5 reasons atheism is irrational
Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
Sometimes it takes a long thread to get to the point
... Now the next point . Anyone who ignores the obvious and convinces themselves that their funny feeling inside justifies throwing all sense and rationality out the door is a lunatic . 

Give me the wine , I don't need the bread
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Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
Well, I'd love to talk to you more about that, but I must go and bark at the moon for a while firstFeck wrote:Sometimes it takes a long thread to get to the point... Now the next point . Anyone who ignores the obvious and convinces themselves that their funny feeling inside justifies throwing all sense and rationality out the door is a lunatic .
"To one who has faith, no explanation is necessary. To one without faith, no explanation is possible" St. Thomas Aquinas
Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
At least the moon is there !Theophilus wrote:Well, I'd love to talk to you more about that, but I must go and bark at the moon for a while firstFeck wrote:Sometimes it takes a long thread to get to the point... Now the next point . Anyone who ignores the obvious and convinces themselves that their funny feeling inside justifies throwing all sense and rationality out the door is a lunatic .

Give me the wine , I don't need the bread
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Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
If course it is; I've seen it on the clangers.Feck wrote:At least the moon is there !Theophilus wrote:Well, I'd love to talk to you more about that, but I must go and bark at the moon for a while firstFeck wrote:Sometimes it takes a long thread to get to the point... Now the next point . Anyone who ignores the obvious and convinces themselves that their funny feeling inside justifies throwing all sense and rationality out the door is a lunatic .
"To one who has faith, no explanation is necessary. To one without faith, no explanation is possible" St. Thomas Aquinas
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Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
After all may many conversations with Christians, I am routinely left with the sneaking suspicion that they just don't want to say that they have no "reason" to believe what they believe, but they just feel that there must be something and Christianity seems to make the most sense to them. The believer wants to somehow justify his or her belief as if it's just as "backed up" by reality, reason and evidence as any other idea. They especially seem to want to create an "equivalence" - like "there's no way we can really know anything, so therefore my belief is just as justifiable." Or, that "atheists have as much faith (or sometimes 'more faith') as religious people."
That's the best I can do to describe this disconnect. And that is what it is. When a religious person thinks about his or her religion, there is a disconnect between that and how a person thinks about other things (and other religions).
I also find there is almost always a serious resistance to saying: I take it on faith, and that's that.
There seems to be a gut feeling among the religious that unless there is some sort of "proof" that their faith is a very weak reason to believe. So, there is this impulse to defend their faith and engage in apologetics to make it "make sense." Hence, we see people going through tortured rationale that somehow they can see as supremely persuasive, but the nonbeliever can't fathom how anyone can find the rationale persuasive.
I find it fascinating.
EDIT - oh - also, I almost always get a sense of fear or reticence to contemplate the concept that there may not be anything supernatural there - no life after death - and that once we're gone, there will be nothing, just like the 14.5 billion years before we were born. That, in my view, represents the driving force behind the believer's need to believe. They think something to the effect of, "this can't be the end, there MUST be something else there..."
Whereas I, on the other hand, am not disconcerted in the least at the prospect of there being nothing after this life. For some reason, I even find that to be a pleasant possibility, far less disconcerting than the potential offered by some religions, like Christianity. The idea that Christianity offers hope, to me, is really not something that makes sense to me. I see it as offering a death sentence - no, a torture sentence - to most of the human population. I see it as characterizing humans as bad and undeserving, whereas I see people as complexities of good and bad, to one degree or another. I wold much prefer nothing to come after life than an eternity of torment, and frankly, given that Christianity posits that most people who call themselves Christians are not on the right path, it really results in there being a tiny minority of humans that would even get into heaven. That, to me, is not a gift, but a curse.
I think if someone gave me the choice of either (A) some form of Christianity is real, and you have to figure out which manner of believing is the right one - or you have to take the chance of whether god will grant you his "grace" - or (B) being guaranteed not to go to hell, but that this life will be the only one and oblivion is alll that remains. I would take B. The gambler inside of me would think about A, but I think I'd rather just be guaranteed that there wouldn't be any pain or torment for eternity.
That's why one of my favorite quotes is Asimov's: "Although the time of death is approaching me, I am not afraid of dying and going to Hell or (what would be considerably worse) going to the popularized version of Heaven. I expect death to be nothingness and, for removing me from all possible fears of death, I am thankful to atheism.."
That's the best I can do to describe this disconnect. And that is what it is. When a religious person thinks about his or her religion, there is a disconnect between that and how a person thinks about other things (and other religions).
I also find there is almost always a serious resistance to saying: I take it on faith, and that's that.
There seems to be a gut feeling among the religious that unless there is some sort of "proof" that their faith is a very weak reason to believe. So, there is this impulse to defend their faith and engage in apologetics to make it "make sense." Hence, we see people going through tortured rationale that somehow they can see as supremely persuasive, but the nonbeliever can't fathom how anyone can find the rationale persuasive.
I find it fascinating.
EDIT - oh - also, I almost always get a sense of fear or reticence to contemplate the concept that there may not be anything supernatural there - no life after death - and that once we're gone, there will be nothing, just like the 14.5 billion years before we were born. That, in my view, represents the driving force behind the believer's need to believe. They think something to the effect of, "this can't be the end, there MUST be something else there..."
Whereas I, on the other hand, am not disconcerted in the least at the prospect of there being nothing after this life. For some reason, I even find that to be a pleasant possibility, far less disconcerting than the potential offered by some religions, like Christianity. The idea that Christianity offers hope, to me, is really not something that makes sense to me. I see it as offering a death sentence - no, a torture sentence - to most of the human population. I see it as characterizing humans as bad and undeserving, whereas I see people as complexities of good and bad, to one degree or another. I wold much prefer nothing to come after life than an eternity of torment, and frankly, given that Christianity posits that most people who call themselves Christians are not on the right path, it really results in there being a tiny minority of humans that would even get into heaven. That, to me, is not a gift, but a curse.
I think if someone gave me the choice of either (A) some form of Christianity is real, and you have to figure out which manner of believing is the right one - or you have to take the chance of whether god will grant you his "grace" - or (B) being guaranteed not to go to hell, but that this life will be the only one and oblivion is alll that remains. I would take B. The gambler inside of me would think about A, but I think I'd rather just be guaranteed that there wouldn't be any pain or torment for eternity.
That's why one of my favorite quotes is Asimov's: "Although the time of death is approaching me, I am not afraid of dying and going to Hell or (what would be considerably worse) going to the popularized version of Heaven. I expect death to be nothingness and, for removing me from all possible fears of death, I am thankful to atheism.."
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Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
I find that interesting, and it is line with the Reformed Christian tradition (and that of certain Catholic theologians such as Catherine of Sienna) that those not "in Christ", those that have not repented*, would never wish to be with Christ/God after this life anyway.Coito ergo sum wrote:That's why one of my favorite quotes is Asimov's: "Although the time of death is approaching me, I am not afraid of dying and going to Hell or (what would be considerably worse) going to the popularized version of Heaven. I expect death to be nothingness and, for removing me from all possible fears of death, I am thankful to atheism.."
*I take N.T.Wright's view that "repentance" or "metanoia" in scripture is not simply talking about repenting of personal sin but rather is talking about embracing a new way of thinking; in the context of the message at the time it was embracing the idea that Christ was building the Kingdom of God rather than the Kingdom of God being focussed on the temple. Repentance is not being sorry for sin (though it would include that), but is letting an old way of thinking and acting die and embracing a new way (our old selves die, so that our new selves may have life, paraphrasing Matthew 16:28).
(I liked Carl Sagan, his "Cosmos" series made a big impression on me when I was young, fueling my desire to make a career out of science).
"To one who has faith, no explanation is necessary. To one without faith, no explanation is possible" St. Thomas Aquinas
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Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
Jam tomorrow.Theophilus wrote:I find that interesting, and it is line with the Reformed Christian tradition (and that of certain Catholic theologians such as Catherine of Sienna) that those not "in Christ", those that have not repented*, would never wish to be with Christ/God after this life anyway.Coito ergo sum wrote:That's why one of my favorite quotes is Asimov's: "Although the time of death is approaching me, I am not afraid of dying and going to Hell or (what would be considerably worse) going to the popularized version of Heaven. I expect death to be nothingness and, for removing me from all possible fears of death, I am thankful to atheism.."
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Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
And today, if you buy in to Joel Osteen's prosperity gospelThinking Aloud wrote:Jam tomorrow.Theophilus wrote:I find that interesting, and it is line with the Reformed Christian tradition (and that of certain Catholic theologians such as Catherine of Sienna) that those not "in Christ", those that have not repented*, would never wish to be with Christ/God after this life anyway.Coito ergo sum wrote:That's why one of my favorite quotes is Asimov's: "Although the time of death is approaching me, I am not afraid of dying and going to Hell or (what would be considerably worse) going to the popularized version of Heaven. I expect death to be nothingness and, for removing me from all possible fears of death, I am thankful to atheism.."
I can say, from a personal viewpoint, the "after-life" was something I did not dwell on much as I was coming back into the church and I don't dwell on it much now. But I accept that for others that it may be a significant factor.
"To one who has faith, no explanation is necessary. To one without faith, no explanation is possible" St. Thomas Aquinas
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Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
Yeah, that Joel Osteen's religion is ridiculous. Yours makes sense. His is ridiculous. How could anyone "buy into" that?Theophilus wrote:And today, if you buy in to Joel Osteen's prosperity gospelThinking Aloud wrote:Jam tomorrow.Theophilus wrote:I find that interesting, and it is line with the Reformed Christian tradition (and that of certain Catholic theologians such as Catherine of Sienna) that those not "in Christ", those that have not repented*, would never wish to be with Christ/God after this life anyway.Coito ergo sum wrote:That's why one of my favorite quotes is Asimov's: "Although the time of death is approaching me, I am not afraid of dying and going to Hell or (what would be considerably worse) going to the popularized version of Heaven. I expect death to be nothingness and, for removing me from all possible fears of death, I am thankful to atheism.."![]()
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Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
Oh, you are a tease Ces 
"To one who has faith, no explanation is necessary. To one without faith, no explanation is possible" St. Thomas Aquinas
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Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
It's not that I have any wish not to be with Christ/God after this life. It's that I recognize that if Christians are correct, most humans who have ever lived go to hell. That doesn't make any one particular human's odds very good. Further, some Christian denominations teach that there is nothing a specific human can do to find heaven. God either calls an individual, or he doesn't. Maybe they're right. I don't know.Theophilus wrote:I find that interesting, and it is line with the Reformed Christian tradition (and that of certain Catholic theologians such as Catherine of Sienna) that those not "in Christ", those that have not repented*, would never wish to be with Christ/God after this life anyway.Coito ergo sum wrote:That's why one of my favorite quotes is Asimov's: "Although the time of death is approaching me, I am not afraid of dying and going to Hell or (what would be considerably worse) going to the popularized version of Heaven. I expect death to be nothingness and, for removing me from all possible fears of death, I am thankful to atheism.."
The thing that Asimov was getting at was that Christianity (or any religion with a potentially torturous afterlife) is what gives us a fear of the afterlife. If there is no Christian god, then there is no Christian hell, and nobody is tormented for all eternity.
What way of thinking is that, exactly?Theophilus wrote:
*I take N.T.Wright's view that "repentance" or "metanoia" in scripture is not simply talking about repenting of personal sin but rather is talking about embracing a new way of thinking;
So? Does that change the fact that most humans will be tortured for all eternity if one of the predominant Christian views are correct? (not all Christians believe in Hell, but that's another matter, and further makes my point about us not being able to tell which belief is right).Theophilus wrote: in the context of the message at the time it was embracing the idea that Christ was building the Kingdom of God rather than the Kingdom of God being focussed on the temple.
So? Does that change the fact that most humans will be tortured for all eternity if one of the predominant Christian views are correct?Theophilus wrote:
Repentance is not being sorry for sin (though it would include that), but is letting an old way of thinking and acting die and embracing a new way (our old selves die, so that our new selves may have life, paraphrasing Matthew 16:28).
What is the new way of thinking and acting?
Carl was very incisive:Theophilus wrote:
(I liked Carl Sagan, his "Cosmos" series made a big impression on me when I was young, fueling my desire to make a career out of science).
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Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
It's not meant in a teasing manner. It's quite serious.Theophilus wrote:Oh, you are a tease Ces
It is quite a good example of the point I've made.
His view is no more (or less) unverifiable than yours. There is no special reason that what you believe is more credible than his. He has the same evidence for his beliefs as you have for yours. It's no different to "buy into" Osteen's belief as it is to "buy into" yours.
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Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
Except that Olsteen claims authority of the bible, and many have pointed to the flaws in his exegesis (when he does exegete in any detail, which is rarely). I would say, from what I have seen of his views, that his is a theology with internal inconstancies. His is not the view of the Christian who must take up his cross.Coito ergo sum wrote:It's not meant in a teasing manner. It's quite serious.Theophilus wrote:Oh, you are a tease Ces
It is quite a good example of the point I've made.
His view is no more (or less) unverifiable than yours. There is no special reason that what you believe is more credible than his. He has the same evidence for his beliefs as you have for yours. It's no different to "buy into" Osteen's belief as it is to "buy into" yours.
"To one who has faith, no explanation is necessary. To one without faith, no explanation is possible" St. Thomas Aquinas
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Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
You too rarely exegete any detail, and I can guarantee you that "many" can point out flaws in your exegesis. That's what Christians do quite often, one denomination points out the flaws in the others' exegesis. Protestants are sure Catholics are way off base, and Catholics are sure Protestants are way off base.Theophilus wrote:Except that Olsteen claims authority of the bible, and many have pointed to the flaws in his exegesis (when he does exegete in any detail, which is rarely).Coito ergo sum wrote:It's not meant in a teasing manner. It's quite serious.Theophilus wrote:Oh, you are a tease Ces
It is quite a good example of the point I've made.
His view is no more (or less) unverifiable than yours. There is no special reason that what you believe is more credible than his. He has the same evidence for his beliefs as you have for yours. It's no different to "buy into" Osteen's belief as it is to "buy into" yours.
What are the internal inconsistencies?Theophilus wrote:
I would say, from what I have seen of his views, that his is a theology with internal inconstancies. His is not the view of the Christian who must take up his cross.
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Re: 5 reasons atheism is irrational
In depth exegetical discussions on an atheist forum? I can't see that world be productive as there is no common frame of reference.Coito ergo sum wrote:You too rarely exegete any detail
In a message that teaches (effectively) that you'll get everything you want in this world by following Christ? I would say that is inconsistent with the source of his claimed authority (such as in Luke 16:19-31 and Mark 10:17-24). O.K., we don't meet up to those standards, but to actually preach seeking and attaining financial prosperity through following Christ seems a tad off-target to me. Still, if you find no inconsistencies with Olsteen's message then fair enough.Coito ergo sum wrote:What are the internal inconsistencies?
But I accept I may be wrong about Olsteen's beliefs; I have not looked into them in detail but I find the tag-lines he uses (such as here and here) rather out of kilter with my understanding of scripture.
P.S. If you're interested in Olsteen then there's a documentary here from Premier Christian radio on a couple of US mega-churches, including Olsteen's.
P.P.S. I assume you know Premier also run a forum that is intended for mixed Christians and non-Christians to interact. That's here, though it does tend to get bogged down in creation debates.
"To one who has faith, no explanation is necessary. To one without faith, no explanation is possible" St. Thomas Aquinas
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