/society/existance, it stems from a neutral one.

This, of course, does not mean that the sum of everything in the universe is neutral.
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
quote:
Those reasons do not come from atheism.
No. They don't. Atheism isn't religion. It doesn't give you anything but an absence of a supreme being, which, as I said before, is neutral. Religion defines the nature of earth and the ether etc., whereas atheism does not. It does not give you reasons. Perhaps this is what you mean by "something positive in of itself" in which case you are correct.

The beliefs of atheists that seem to be present ed here, come from the humans that create them; from observation, from scientific investigation, from experience, from hope. I would call this Humanism.

Atheism is really a name which exists only because for so long the default position has been Theism. In the world of an atheist, this viewpoint is usually reversed.

Although Euripides says that there are uniting beliefs for all atheists, I think that only applies to Humanists, who make up the vast majority of atheists. I suppose what you view as morality comes from Humanism.
 
Posted by katharina (Member # 827) on :
 
quote:
The beliefs of atheists that seem to be present ed here, come from the humans that create them; from observation, from scientific investigation, from experience, from hope. I would call this Humanism.
...
Although Euripides says that there are uniting beliefs for all atheists, I think that only applies to Humanists, who make up the vast majority of atheists.

This is exactly what I meant. [Smile]
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
And Humanism, I should add, comes from the people that ascribe to it. Anything positive is stemming from the people- the humans. That is what Humanism means.
 
Posted by Rakeesh (Member # 2001) on :
 
Euripedes,

quote:
It's a perfectly reasonable statement. He didn't even say that atheists believe these things bceause of atheism. In fact, it was worded more like, 'We atheists don't do _____, but we see value in _____ and have meaningful ways of responding to tragedy too.'
You and I at least have been over this before, but I thought I'd draw attention to our disagreement for the sake of newcomers to the conversation. I believe that since, when a religious person says, "We Mormons believe...," or, "We Catholics believe," or, "We Buddhists believe," that person is generally comprehended as implying (whether or not he knows what he's talking about) a statement about the behavior of Mormons, Catholics, Buddhists, etc., in general.

I believe that the same should be said for atheists, because it's been my experience (backed up by the author) that while atheists (when viewed in only that light) aren't unified by anything other than disbelief, there is still some kinship felt.

J4
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
I don't think it is a good idea to mix up the concepts of Atheism and Humanism. There are some atheists who are not Humanists, and it would be unfair to them for one thing. There are also many theists who are Humanists. I am inclined to think, if Christ's teachings are true, that God was the first Humanist.
 


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