Author Topic: The $%*! frustration thread  (Read 484545 times)

Radical_Dreamer

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4365 on: October 27, 2009, 04:36:46 pm »
Conversely, the more children a woman has, the more likely subsequent children will be homosexual. Assuming these trends continue, it is quite likely that in the future homosexuals will easily outnumber atheists. It is quite possible that homosexuality will become more socially acceptable than atheism.

Atheists are presently the least trusted minority in America. So your hypothetical is already somewhat indicative of present reality.

Daniel Krispin

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4366 on: October 27, 2009, 04:40:42 pm »
Hm, no, ZeaLitY on this manner has an extreme bias that should be watched for. Sorry, ZeaLitY, but it is true. You are not speaking very rationally when you approach the aspect of religion. And, let me add to this, that you are not particularly versed in the subject. I know you think you are, but your statements are about it tend to be about the level of a schoolchild attempting to grasp advanced physics. I find it amusing that one could easily take someone to task for being a mere dillitante in the sciences, and by the misunderstanding what they mean, but when it comes to religion, everyone thinks they can have a valid, intelligent, and meaningful opinion. It's simply not the case. It is a genuine field of study, as complex as any other, and to think it can be dismissed on the grounds of an intuitive opinion, or that one branch of the sciences (ie. empiricism, which is a branch, and a branch only, because religion does technically fall under the aegis of science or, shall we say rather, philosophy) can disprove the other in this fashion, is absurd and egocentric. There is nothing validated in statements made from mere personal rage and ignorance, and that is all you've tended to typically say on the matter.

My second frustration of the day. That ZeaLitY is allowed to ramble at a novice level about how much he hates religion, and indeed at how great science is also at a novice level, and thinks he can utterly shut down those who actually are dually versed by in applied scientific and humanities alike. As far as I know, I am the only one here that has formal training in both. So I'm taking the stand against ZeaLitY.

I've been watching that development from afar, ZeaLitY, and I must say now, this heavyhanded authoritarian approach almost had me quit the forums in disgust a while back - that is why I stopped posting for several months, in fact. I was utterly disgusted by what happened to what was supposed to be an intellectual forum. I am actively participating in scholarly works, and while you had wanted some sort of high minded debate for this place, your own fervor has been destroying it. It's often seeming to me that the Compendium is becoming less a forum for open discussion and more ZeaLitY's smiting the wicked who disagree. And frankly, man, and this must be said, if one speaks of fields of learning, of intellectualism, I, or Thought perhaps (sorry for bringing you into this, but you're the only other I know of as trained as I am), are far more actually knowledeable, and have been more exposed to varying fields of thought. I have gone through a liberal school-system, so I bear those marks as well - not, I must add, something I count for a negative. But the frank fact is, your rants are nothing more than that: you have nothing to support them that would hold academic weight, you have no actual training, not in the sciences, not in religion. Therefore it'd be rather good if you'd stop lambasting these others when you do not stand head and shoulders above them, save perhaps in the fury of your voice. That you can shout louder than Truthordeal doesn't make you more right.

But I am drawing academic elitist rank on you. I know this is your Compendium, but in the name of intellectual interaction, stop it. And I mean that seriously. I've had enough of your anti-religious rants. If you really want to have something to add to that matter, do so intelligently, and don't sound like the anti-religious version of a fire and brimstone preacher. And don't just quote this and that that agrees with you. Anyone can twist the facts.

And frankly, ZeaLitY, a bit of historic studies would do you good. Understand that this debate between religious and atheists is not something that just recently arose. It has existed for thousands of years, and I'll have you know that there were those of the ancient Greeks who would have thought exactly as you did. It's tempting to think that due to our supposed scientific advancements we have no more need of gods, but hey, that exact thought existed in antiquity already, when Rome was still a village on the Tiber. Even then the philosophers had decided that these gods they believed in were ridiculous.

How is that for fury? It has been gnawing at my liver for far too long, and this is but the broken levy.

If my comments are considered too shameful, too shocking or daring, well, fine, I'll leave the Compendium, and go to where open dialogue is actually welcomed, in the University. Because I'm just too tired of seeing this. We should NOT be anti- anything. We should talk about it. Discuss it. Not villify, not bring prejudice and bigotry into the matter, for any group. I am certainly open to people questioning the validity of my belief... heck, I know they're irrational at heart, they have to be. This is not problematic. But what is problematic is this beat-down, this heavy authority against disagreement. Should we all not feel free to speak our minds with an appetite for disagreement, rather than a fear of snarls? Open minds, people, open minds. And this goes especially for those people and things we disagree with. Hatred, ZeaLitY, has no place in academics, no place in intellectualism.


Quote from:  Radical Dreamer
Atheists are presently the least trusted minority in America. So your hypothetical is already somewhat indicative of present reality.

See my previous frustration. 'In America'. Note that I am speaking as not an American, and we Canadians are not so theocratic as you are. As such, take my comments as from a country in which atheism is not mistrusted, indeed has a balance or even advantage.
« Last Edit: October 27, 2009, 04:59:50 pm by Daniel Krispin »

Truthordeal

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4367 on: October 27, 2009, 05:02:53 pm »
Quote from: Daniel Krispin
Oh, and Truthordeal, actually, so far as I know, the US actually doesn't have a very high average IQ... actually, a pretty low one. IQ doesn't really mean much, of course, but since you brought it up, I thought I'd mention it. Actually, I think on most charts, whether it be standard of living, etc. America tends to rank pretty low. But you are correct, there have been many highly intelligent that are religious. The problem is that those who think that atheists are smarter are drawing a flawed connection. The two simply do not match, no matter how much they want it to. It is, I suppose, a form of self-validation, but it just doesn't work.



Why does everyone keep confusing me for GenesisOne?

Daniel Krispin

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4368 on: October 27, 2009, 05:04:56 pm »
Because you make similar arguments.

And I reconsidered that thought, anyway. Those guys might actually be right, there might be a correlation between religious belief and IQ.

Radical_Dreamer

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4369 on: October 27, 2009, 05:07:34 pm »
Quote from:  Radical Dreamer
Atheists are presently the least trusted minority in America. So your hypothetical is already somewhat indicative of present reality.

See my previous frustration. 'In America'. Note that I am speaking as not an American, and we Canadians are not so theocratic as you are. As such, take my comments as from a country in which atheism is not mistrusted, indeed has a balance or even advantage.

I'm not sure why you were singling out this comment. It was made in the context of a conversation about the social status of homosexuals and atheists within the United States. I am aware that this is an international forum, and that what is true in America isn't necessarily true in other nations. I prefaced my statement to indicate the scope of its assertion. I'm not sure what you would have had me do differently.

If you'd like to talk about Canadian social issues, that'd be fine. I have no real knowledge of the topic though, so expect more questions than assertions from me.

Thought

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4370 on: October 27, 2009, 05:26:12 pm »
I believe it has already been proven true, that the more intelligent you are, the greater the likelyhood of being an atheist.
I have no idea on the validity of this site but it seems to have studies and the like to possibly prove it.
http://www.huppi.com/kangaroo/L-thinkingchristians.htm

Alas, such studies are highly suspect. Those studies listed in the website you linked to focus on college students, but better studies would track life-long religious beliefs. They sould also divide the results by subject matter (how do the beliefs of theater majors compare to the beliefs of mathematicians, for example). Double-blind studies would be good, too. That particular website also seems to confuse liberal and atheism. A extremely liberal religious individual is more than an extremely timid and conservative atheist. Studies showing that liberal individuals are considered more intelligent than conservative individuals, within the same classification of religion, tell us nothing about atheism.

Now this isn't to say that theists are more intelligent than atheists, nor is this to say that atheists are not more intelligent than theists. Rather, just that the science has yet to be done.

Given that conservatives are less likely to challenge the beliefs that they grew up with, and that academics tend to judge intelligence based on one's willingness and ability to challenge preconceived notions, I would actually expect that right now that most "intelligent people" would be atheists. Though, if atheism becomes the norm, I would expect the reverse to be true as well. Terribly few individuals, theist or atheist, have actually put in the work necessary to make an informed, reasonable decision. I see no sign that such a trend will change.

And that's my frustration. I have at times been treated as speaking for the status quo, or some sort of religious theocracy, or the powerful majority, or similar things. Now while that might be true were I an American, I am not, and in this country (and this is yet more pronounced if I travel east or west) my occassionally more conservative viewpoints are in fact the minority, and if I do speak against certain things it is not upholding the norm, but challenging it. I have a perspective that many of you simply don't have.

Such is the curse of the internet forum. Here, you aren't Canadian, you aren't even a person. You're a voice in someone's head as they read your words. To an extent, you are them, and if they are American, you are an American. That is a two way street, but given that we Americans have a tendency to bluster about, it’s a bit more noticeable with us.

It isn't fair, certainly, and it is good to struggle against this. But... it is the internet. Your among the very "hoi"est of the "polloi." and let me apologize for misusing a Greek phrase like that, but I think it conveys the meaning I'm getting at.

FaustWolf

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4371 on: October 27, 2009, 05:47:37 pm »
But Daniel, wasn't ZeaLitY actually in training for Mormon priesthood for awhile? His theological knowledge certainly outstrips my own at least; sometimes deep familiarity with a subject can breed a powerful negative reaction. As an analogy, I've never had a crisis of faith because what passes as my faith is comparatively lukewarm for being self-taught and concocted from a wide array of elements; by contrast, both ZealitY and Lord J seemed to have been extremely familiar with the ins and outs of specific religious traditions and practices, and they apparently experienced powerful revulsion. I wouldn't be surprised if that were the case with a number of members here of atheist persuasion. It doesn't mean everyone with theological training is going to end up on that side of the equation, but after seeing so many people of our generation turn out ultra-liberal after being raised ultra-conservative, I can't help but feel something culturally important may be happening here. It seems religious institutions are turning out atheists with some efficiency; traditional religion is devouring itself voraciously (...in American society).

ZeaLitY's attitude toward religion may be much like my attitude toward pornography. I couldn't quite identify with what ZeaLitY was feeling until I approached it through my own experience with something I consider absolutely evil and horrid; the fervor with which ZeaLitY has railed against religion made a whole lot more sense once I started reflecting on my huge attack on porn a couple weeks back. ZeaLitY has probably witnessed people being damaged by religious zeal, just as I've had to remove misogynistic smut from the computers of politicians and heard stories about guys who literally couldn't "get it up" with their girlfriends because they weren't dating porn stars, or else overhearing complaints from female college students about sex acts they were asked to perform by men they were dating.

Given the level of fervor with which ZeaLitY has addressed religion, the true test of his character as leader of the Compendium is whether he starts banning people who disagree with him on this subject. So far he has passed this test because that hasn't happened, and I think the religious debates we've had here have at times progressed with a modicum of civility as long as we each checked ourselves and remembered to remain civil. These forums are still a bastion of free speech in all but the most extreme cases; only bots and people who post outright pornography are summarily banned, unless they leaked Crimson Echoes or something. As far as the majority attitude towards religion goes, I think the Compendium community is about on par judging from other videogame-oriented communities. Although it would be interesting to see if there's any videogame forum out there where the majority of participants identify as religious.
« Last Edit: October 27, 2009, 06:21:58 pm by FaustWolf »

ZeaLitY

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4372 on: October 27, 2009, 07:56:58 pm »
Yes, I nearly went on a Mormon mission. I was (and am) ordained as a Priest, which isn't quite on the level of priests in other churches, but is definitely above the status of deacon in a Catholic church, I think. I suppose if I had obtained the Melchezidek (sp) priesthood I'd be more qualified to speak, eh?

Quote
Nicholas Copernicus, Sir Francis Bacon, Johannes Kepler, Galileo Galilei, Rene Descartes, Isaac Newton, Robert Boyle, Michael Faraday, Gregor Mendel, William Thomson Kelvin, Max Planck...

Historical figures believed in God because 1) scientific rationality and skepticism was not at a level requisite to challenge the notion in European society yet, and 2) everybody did it as the cultural norm, and if you doubted God, you invited instant death. If born in today's society, these figures would have assuredly all been atheists.

Quote
And, let me add to this, that you are not particularly versed in the subject. I know you think you are, but your statements are about it tend to be about the level of a schoolchild attempting to grasp advanced physics.

Religion and theology are not subjects worth being particularly versed in.

Imagine that I create an entire fictional world called Zealandia. I give it a set of scriptures from my own personal beliefs; I intertwine thousands of myths; I effectively created a legendarium to rival the length and depth of the Rings series. Unfortunately, in this case, my writing is very, obviously bad. I then parade my work around as divine word, and anyone who dares criticize me will be met with, "but you aren't particularly versed in my mythology of Zealandia; how can you criticize it?" Do you think anyone will care enough to read my Tolkien-length legendarium of fantasy and myth just to criticize it, when it's obvious that it's 1) not divine and 2) not a good work of literature? There's no need to learn the intricacies of a fictional work to understand that it's fictional. A person could pick up Lord of the Rings and understand that it's fictional immediately, without ever bothering to learn who Aragorn is. And a person should be able to see that religion is fiction without bothering to memorize Jesus's patriarchal heritage or all the psalms.

What can be asserted without proof can be dismissed without proof.

Quote
I've had enough of your anti-religious rants.

Ah, it's like the Lord J treatment, vintage 2004. It is an enduring, thankful tradition on this forum that it's populated mainly by secularists and atheists. And now, it's becoming populated with social justice activists on top of that. And who is a massive purveyor of social evils in the modern world? Religion. And the condition and atmosphere of this forum are ones of free discussion, to include respecting people. Lord J and the others don't call people idiots personally on this forum for being religious. But they do not ever hesitate to highlight the evils and injustices promulgated by religious people. It seems you are offended by complicity, rather than personal insult. Nothing can be done about that. The forum will not be censored so that the religious can claim their sanctimonious higher ground and sacred cows. Just recently, the US delegation to the UN voiced support for the resolution to limit criticism of religion in order to offend fewer Muslim sensitivities. Contrarily, criticism of religion should be prized and encouraged, as religion claims dominion over all life and claims moral authority. That's going to come to an end. Despicable religious acts, such as the excommunication of a Brazilian rape victim, or the justification of war, or its countless other atrocities shouldn't be sugar-coated to sound less despicable. Religion has no shield of sanctimony here.

Quote
And frankly, ZeaLitY, a bit of historic studies would do you good. Understand that this debate between religious and atheists is not something that just recently arose. It has existed for thousands of years, and I'll have you know that there were those of the ancient Greeks who would have thought exactly as you did. It's tempting to think that due to our supposed scientific advancements we have no more need of gods, but hey, that exact thought existed in antiquity already, when Rome was still a village on the Tiber. Even then the philosophers had decided that these gods they believed in were ridiculous.

That was still in a very undeveloped environment, and one in which a surprise Visigoth attack or a token Fall of Constantinople could reset civilization a few centuries. Now, we have modern, irrevocable ground. And the demographic information is showing that fruition is taking place. Atheism is on the rise faster than ever before.
« Last Edit: October 27, 2009, 07:59:28 pm by ZeaLitY »

Daniel Krispin

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4373 on: October 27, 2009, 09:09:26 pm »
That was still in a very undeveloped environment, and one in which a surprise Visigoth attack or a token Fall of Constantinople could reset civilization a few centuries. Now, we have modern, irrevocable ground. And the demographic information is showing that fruition is taking place. Atheism is on the rise faster than ever before.

Oh, instant death for those figures? Really, do you really believe that? It is not the case. Heck, I bet you still believe that old story that Galileo was made to recant about the sun on religious grounds too, eh? Of course it was because he was refuting another scientist (Aristotle... how dare he question Aristotle!), but of course, showing that for the true scientific battle that it was isn't so fashionable as making it the great ol' oppression of science by religion, eh? But no, forget the truth of the matter, it doesn't really matter, eh? It's a lot more helpful just to repreat the old mantra - religion's bad - and hold it accountable. It must be held accountable! For what it did and even for what it didn't do... it'd have done it anyway! And even if not, hey, it's something it deserves, I think... oh, dear, where is this train taking us now? ZeaLitY, do you not see? You are buying into this great myth! It is not fact, it is itself fiction, a skewed perception of history, and you are believing it as readily as ever you believed your Mormon teachings in days past. There have been others like this, the, oh, Marxist perception of history, that all's been the war of classes (mostly out of favour now), let's see... the feminist one (second wave feminist, also out of favour) that history has been an attempt to control women, which is an offshoot of Marxist concepts of economic control (you might actually still be holding to this one without realising that the time when it was considered a viable theory is in fact come and gone amongst reputable scholars... sort of taking the gleanings of the field decades thereafter. Feminism is actually more in third wave form, which is, I think, a bit more realistic and quite a bit more interesting.) The point is, these various paradigms for viewing history come and go. They all have their virtues, but no one is overarchingly correct. You're just buying into the atheistic one which is in vogue, but which will also have a similar fate. Each has some truth, but none of them really explain history correctly. This is something you must come to realize about paradigms.

And, oddly, these paradigms serve the same function that myths did in ages path. Do you realise, ZeaLitY, in doing what you are doing you are writing the myths of our age? Seems we can't get that desire for mythmaking out of our hearts... but this is what it is. Taking a certain view of the world and constructing the view of the past to fit. Setting up the villains and the heroes, rearranging the pieces. It's actually all quite fascinating. Unfortunately, though, you do not seem to be aware that you are doing it, and thus are not a mythmaker, but a merely a participant in the process.

Anyway, if such outdated view of history is what you hold, then you are sorely undereducated in it. No, ZeaLitY, for one thing, I was speaking of an earlier era, pre-Rome, and the foundations that were laid then endured even to this very day. Not to mention this idea of a 'dark age' is an absurd view that has been heartily dismissed these days. We did not lose our learning, and civilization was not reset... indeed, you are several decades - at the least! - behind in where scholarship is on such issues. That, in fact, is one of your problems: you have not kept up with modern developments, and most of your assertions are based on theoretical frameworks and conceptions of history that are woefully behind the times.

A philosopher from anquity could just have well said the same thing and, indeed, he would have had just as much reason to say so. Your view of history is terribly flawed: it is little wonder that your assertions about the present have so many holes. It is downright laughable that you should say that scientific rationality was not at the point yet where such things could be questioned: it was so even in antiquity. Hell, man, you need to look at some Lucretius! You have a terrible sense of Presentism, or if you were a prejudice to previous ages. The very fact that you think all times before this to have been steeped in some sort of dark age of ignorance and mysticism (save perhaps the glorious Greeks) is terribly outdated. Actually, you often have the sound of a 19th century Neoclassicist in that. The point is, you simply cannot make these assertions you do: they are based only on a flawed understanding of history, no matter what you would like to think.

As for the rest, again, you have thourough misunderstanding of many things. For one thing, your dismissing of religion as a field because it does not fall into your category of what is worth studying is rather dismaying. Indeed, you are dismissing what you do not know out of ignorance, not out of knowledge. Nor was I speaking of the training that ministers receive, because many of these are themselves unversed in the more subtle aspects of religious studies. I was speaking more of theology. And that is a field that can be discussed and dissected without even believing in a God, because it does entail the study of human nature - it tells us something about ourselves as well. But you have wholesale ignored this because it does not fit your criteria.

Not to mention, if you are implying that the Bible is not a good work of literature, on that ground alone you are sorely mistaken. Reject any truth or reason to it at all, it is undeniably good at points. The wisdom literature of Ecclesiastes, the Cosmology of Genesis... even if you put no more stock into these than you do the Ennuma Elish and Hesiod, it can still be good. As, indeed, Hesiod IS good. Ever read, I wonder, the Titanomachy segment? No, I doubt it... else you might have a touch of an appreciation what a religious mindset can write, when possessed of an artistic spirit.

And, oh, well, your list of - again I'll use your term - incuriousness continues! Fiction, you call Lord of the Rings? Yes, maybe, but what is fiction? Is there not truth contained even in a work of so-called fiction? Does not Hamlet, never having lived, tell us more about ourselves than those around us? Does not the fall of Agamemnon in Aeschylus' work teach to us ever so much, or as is said, that the muses tell truth in amidst lies? ZeaLitY, you do not understand literature, or the humanistic endeavour! All you see is fact and fiction, but haven't even cared to discern what those terms are! Oddly, you make the selfsame mistake that my fundamentalist friends have made (hmm... and you do have a fundamentalist upbringing, do you not? It seems to have travelled with you...): that you take only that which is there present to be truth. Either one says 'what this book says is true' or 'only what happened is true'... it amounts to the same fallacy. Truth does not only lie in the event, but in the interpretation of the event, and this is something you have yet to learn. Until you do, much of the world remains closed to you, and you are not in a springtime but a cold and hoar winter of black and white.

Nor are your view on science any better, a field which, again, I will maintain you have very little training or knowledge of. You use it as your gambit, your supposedly unshakeable trump. 'At least I have science.' Well, you don't. You have what you think is science, you have a layman's attraction to it that hardly manifests anything of true curiosity (to use your terminology) or understanding.

Let us, for example, take that ridicilous quote you are so fond of putting forward, that that which can be proposed without proof can be dismissed without such. This is foolish. This is because what you think to be science is not science in the general sense, but a very specific form of it, Empircism. Now this is good and fine - it has its place - but it is not the end all and be all to what science is. However, you do not, rather refuse to, accept this as being the case because it undermines your position. You have taken it as a godhead, to borrow religeous terminology, and defend it with all the fervour of a fervent believer. You are making apriori assumptions about things...

Yet again, you do not know yourself enough to see this be the case.

Yes, you think you are some great crusader for enlightenment, but you do not even know what enlightenment entails. Your eyes are clouded with anger, and all you see is bloody Ares through them... you know, it's of this sort of nature you express, either from the religious or atheists, that has foremost caused the very oppression and war you abhor... you, ZeaLitY, are in fact taking on yourself the nature and raiment which most allows those injustices to be perpetrated. And you have the audacity to style yourself some sort of crusader.

The irony in this statement you made is almost amusing...

'The forum will not be censored so that the religious can claim their sanctimonious higher ground and sacred cows.'

But you would see it censored, or at least invoke great wrath, so that the Empiricists can claim their sanctimonious higher ground and sacred cows? Because that's what you're doing, and doing with each breath you take here. You are defending what you hold sacred with a sense of self-righteousness. You only praise that which agrees with you, and damn those who disagree? Open-minded? ZeaLitY, these days, you are amongst the most closed-minded people I know. You wish to see nothing if it doesn't fall in your world view, and the only beauty is that which agrees with you.

ZeaLitY, from the likes of you, from those with this selfsame temper, HAVE begun the holy wars, from those who speak with hateful passion against their compeers of another creed.
« Last Edit: October 27, 2009, 09:34:23 pm by Daniel Krispin »

alfadorredux

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4374 on: October 27, 2009, 09:37:22 pm »
ZealitY, the problem isn't your beliefs, it's that you push your agenda using much the
same methods (sometimes including subtle bullying tactics) that are often used by theists
to push their agenda. Browbeating people isn't right no matter why you do it,
and it's a large part of the reason why I avoid the General Discussion forum here a
lot of the time. It sometimes creates a toxic atmosphere that, quite frankly, makes
me cringe.

You may very well fall into the category of "people who see argumentation as a
normal mode of discussion" and as such be unable to perceive just what is harmful
about what you're doing, but I'm afraid it does hurt people. I think the only reason
that it hasn't gutted the Compendium, as I've seen similar patterns of behaviour
by regular posters do in other places, is that, on average, women seem to be more
bothered by it than men (which leads me to wonder if the gender balance here is a
cause or an effect...) I know it makes me feel uncomfortable and unwelcome, even
though I am not a theist
.

And, y'know, while the effect of symbolism and ritual on the human mind isn't exactly
perfectly understood, there's no doubt that they do have an effect. For some
people, that effect is the real attraction of religion, and it has absolutely nothing
to do with theism. And there are harmless theists out there, too. Like my parents.
People who keep to themselves and don't attempt to dictate the actions or beliefs
of others, not even their own children.

Religion isn't innately harmful. Even believing in things that aren't true isn't
innately harmful--most people do it every day (there are studies out there that show
that people who are mildly depressed actually evaluate themselves and the
world around them more realistically than normal, happy, well-adjusted people, but
that doesn't mean that depression is something desirable!) What's harmful is using
any belief--true, false, or unprovable as either at the present time--as an
excuse to hurt others, which is what you're doing. Just like the people you're
railing against.

Daniel Krispin

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4375 on: October 27, 2009, 09:56:36 pm »
What Alfador said.

IAmSerge

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4376 on: October 27, 2009, 10:18:05 pm »

Religion and theology are not subjects worth being particularly versed in.


neither is the fictitious Chrono series, but hey, we all do it anyways.

Thats my 2 cents.

FaustWolf

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4377 on: October 27, 2009, 10:28:50 pm »
There's certainly something to be said for the way in which an ideology is communicated. I've felt deflected by the kind of atheism we see in Letter to a Christian Nation for the same reasons I've felt deflected from conservative religion. There's a sense of dogma about it, rather than dialogue and freedom to draw one's own conclusions. There is some risk that the manifestation of atheism embodied in Sam Harris could potentially go the way Daniel Krispin attributes to Second Wave Feminism and Marxism, possibly for precisely that reason. I definitely have the impression that Third Wave Feminism is partly a reaction against dogmatism women sensed within Second Wave Feminism, to go back to that specific example Krispin used.

Now, this doesn't mean Second Wave Feminism, Marxism, or the other examples Krispin mentioned don't have timeless value, and that some of that value was lost in the rush to move away from these things -- it means Second Wave Feminists and Marxists weren't careful with their delivery and dropped the ball. I attribute this danger to the use of buzzwords and phrases, and oversimplification of arguments. One look at Freethoughtpedia is probably enough to innoculate a mildly religious person from ever even considering atheism, and environments like that are probably atheism's own worst enemy (contrary to the banana, which was pretty funny, I have to admit).

To go back to the example of Second Wave Feminism, I agree that it's antiquated in some respects, especially when it comes to cross-cultural feminist dialogue: but they totally nailed it when it came to the porn industry, and were in fact prophetic in their realization that it could only get worse from what they were seeing during the 1970s and 1980s. But because they were so unmoving in their tenets and unwilling to compromise in any respect, people like Andrea Dworkin lost their audience to a more hip, watered down, and capitalism-friendly worldview where suddenly a woman was "empowered" by gagging on a man's member at the direction of another man at the helm of a camera, and self-proclaimed feminists started glorifying supposed rape fantasies in their stretch to justify extreme pornography (read Wendy McElroy; that part was just shocking, and would probably make Dworkin turn in her grave). But this happened because Dworkin dropped the ball by tossing around terms like "patriarchal exploitation" and talking about historical struggles to subjugate women, and various things that sounded unforgiving of men -- and because she lost her audience, society paid for it.

IMHO this is precisely what atheists need to worry about at this point, if they feel they need to worry about anything. A movement is never entirely safe, even though it may currently have great momentum. A movement with momentum needs to view itself critically, examine how it can keep that momentum, and cut the fat if it aims to have maximum appeal. Yes, that means compromise at times, but more importantly, it means getting in touch with the people you're trying to reach out to on a personal, psychological level, and showing them why your movement matters to them.

Now, I don't claim to be making any kind of rational, reasoned argument or observation here: it is precisely from the gut. But the gut is where people feel on a day-to-day basis, just because we're people, and that's why arguments straight from the gut have at least some merit. Barack Obama is President of the United States today at least partly because his campaign realized precisely this. Although the Obama Campaign used its fair share of simple "Yes We Can!" chants, each field organizer was also trained to tell his or her personal journey, and how he or she arrived at supporting Barack Obama. We trained our volunteers to do the same. It's getting in touch with people, finding out how they relate to things, and turning that to your advantage that allows a movement to grow and continue.
« Last Edit: October 27, 2009, 11:15:28 pm by FaustWolf »

ZeaLitY

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4378 on: October 27, 2009, 11:06:09 pm »
Quote
Religion isn't innately harmful.

It's forcing oneself to maintain an irrational position and worldview. This makes it innately harmful and debilitating to cognition and leading a meaningful life. Forced belief of a lie is not healthy, especially when it's forced belief of lies such as "women are inferior to men", "the world is going to end and cannot be saved", "cast out the unbelievers to hell", and so on.

As for Krispin's massive convoluted post, I'm honored you would spend so much time to pivot and dance the apologist tango, no doubt sighing and heaving heavy boughs of an empty intellectualism resigned to a convenient belief in God and the afterlife. I was meanwhile spending my time in a feminism class studying the plight of migrant workers and diplomatic wives, and arming myself for future efforts of social justice. And last night, I was busy composing a paper highlighting the abortion struggle in Ireland. The Emerald Isle's abortion policy is a result of lobbying of the Catholic Church—the same institution responsible for the Inquisition, cloistering of knowledge and technology, opportunistic wars, sexual guilt policies, female repression, Nazi appeasement, laughable indulgences, sexual abuse cover-up, and just about every other crime against humanity that can be committed over the span of a thousand years. It is the Catholic Church that would restrict abortion from rape victims. It is the Catholic Church that would restrict abortion from an incestuous pregnancy sure to produce a retarded or genetically-deficient child. It is the Catholic Church that would restrict abortion from a 13 year old girl who will develop fistula and other maladies while have an agonizing, days-long birth. It is the Catholic Church that invades a woman's right to decide her life and would punish an accident or contraceptive failure with early parenthood. It is the Catholic Church that lacks fundamental empathy and humanity. And the reason?

God.

And because of God, 5000 women a year flee to London to have abortions. Even that wasn't legal until after Attorney General v. X in 1992. Divorce wasn't legal until 1990. Contraceptives weren't really legal until the mid-80s. Many women are strong-armed into not having abortions altogether, as defying the holy church would incur wrath and ostracizing from their community. God, God, God. What a God of compassion. This is religion. It is a prehistoric myth with outdated moral codes and urges that are contrary to humanity and sentience. Every other flavor of religion besides Catholicism has its own brutal follies just like the church's stance on abortion.

But I have not declared war on the religious. I've declared war on superstition, fallacy, and ignorance, and religion is the greatest nerve center of ignorance on earth. Don't bellyache because you're in the way of stopping a superstitious plague that would do something as vile as banning abortion for rape victims, subjecting male children to ritual mutilation, excluding women from its ranks, and every other damn crime religion is guilty of. If you cannot grasp the inhumanity of religion and the suffering it inflicts upon people, it's regrettable. But don't stand in the way of and complain about social progress and reason. Unlike you, I haven't resigned this world to be blown up by seventh seals or whatever interpretation of the end times or Rapture you believe in. I believe humanity can become illuminated on its own merit, through reason, education, technology, and so on. If it's your belief the world is doomed to explode, feel free to wait in a bunker while the courageous struggle to improve the world—fought at almost every step by religious institutions, of course.
« Last Edit: October 27, 2009, 11:08:45 pm by ZeaLitY »

Daniel Krispin

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Re: The $%*! frustration thread
« Reply #4379 on: October 27, 2009, 11:35:07 pm »
As for Krispin's massive convoluted post, I'm honored you would spend so much time to pivot and dance the apologist tango, no doubt sighing and heaving heavy boughs of an empty intellectualism resigned to a convenient belief in God and the afterlife.

Oddly, the gist of my post was that, between the two of us, mine is the actual intellectualism, and it is yours set on empty bluster. Actually, ZeaLitY, you're not an intellectual at all - that was in fact my point. You might not like it, or you might be envious, but between the two of us, that's who I am, not you. I'm pulling the elitist card here: I've got the education, I've got the background. You don't. Just the other day you maintained the good of professing one's own person and not being falsely humble, so I'm doing that. I know who I am in this case, and I know what I am able to profess.

But certainly, you did not read the post, or else you did not understand it, or else you do not understand your own words. It was in no way or manner apologist. I was not defending a stance, I was attacking yours. Did I once maintain my own beliefs? No. In fact, it had nothing to do with my own theism whatsoever - and the fact that other atheists have even now supported me in saying that you become too vehement - adds credence to that. And it is a further blemish against you that you have, in your blind appraisal of others, been unable to see or say anymore than what is manifestly false: that I was somehow acting from the side of my dogma. Since it is perfectly clear in my writing that I was neither dogmatic nor apologetic, and since you have so strongly claimed it, I call utter inanity on your argumentation. On all of it.

That is, I call into utter question all your assertions and views on the grounds that you are incapable of drawing a fair or measured judgement, and set yourself only to bigotry and prejudice. Unfit, ZeaLitY, to even stand trial. No one can believe you or put any trust in what you say if you have that level of innate prejudice. You have just now accused me of something I have not even done, merely because I am associated with that creed. You - you ZeaLitY - have just now acted in the way that makes you brother to the racist and the sexist: you have disparaged what I said not because of what I said, but only because I am otherwise Christian. You want to be a social crusader? You can't even take the first step and treat people fairly. How in the world do you expect to do some good out there when you've not even got a hold on yourself and your hatred here? Until you temper that, you will always do more harm than good to the world. You're arming yourself as a knight with a sword and lance, all very potent, but being so untrained in aught but the might of your sword, and having no good judgement, you're more likely to injure the innocents than the wicked.

But the fact remains, though I have been overly vehement, overly rhetorical, and all other true accusations you can set against me... other atheists have in more level fashion expressed their displeasure. You might say 'they're just not daring to say what must be said' but that's an 'it's not me it's the world' mentality, which is in fact delusional. So watch your peers, watch what they say. I have, in opposition to you, taken a very strong and perhaps too vehement stand - I figured it was needed. But its purpose was served, and it brought some of the more level heads out of the woodwork to say their peace in better terms. If you cannot listen to me (and since I have directly attacked you, I would not fault if you ignore this), then listen to them.

Nor, indeed, was it convoluted, but progressed from addressing your mistaken view of history (which you have not countered), to maintaining that you simply do not know what you are talking about, which asks the question: why should we even listen to you? On what grounds do we have it that you are right.

Yeah, yeah, you have stories and you have certain figures and statistics. I've heard the same proposed for the other side, and heck, every bad case of history has had the statistics and those sorts of stories on their side. You've gotta do better than such things as that. Honestly, I've heard better arguments from the people that would have me believe the world was created in seven days.

I dare you ZeaLitY, prove it to me. If it's that proveable, do so. I am not unmalleable. And even if you can't convince me, you can make a good case. But the fact is, you don't have the intellectual weight. Nietzsche, he puts forward a good case... heck, he is outright vicious. But he's not clubbing his opponents like a caveman with his club as you do. He takes his knife, strikes where he wishes, and he twists. Even his opposers must agree he makes a good point, and makes his point well. You do not.

Now if you'll pardon me, I've got some erotic elegy I've been meaning to write in Latin. I've had enough of you trying to tell me what and who I am. I know myself and who I am; you, unfortunately, do not. Perhaps a visit to Delphi to read the lintelpost would do you good.
« Last Edit: October 27, 2009, 11:41:44 pm by Daniel Krispin »