Originally posted by Slytovhand
View Post
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
I believe in Atheism...
Collapse
X
-
Thanks Ped
JC, what is out there that's unlikely with evidence?
Now, while I'm willing to go along with your following points, you've only tried to invalidate one version of deity...there are stacks of others out there that are believed in. What I find interesting is the number of cosmologists and astrophysicists putting their hand up to say there's something else out there that created all of this. As if, in seeing a much bigger picture, they see much less randomness at work.ZOE: Preacher, don't the Bible got some pretty specific things to say about killing?
SHEPHERD BOOK: Quite specific. It is, however, Somewhat fuzzier on the subject of kneecaps.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Slytovhand View PostJC, what is out there that's unlikely with evidence?
Show me evidence, real evidence, not circumstantial bullshit, for any deity and I will investigate it. Seriously.
Originally posted by Slytovhand View PostNow, while I'm willing to go along with your following points, you've only tried to invalidate one version of deity...there are stacks of others out there that are believed in.
Zeus? Bullshit. Apollo? Bullshit. Athena? Bullshit. <Insert Greek God Here>? Bullshit. Horus? Bullshit. Ra? Bullshit. Hathor? Bullshit. Sekhmet? Bullshit. Geb? Bullshit. Nut? Bullshit? Thoth? Bullshit. Sobek? Bullshit. <Insert Egyptian God Here>? Bullshit.
Vishnu? Bullshit. Zoroaster? Bullshit. Buddha? Bullshit. Thetans? Bullshit. Mithra? Bullshit. <Insert currently worshipped non-Christian God here>? Bullshit.
Baldr? Bullshit. Forseti? Bullshit. Höðr? Bullshit. Thor? Bullshit. <Insert Norse God here>? Bullshit. Atlacamani? Bullshit. Chantico? Bullshit. Cinteotl? Bullshit. <Insert Aztec God here>? Bullshit. Ah Peku? Bullshit. Hunab Ku? Bullshit. Balam? Bullshit. Ekchuah? Bullshit. Kinich Ahau? Bullshit. <Insert Mayan God here>? Bullshit.
Hachiman? Bullshit. Benzai? Bullshit. Jikoku? Bullshit. Hoderi? Bullshit. <Insert Japanese God here>? Bullshit.
Do I need to elaborate any further? The preceding list is only a small sliver of the gods who are/were believed in at one point in time or possibly now. Why should Yahweh/Jehovah/Jesus garner any more respect when the evidence for their existence is as flimsy as the gods in the 'bullshit' list I just posted? Why?
Originally posted by Slytovhand View PostWhat I find interesting is the number of cosmologists and astrophysicists putting their hand up to say there's something else out there that created all of this. As if, in seeing a much bigger picture, they see much less randomness at work.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostWhy is it a leap of faith to believe in ridiculous religions but delusion for EVERY other lunatic idea?
You've mentioned that you are a "born atheist" more than a few times. If that's possible (and I believe that it is), then there are likely "born believers" too. I don't see why either characteristic necessarily precludes sanity.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jadedcarguy View PostActually, it is. Belief in the unlikely without evidence of any sort is utter horseshit.
Originally posted by Jadedcarguy View PostA deity of that nature is not deserving of worship or adoration.Happiness is too rare in this world to actually lose it because someone wishes it upon you. -Flyndaran
Comment
-
Originally posted by Evandril View Post...
While I'd agree with that last part...that has little to do with their existance. Show me how there is more evidence for a quark than a diety...and yet quite a few scientists state they exist. What about the matter we can't *find*, that science says must exist?
People have seen, and measured, and discovered quarks in particle acclerators. No one has predicted, measured, and witnessed an impossibly perfect deity.
Only psuedo-science has even a passing resemblance to religion.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Evandril View PostSo the fact man can fly is utter horseshit? Or that we'll make it to the moon someday? BOTH of which were 'unlikely' at their time, and, other than some rather confused people, are fairly accepted now as having happened.
Now then, on to your feeble arguments.
The people who made human flight possible believing it could be done were not crazy, because they could see birds and insects and bats do it, so they knew it was mechanically possible. Therefore, believing that it could be done was in no way belief without evidence.
By the time we went to the moon, human flight was commonplace. We'd already put manned and unmanned craft into orbit and beyond, so we knew sending a man to the moon was possible. That isn't belief without evidence either.
Originally posted by Evandril View PostWhile I'd agree with that last part...that has little to do with their existance.
Originally posted by Evandril View PostShow me how there is more evidence for a quark than a diety...and yet quite a few scientists state they exist. What about the matter we can't *find*, that science says must exist?
Comment
-
Originally posted by Flyndaran View PostI really wish you religious people would stop bringing up scientific discoveries that you clearly don't understand. It just makes you look ignorant.
People have seen, and measured, and discovered quarks in particle acclerators. No one has predicted, measured, and witnessed an impossibly perfect deity.
Only psuedo-science has even a passing resemblance to religion.
I do not believe I've ever stated it needed to be even a moderatly perfect diety, much less impossibly perfect... And the 'evidence' behind things happening without an explination is fairly concrete, if you were talking other scientific investigations.Happiness is too rare in this world to actually lose it because someone wishes it upon you. -Flyndaran
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jadedcarguy View PostThe people who made human flight possible believing it could be done were not crazy, because they could see birds and insects and bats do it, so they knew it was mechanically possible. Therefore, believing that it could be done was in no way belief without evidence.
Originally posted by Jadedcarguy View PostBy the time we went to the moon, human flight was commonplace. We'd already put manned and unmanned craft into orbit and beyond, so we knew sending a man to the moon was possible. That isn't belief without evidence either.
Originally posted by Jadedcarguy View PostNo, it has to do with their divinity.Happiness is too rare in this world to actually lose it because someone wishes it upon you. -Flyndaran
Comment
-
Originally posted by Evandril View PostWhen they started trying to do it...it wouldn't work, because we *don't* fly the same way birds, insects or bats do...the way we do it is quite a bit different. So the 'evidence' they had was pretty much 'I think we can do this, lets see if we can find a way'. It's still believing something without knowing it's possible...sorta like the scientists working on teleportation now. People say they are crazy, but I'm withholding judgement until they either do it or not.
Yes, by the time we *DID* it...people were talking about it LONG before then, in Science Fiction, and were widely called crazy for it.
I'm not going to get into a debate about the mechanics of flight or space travel, other than to say this. The forefathers of flight and space travel knew it was possible before it was attempted. They could see animals do it. They simply had to figure out how we could do it. All of this of course has absolutely nothing to do with deities. Jesus jack-hammerin' Christ!
Besides the fact that attempting to do something never before done that you know is theoretically possible is an entirely different kind of "leap of faith" than a religion. Come on, man.
Originally posted by Evandril View PostOk, so your other post about various dieties doesn't apply? Most of the ones you listed don't fall under the example you gave of divinity...which is it? A diety who's sole power is to make sure the cores of the suns are the right color is *still* a diety...just one we'd never notice...and wouldn't ask for anything you listed, nor do anything you'd said a god/ess *must* do.
My other post about long lost deities had absolutely nothing to do with my statement that the God of the Bible would be unworthy of worship, Mr. Herring. It meant that if that particular god existed, his behavior as chronicled in the OT made him less than divine, thus my qualifying statement about divinity, not existence. In other words, I don't believe in Him, but if he were real and the OT were accurate, he is unworthy of worship. Ya dig? I gave no example of divinity, only an example of what was not divine.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Jadedcarguy View PostI'm not going to get into a debate about the mechanics of flight or space travel, other than to say this. The forefathers of flight and space travel knew it was possible before it was attempted. They could see animals do it. They simply had to figure out how we could do it. All of this of course has absolutely nothing to do with deities. Jesus jack-hammerin' Christ!
Originally posted by Jadedcarguy View PostMy other post about long lost deities had absolutely nothing to do with my statement that the God of the Bible would be unworthy of worship, Mr. Herring. It meant that if that particular god existed, his behavior as chronicled in the OT made him less than divine, thus my qualifying statement about divinity, not existence. In other words, I don't believe in Him, but if he were real and the OT were accurate, he is unworthy of worship. Ya dig? I gave no example of divinity, only an example of what was not divine.Happiness is too rare in this world to actually lose it because someone wishes it upon you. -Flyndaran
Comment
-
Originally posted by Evandril View PostActually, it was in response to someone saying why are people who believe in various dieties concidered sane, but others who have *NON-RELIGIOUS* ideas, ie, having nothing to do with deities, are concidered insane. I was saying that people who *were* concidered insane at the time...Have been proven right.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, and to some extent the early 20th, polite society considered themselves to be at the absolute pinnacle of achievement. Therefore anyone trying to improve on that was considered loopy. Once it was realized how much else was truly possible, the ridicule of the dreamers subsided quite a bit.
Originally posted by Evandril View PostSo if a god is not a nice deity, they are not worthy of worship, and therefore not divine? I've very rarely heard of a god that didn't have the manners of a spoiled child, in *my* opinion, but lots of people worship them...It seems a different definition of 'divine' than most is being used here...Could you please clarify?
Comment
-
Does divine necessarily mean 'good'? Western culture, infused by generations of christianity, has instilled the idea that a god has to be good, but there are examples out there of nasty ones. Polytheistic religions usually have some sort of god who is mischievous (Loki for example), or downright nasty (Loki at his worst, Shiva, Kali, Nemesis).
RapscallionProud to be a W.A.N.K.E.R. - Womanless And No Kids - Exciting Rubbing!
Reclaiming words is fun!
Comment
-
okies... just 2 things immediately came to mind skimming through.
1 - way back when (say, oh, 5000 years ago), looking up at the sky and thinking "hey, I might be able to do that" was looney! The only difference is science and engineering at the time...so - does that count??
2 - what about other dimension or other universes? We don't know if they exist (mathematically possible, even mathematically 'proven'... ) but not in physics at this moment in time (and perhaps never). Mathematically, there is evidence.
How do those compare to divinities?
(and I've also got to agree, some of the specific 'divine' references have come out confusing...)ZOE: Preacher, don't the Bible got some pretty specific things to say about killing?
SHEPHERD BOOK: Quite specific. It is, however, Somewhat fuzzier on the subject of kneecaps.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Rapscallion View PostDoes divine necessarily mean 'good'? Western culture, infused by generations of christianity, has instilled the idea that a god has to be good, but there are examples out there of nasty ones. Polytheistic religions usually have some sort of god who is mischievous (Loki for example), or downright nasty (Loki at his worst, Shiva, Kali, Nemesis).
Rapscallion
Comment
Comment