On Being Atheist...

Disbelief in the presence of god(s)?

Or belief in the absence of god(s)?

Clever...

Anyone standing in the presence of God who says, "God doesn't exist", just might see God wave a finger and say,"Actually...(poof)...you don't exist".

I have no belief in the existence of god(s). But if I find myself in the presence of one, I'll try to keep my mouth shut. :D
 
Clever...

Anyone standing in the presence of God who says, "God doesn't exist", just might see God wave a finger and say,"Actually...(poof)...you don't exist".
Which is just exactly what I expect at the end of life anyway-- non-existence. So what would be the difference? And also-- why should an ETERNAL life be based on a mere double-handful of decades of earthly existance? tell me how that makes sense in cosmological terms. When peopple explain to me that an afterlife awaits those who live this life right, I like to ask them what happens if you live your afterlife wrong. Do you lose your chance at the after-after-life?
I have no belief in the existence of god(s). But if I find myself in the presence of one, I'll try to keep my mouth shut. :D
Like He doesn't already know what you thought about him? Is He omnipotent, or isn't He?

Pascal's wager is so fucking stupid. Who do they think they are, trying to kid the ultimate kidder? Unless God approves of hypocrites, and supposedly He does not. Pascal's wager is a chump's deal.
 
If there is a god and he knows everything, then he knows what I require for proof of his existence. If he decides not to give me that proof, he doesn't want me anyway. Further, if God (with the big G) did exist, I would hate him. There is nothing worthy of worship in that spiteful, malicious, evil prick.

I don't simply not believe in god/gods. I believe that there is no god. Maybe a slight difference, but important. The Christian god, as he is universally ascribed, is not possible. You can prove a negative. A circle with four corners cannot exist. It contradicts itself, so it is impossible. A perfect god creating an imperfect world is a self-contradiction. If he were perfect he would be incapable of creating something imperfect. If he were perfect he would have no need to create us anyway. As a perfect being he would want for nothing and would be satisfied just being. Any need for us is a definite symptom of his imperfection.
 
Dear Reader,

TEX likes to get in pissing contests matching his vienna sausage mind with John Holmes Class 'Meat-Heads' like de Bono.

No, JBJ, I have no problem with anyone but you. You make broad sweeping statements attributed to someone else with nothing to back it up. Then you toss out an asinine little homily of your own that again has nothing to back it up.

A homily I might add that is totally wrong. Keep trying, you might one day be able to converse with the adults without stepping on your own dick.
 
I read a story about Jack Benny once.

He became ill and was diagnosed with inoperable pancreatic carcinoma. He chose to live out his days at his home. One day a friend came to visit and was surprised to see Jack reading the Bible. Knowing that Jack was born Jewish and had lived a secular life, the friend asked, "What are you doing that for?"

To which Jack replied, "I'm looking for loopholes."
 
If there is a god and he knows everything, then he knows what I require for proof of his existence. If he decides not to give me that proof, he doesn't want me anyway.
The catch 22 of faith. If you require proof to back up a belief, it's not faith. The idea of faith is to believe in something in spite of lack of evidence.

That's why religious people who feel threatened by science are so pathetic. They missed the point of faith. And they show how weak theirs is.

The flipside of that is atheists who require proof of God. Sorry, no, that's not how it works. There is and will be no proof either way. You believe or you don't, the choice is yours, and you stand for it.
 
Your definition Amicus is problematic. By making faith, belief and gods central, if only something to be negated as a denial of god(s) one is in danger of making them a first (and necessary) pre-requisite to the philosophy which you may propose to put in their place.

I prefer to think that atheism includes any system of thought that is without or absent any idea of god(s). I think it can include belief, for example you may argue for your contention about 'absolute values' suggesting that you have arrived at them through objective rationality but another individual might suggest they believe in exactly the same thing without a semblance of rational thought. (there you are - an easy target!)

I don't have time to say much more at the moment but I look forward to considering such ideas as:-

1 The substitution of the ego for god in much modern atheist thought particularly the essentially theist characterisation of the self in objectivism.

2 The religiosity of many atheist's methods of thinking (Dawkins et al).

All for now.[/
QUOTE]

~~~

Point taken, Ishtat, and I too look forward to your commentary on 'ego', in Objectivism. One should note the difference between 'egotism' and 'egoism'. I do no agree on the 'essentially theist' characterization of 'self', as no rational person (except as a writer:)) sees oneself as omniscient.

The 'point taken' above refers to your first paragraph....I will 'tweak' my original Post to include the conclusion, that there is no God, fuctions as a logical deduction, that in the absence of any evidence supporting the concept, the concept does not exist.

I think that the astronomical discoveries of the past half century or so have pulled the veil back from the deep Universe, as we now know it, and exposed a complexity of natural laws so fantastically amazing as to challenge the ability of mere men to encompass the scope.

A flip side to that, absent any evidence of other life in the Universe, would be to acknowledge the greatness of God in creating man in the image of himself and that we truly are, but for God, alone in the Heavens....:)

ami
 
The catch 22 of faith. If you require proof to back up a belief, it's not faith. The idea of faith is to believe in something in spite of lack of evidence.

That's why religious people who feel threatened by science are so pathetic. They missed the point of faith. And they show how weak theirs is.

The flipside of that is atheists who require proof of God. Sorry, no, that's not how it works. There is and will be no proof either way. You believe or you don't, the choice is yours, and you stand for it.

Minus proof I don't and never will believe. I don't expect to believe. I think faith is a very bad thing and I see nothing good to come from it. False comfort, at it's best. At it's worst, some of the worst inhumanities ever committed.

Truth does not require faith.
 
Tio_Narratore;36472371[I said:
]I have some sympathy with Amicus' position, but have too often found Atheists "believing" in the non-existence of any form of deity. That does put them dangerously close to JBJ's perception of them.

I do not believe, nor do I disbelieve, the notion of a deity or deities, supreme or multifarious. I find no need to invoke such a notion in attempting to understand the universe nor do I find a need to disprove the notion. Essentially, I find the question of the existence of deities to be irrelevant. What I do need to address about it, as an anthropologist, is the apparent need of people to create their deities and then fight about it.

As a student in a parochial school I was taught that "God created man in his own image and likeness;" as an anthropologist who has studied comparative religion, I find that it would be far more accurate to declare that it is the other way around.[/[/I]QUOTE]

~~~

Thank you Tio...interesting...but I find I must question the assertion in your paragraph, that you find 'no need'...it is my contention that every rational person with the mental ability to question his existence must either pose the question or accept an existing belief concerning the meaning and purpose of his existence. That, I offer, is what makes us human, sentient, and full of questions.

Anthropology indeed! Yet even today we are witnessing a continuation of the Muslim/Christian conflict that is centuries old.

I did my bit on comparative religions also...long ago...education enlightens, so they say, and it lit up a path away from religion for me because of the triviality and general silliness of rituals and such.

But then...age, has made me more tolerant of my fellow man and his penchant for deities. I have said, on this forum, at least a dozen times, that the lower half of the Bell Curve of the human Intelligent quotient, a full one out of every two humans that ever lived, are mentally incapable of cognitive thought to the degree of dismissing a deity as a guiding force in life.

That satisfies my curiosity as to why, in this day and age, so many cling to faith when it is so evidently a false faith.

A pleasure.....:rose:

Amicus
 
Minus proof I don't and never will believe.
That's your choice then. As well as mine.

But.
Just like there's no proof of the existance of God, there's no proof of the non existance. You can't prove a negative. The realm of science doesn't apply.

You said yourself:
I don't simply not believe in god/gods. I believe that there is no god.

Thus it's a choice, not the inevitable deduction of knowing an absolute truth.

I own my choice, and don't try to pin evidence to it. Atheism is my faith choice.
 
Oh, Ami, isn't this just one of those times when we miss Colleen T?

To my mind, you ask the wrong question. For several millenia we, homus erectus (no pun intended), have been trying to rationalize the concepts of birth, life and death with infinity - and failing. Neither Darwin or Galileo answered the question of what happened "before".

Cats, dogs and the rest of the animal world are oblivious to the conundrum of why living beings are mortal but the universe is infinite. It started with a big bang? Then what was there before?

From Gaia through all the changing identies of deities we look to find an explanation of infinity. That is all religion is.

I have no belief that one day I will sit on a cloud looking down on my descendants but no-one has answered the questions of why the universe is there, what was there before it and what will be there after it.

From mystic belief to the creationists we have tried to analyze things against a cradle to grave reality - and failed.

Given all our scientific advances, we haven't intellectually understood infinity.[/
QUOTE]

~~~

Can't and won't argue with a single thing you said, Elfin, and thank you. However....:)))

I would suggest that the reason there is such a word as, 'infinity', and beneath that, the 'concept' of infinity, is the reason we are human and curious. Had we not such a word, we would invent it....;)

Infinity can mean something as simple as a circle; without beginning or end, or as complex as the Universe and multiple 'big bangs'.

I do not think we have failed; quite the opposite, I think we have succeeded magnificently and are still taking giant steps for mankind each time we solve and comprehend another aspect of existence.

I am going to dwell on your Post for a moment longer; not for something you said, but for something you did not.

Each and every human is and will be subject to tragedy in life. There will be the sadness when our parents age and pass on; there is pain when illness disables or takes a child or a loved one. The horrors of war and senseless crime bring agony to countless millions.

I have watched the birth of five of my children, I was out to sea when the first one arrived. The 'miracle of birth', the coming together and conception of an unique human being, different from all the billions before and after, the long, painful and dangerous time of growth in the womb and the final arrival of a perfect little human being, is an emotional event of the first magnitude for all involved.

I have held my wife's hand and soothed the perspiration from her brow as she labored to deliver a child and therein are lessons learned about love, bonding, understanding, and yes, faith of a sorts, that all will end well.

Intellectually, we are helpless to alter or influence those natural events of life; it is how we deal with good fortune and bad that determines who we are, what our character is and how we address our fellow humans who are all in the same circumstances.

We cannot analyze tragedy, but we have progressed far beyond the early days of man when half of all children born did not survive their first year and a woman's lifespan was under 30 years, on the average, due in part to repeated pregnancies.

The medical science of man has so extended human life that we are now faced with the problem of an aging society and how to deal with the seniors in our mix. But we will figure that out and we will reach a humane answer that addresses the many issues involved.

I think a psychologically healthy human being must have a 'sense of life' that overlooks the frailty and failures of man and cherishes, even worships, the successes we, as a species, have enjoyed.

See there, ya got me to wax poetic for a moment....shame on you!:rose:

ami
 
This made me laugh out loud.

FWIW I'm an agnostic. Organized religion is a clusterfuck, but as an atheist, I'd have to buy in to the concept that a string of coincidences stretching back over 4 billion years, beginning with a cloud of dust and gas that would eventually become earth, resulted in...me. Can't quite accept that.

That and, at is most intricate level, particle physics (my specialty) is too perfect to be an accident.


K

~~~

Hello, and welcome, as I do not recognize your SN. It was your last sentence that made me smile...

The 'perfect' thing about your knowledge and ability to perceive particle physics, is that head on your shoulders, and the even more intricate level of cognitive thinking....see the catch? Your perfect perception far outweighs particle physics which is just a tiny (pun) part of the over all physics of the Universe.

I find it fascinating that astronomers can predict that our Galaxy and the Andromeda Galaxy will collide at some distant date in the future. Not only that, but they have created computer models that predict possilbe combinations and permutations of just how that collision will occur and the aftermath! Ain't that a gas! Oops, another pun, but, it is the human brain that I applaud for being able to make you a particle physicist and others deep space astronomers, man is just damned magnificent!

Amicus
 
The onus of proof...

Theists can't prove that god(s) exist.
Atheists can't prove that god(s) don't exist.
I can't even prove that this whole discussion will ever go away.

A Muslim, a Christian and a Hindu walk into a bar...
...and the bartender says, "What is this? A joke?"[/
QUOTE]

~~~

Philosophy 101: One cannot prove a negative and it is sophomoric to even ask.
 
IMO, a true athiest could care less about the God debate and would just go about their lives as if it made no difference because it DOESN'T.

Each person has a right to think for themselves, and it's nobody's business but theirs.

The "Athiests" who try to convince the world that they are right and push their opinions onto others are just as bad as the Religious Fundamentalists who knock on your door. I think it's at that point that their athiesm becomes their religion.

I know what I believe; I know why I believe it; but, I'm sure as hell not going to start a damn thread detailing all the why's and what not's about it.

Find out who you are inside and spend your time bettering your life and the lives of those around you; otherwise, either start a blog or shut up.
 
The catch 22 of faith. If you require proof to back up a belief, it's not faith. The idea of faith is to believe in something in spite of lack of evidence.

That's why religious people who feel threatened by science are so pathetic. They missed the point of faith. And they show how weak theirs is.

The flipside of that is atheists who require proof of God. Sorry, no, that's not how it works. There is and will be no proof either way. You believe or you don't, the choice is yours, and you stand for it.
That's what I keep on saying. I DO NOT have a capacity for belief in gods.

If you can furnish me with a proof I will let that proof rearrange my entire world -- and I will agree that a god exists. But I don't believe. Not even if I wanted to-- and there have been plenty times in my life when a belief in a god could have been very comforting.
 
Precisely.

By the way, the original is "Elephants all the way down," and it comes from a joke about a Hindu Guru explaining cosmology. Thomas King turned it into an American Indian "story" in his Massey Lecture, and so, mutatis mutandis, the elephants became turtles
.

~~~

I just love it when you talk smart, Tio, gives me a good feeling....then being forced to consult a dictionary: "Mutatis mutandis is a Latin phrase meaning "by changing those things which need to be changed" or more simply "the necessary changes having been made".

Although I am not quite sure how that applies to Cosmology.

I did have a thought, though....they, the scientists, now say our Solar System is between 4.3 to 4.5 billion years old...okay I get that....then they say the Universe is approximately 14.7 billions years old...but....had no beginning or causal factor.

That, I don't get.

I would suggest, that in the fullness of time, the 'Big Bang' will be revised, maybe even become obsolete as an explanation as to the origins of the Universe.

Just a mere few Hundred years back, the best Theology said the Earth was only about 6,000 years old, but we dug up some bones, figured out carbon dating and the Earth aged rapidly. Go figure.

It may well be that a few short years from now, another theory will pop up, but even so, it merely pushes back the question to where it began, from whence cameth it all?

It ain't God...soooo...but....you have about fifty years of productive life to live, how should you go about it? JBJ is correct in his sphincterly way, 'it don't really matter no how...' (I paraphrase, James, forgive me).

Religion, faith, belief, once gave mankind a moral code to live by. It no longer does that. What, to where, does an Atheist turn for moral guidance?

Which... is the real intention of this Thread.

Amicus
 
IMO, a true athiest could care less about the God debate and would just go about their lives as if it made no difference because it DOESN'T.

Each person has a right to think for themselves, and it's nobody's business but theirs.

The "Athiests" who try to convince the world that they are right and push their opinions onto others are just as bad as the Religious Fundamentalists who knock on your door. I think it's at that point that their athiesm becomes their religion.
If people who did believe in god would keep that to themselves, we would all get along just fine.

But, monothiests believe they must save the world from idolatry and convert everyone to whatever flavor of monotheism they believe in.

Have you ever had an Atheist come to your door to tell you not to believe in god the way evangelicals Xtians do?

Have you ever had an Atheist church send money into your home state to fund a referendum denying you basic human rights the way the Mormons did in California?

Have you ever seen atheists stand out on corners with bullhorns professing the joys of disbelief and promising hellfire and damnation to those who do believe?

Have you ever seen Atheists do this in reverse?
http://deskofbrian.com/wp-content/uploads/Fred-Phelps-protest.jpg

No, I didn't think you had. I always get a giggle out of people who try to invoke the magic reverse-bigotry fairy.
I know what I believe; I know why I believe it; but, I'm sure as hell not going to start a damn thread detailing all the why's and what not's about it.

Find out who you are inside and spend your time bettering your life and the lives of those around you; otherwise, either start a blog or shut up.

Welcome to the forum. It is a discussion forum.
 
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Pure, this is where I find fault with your thinking: "a person who says he does not know whether God exists, or more broadly that it is not known whether God exists. more technically, he says "as to the statement, 'god exists', i do not know if whether it's true or false. he might well add that the evidence appears lacking or convincing, one way or the other."

~~~

You display a good mind Pure, I don't understand how you can dismiss what I have said so many times before concerning the epistemology of the human mind.

We can only learn and 'know' things by the evidence of their existence. Not only is there no evidence for the existence of a God, but any such evidence would contradict concrete evidence in every other intellectual discipline of man.

Thus, one can not rationally state that a proposal concerning the existence of a God cannot be judged true or false. Of course it can.

Amicus
 
Folks, Omar Khayyam got it right.

Myself when young did eagerly frequent
Doctor and Saint and heard great argument
About it and about
But evermore
Came out by the same door
As in I went.

No one is changing anyone's mind. It's always turtles (or elephants or whatever) all the way down. And where did the primeval vacuum come from? It's vacuua all the way down.[/
QUOTE]

~~~

Hello and welcome, estragon, nice of you to quote Khayyam...been a while.

I think that minds will be changed and certainly expanded by discussion because that is how it has always been; that is how knowledge is perfected, thesis, antithesis and synthesis....

And the issue is of some import as the balance of sanity hangs awaiting reason. There is insanity in the Radical Muslim world at this time and probably since its' inception, and insanity drives men to atrocities which we are witnessing.

If a few more people, maybe even a Muslim or two, exits their faith and chooses reason and rationality, which I am promoting, then that is a good thing, is it not?

Amicus
 
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Tio_Narratore;36472371[I said:
]I have some sympathy with Amicus' position, but have too often found Atheists "believing" in the non-existence of any form of deity. That does put them dangerously close to JBJ's perception of them.

I do not believe, nor do I disbelieve, the notion of a deity or deities, supreme or multifarious. I find no need to invoke such a notion in attempting to understand the universe nor do I find a need to disprove the notion. Essentially, I find the question of the existence of deities to be irrelevant. What I do need to address about it, as an anthropologist, is the apparent need of people to create their deities and then fight about it.

As a student in a parochial school I was taught that "God created man in his own image and likeness;" as an anthropologist who has studied comparative religion, I find that it would be far more accurate to declare that it is the other way around.[/[/I]QUOTE]

~~~

Thank you Tio...interesting...but I find I must question the assertion in your paragraph, that you find 'no need'...it is my contention that every rational person with the mental ability to question his existence must either pose the question or accept an existing belief concerning the meaning and purpose of his existence. That, I offer, is what makes us human, sentient, and full of questions.

Anthropology indeed! Yet even today we are witnessing a continuation of the Muslim/Christian conflict that is centuries old.

I did my bit on comparative religions also...long ago...education enlightens, so they say, and it lit up a path away from religion for me because of the triviality and general silliness of rituals and such.

But then...age, has made me more tolerant of my fellow man and his penchant for deities. I have said, on this forum, at least a dozen times, that the lower half of the Bell Curve of the human Intelligent quotient, a full one out of every two humans that ever lived, are mentally incapable of cognitive thought to the degree of dismissing a deity as a guiding force in life.

That satisfies my curiosity as to why, in this day and age, so many cling to faith when it is so evidently a false faith.

A pleasure.....:rose:

Amicus


We may all wonder about the reason of our existence, but to wonder about the purpose is to accept, a priori, a teleological approach to the whole of the universe. At that point you have already accepted the notion of some form of 'divine' plan. I'm afraid, Amicus, that I have no need of a purpose for my existence, and, as for a reason, I accept for myself the same reason as for anything else: because it could and does.

I'm not at all sure what you mean by "Anthropology, indeed!." I am even more confused by the apparent non sequitur about the continuing Muslim/Christian conflict. I can only conclude from this paragraph that I have no idea of what you think Anthropology is. I can assure you, however, that it isn't a discipline at a loss to address the question of continuing religious conflict.
 
I recall reading about "it's turtles all the way down" somewhere. It was something about the world being supported by something, with that something being supported by turtles. And when someone asked what supported the turtles, the reply was "turtles...it's turtles, all the way down..."

I have to admit that thinking about the origin of the universe is kind of like asking which direction is north, when you're standing at the North Pole.

From what (little) I understand about cosmology, asking about what preceded the big bang is like that. The less than satisfactory (to me) answer is supposed to be...nothing. All of space and time were created at the beginning, thus there was no space or time before the beginning, thus the question of what preceded the beginning is meaningless.

The universe is just one of those things that happen from time to time.

The Anishnaabe creation story involves the world resting on the back of a turtle. :)
 
IMO, a true athiest could care less about the God debate and would just go about their lives as if it made no difference because it DOESN'T.

Each person has a right to think for themselves, and it's nobody's business but theirs.

The "Athiests" who try to convince the world that they are right and push their opinions onto others are just as bad as the Religious Fundamentalists who knock on your door. I think it's at that point that their athiesm becomes their religion.

I know what I believe; I know why I believe it; but, I'm sure as hell not going to start a damn thread detailing all the why's and what not's about it.

Find out who you are inside and spend your time bettering your life and the lives of those around you; otherwise, either start a blog or shut up.

Thank you, thank you, thank you.
 
Folks, Omar Khayyam got it right.

Myself when young did eagerly frequent
Doctor and Saint and heard great argument
About it and about
But evermore
Came out by the same door
As in I went.

No one is changing anyone's mind. It's always turtles (or elephants or whatever) all the way down. And where did the primeval vacuum come from? It's vacuua all the way down.[/
QUOTE]

~~~

Hello and welcome, estragon, nice of you to quote Khayyam...been a while.

I think that minds will be changed and certainly expanded by discussion because that is how it has always been; that is how knowledge is perfected, thesis and synthesis....

And the issue is of some import as the balance of sanity hangs awaiting reason. There is insanity in the Radical Muslim world at this time and probably since its' inception, and insanity drives men to atrocities which we are witnessing.

If a few more people, maybe even a Muslim or two, exits their faith and chooses reason and rationality, which I am promoting, then that is a good thing, is it not?

Amicus

Amicus, it doesn't quite work that way. My man G. K. Chesterton remarked that when a man stops believing in God, he does not then believe in nothing--he believes in anything. My corollary- even to the extent of believing that the universe and everything in it is made of of ten (or is it eleven?) dimensional, invisible, miniscule, vibrating strings of something. For which proposition there is no replicable, observable proof. I'll take God, a player to be named later, and a first-round draft pick. You can draft whom you want--or no one. Let's just agree to disagree.
 
Welcome to the forum. It is a discussion forum.

You're right, it is. How is this discussion related to erotica?

I'm sorry, Stella. I agree with you most of the time, but if you want to not discuss politics here, I suggest that religion should be just as out-of-bounds, because, in this instance, it's just as off-topic. I'm very live and let live, as far as religion is concerned, but there are very few here that feel the same - even you.

I've defended others' rights to their beliefs but I challenge anyone to find even one post where I've stated mine, and/or told others that mine is the only way.
 
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