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Author Topic:   Identifying false religions.
New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


Message 84 of 479 (566158)
06-23-2010 11:11 AM
Reply to: Message 76 by Pauline
06-21-2010 4:53 PM


I do not believe in theistic evolution because I believe that Bible falls or stands as one piece.
Why does it fall or stand as one piece?
What does the Flud being a myth have to do with the veracity of Jesus' philosphy?
And which "one piece" are you referring to?.. there's a lot of different canons. Is one particular canon even really "one piece"?
Does the fact that species do change over time really contradict the Bible? Isn't the Theory of Evolution a really good explanation of that fact that we see?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 76 by Pauline, posted 06-21-2010 4:53 PM Pauline has not replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 85 by Phage0070, posted 06-24-2010 3:29 PM New Cat's Eye has replied

New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


Message 86 of 479 (566415)
06-24-2010 3:45 PM
Reply to: Message 85 by Phage0070
06-24-2010 3:29 PM


That all makes sense except for this part:
Theists know that if they were to honestly do this, all of the supernatural elements of the Bible would be swept aside
How's that follow?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 85 by Phage0070, posted 06-24-2010 3:29 PM Phage0070 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 88 by Phage0070, posted 06-24-2010 4:04 PM New Cat's Eye has replied

New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


Message 89 of 479 (566425)
06-24-2010 4:07 PM
Reply to: Message 88 by Phage0070
06-24-2010 4:04 PM


Oh, seems like I'd have to assume that the supernatural could not have happened.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 88 by Phage0070, posted 06-24-2010 4:04 PM Phage0070 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 90 by Phage0070, posted 06-24-2010 4:45 PM New Cat's Eye has replied

New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


(1)
Message 91 of 479 (566441)
06-24-2010 4:57 PM
Reply to: Message 90 by Phage0070
06-24-2010 4:45 PM


Supposing that you have any reasonable standards of observing the world we live in, I wouldn't describe that as an assumption but rather an observation.
To each his own, I guess.
"Observation" suggests to me that there's data... something observed... showing that the supernatural could not have happened.
At best, I'd say you could get an induction, based on your standard of observing never seeing the supernatural... but I don't think that necessarily follows.
So it seems to me to be closer to an assumption than an observation.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 90 by Phage0070, posted 06-24-2010 4:45 PM Phage0070 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 92 by Phage0070, posted 06-24-2010 5:05 PM New Cat's Eye has replied

New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


Message 93 of 479 (566446)
06-24-2010 5:23 PM
Reply to: Message 92 by Phage0070
06-24-2010 5:05 PM


Centuries of consistent observation ruling out violations of natural law doesn't qualify as data showing that the supernatural could not have happened?
Not really, although, I'm not so sure that all violations of natural law have been ruled out. There's plenty of unanswered paranormal mysteries out there.
Or are you suggesting that our sample of reality isn't representative of the whole?
One possibility, or that something has changed over time. But these are just possibilities that remove the conclusion from being a necessity, not something that we have observed.
How about we turn this question around; what *would* qualify as that data you are talking about?
Nah. I'd rather better understand what leads you to this:
quote:
If part of the Bible is false, then the Bible's claims must be evaluated piecemeal in order to separate the falsehoods/exaggerations/myths/etc from the truth. Theists know that if they were to honestly do this, all of the supernatural elements of the Bible would be swept aside and they would be left with a book of moral teachings and poorly recorded history.
I think you saying that since every past supernatural explanation has been replaced by a natural one, then that means that we can conclude that the supernatural does not exist, so therefore an honest examination of the Bible would be without anything supernatural, right?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 92 by Phage0070, posted 06-24-2010 5:05 PM Phage0070 has replied

Replies to this message:
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New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


Message 137 of 479 (567503)
07-01-2010 12:05 PM
Reply to: Message 130 by Rahvin
06-30-2010 6:38 PM


Re: Almost there - now apply it to the topic ...
Which is why an agnostic position -- that we don't know is the logical rational conclusion ... as I have said many times.
And yet you yourself are not an agnostic - you're a deist. Are you acknowledging that your position is irrational?
I don't think its ever been in dispute that a belief in god is irrational. I think I might have argued that it can be rational.
The root of the argument is atheism being rational.
Straggler's probability argument is pretty good, but I don't think his physical probability follows from the induced one. Him thinking that its more likely that god does not exist is insufficient to come to a rational conclusion of god not existing.
There's a paper called The Concept of Inductive Probability that explains:
quote:
As an illustration of the difference between these two concepts,
suppose you have been told that a coin is either two-headed or two-tailed
but you have no information about which it is. The coin is about to be
tossed. What is the probability that it will land heads? There are two
natural answers to this question:
(i) 1/2.
(ii) Either 0 or 1 but I do not know which.
Answer (i) is natural if the question is taken to be about inductive
probability, while (ii) is the natural answer if the question is taken to
be about physical probability.
I don't think you can get the physical probability from the inductive one and I think that's what Straggler is trying to do.

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Replies to this message:
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New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


Message 208 of 479 (568966)
07-19-2010 10:14 AM
Reply to: Message 206 by bluegenes
07-19-2010 10:02 AM


Someone who accepts the theory that all animals are born from other animals as a strong theory, but does not accept the theory that all supernatural beings are born of the human imagination as a strong theory, is someone who is being inconsistent and irrational.
For me, I don't have any reason to think that any animal wasn't born from other animals. If I did, then I'd accept that it might be true. Depending on the reason, I might even believe it happened.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 206 by bluegenes, posted 07-19-2010 10:02 AM bluegenes has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 211 by bluegenes, posted 07-19-2010 10:50 AM New Cat's Eye has replied

New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


(1)
Message 212 of 479 (568977)
07-19-2010 11:05 AM
Reply to: Message 211 by bluegenes
07-19-2010 10:50 AM


Re: I agree.
Someone who accepts the theory that all animals are born from other animals as a strong theory, but does not accept the theory that all supernatural beings are born of the human imagination as a strong theory, is someone who is being inconsistent and irrational.
For me, I don't have any reason to think that any animal wasn't born from other animals. If I did, then I'd accept that it might be true. Depending on the reason, I might even believe it happened.
Same here. Exactly.
So then, one could accept your animal theory while not accepting your supernatural one without being inconsistent and irrational.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 211 by bluegenes, posted 07-19-2010 10:50 AM bluegenes has replied

Replies to this message:
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New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


(1)
Message 374 of 479 (570898)
07-29-2010 10:54 AM
Reply to: Message 320 by Phage0070
07-25-2010 7:21 PM


confusing the issue
Disbelief is not the same thing as lacking belief. There are in general three answers to the question of belief in Bigfoot's existence:
1) I believe Bigfoot exists.
2) I don't know/care/etc.
3) I believe Bigfoot does not exist.
Completely impartial agnosticism, your position, is number 2. Number 1 is belief in Bigfoot. "Not believing" in Bigfoot encompasses everything that isn't number 1; that means 2 and 3, and any additional options we happen to dream up later.
Too, "Not disbelieving" in Bigfoot encompasses everything that isn't number 3; that means 1 and 2...
But that can't be right, because then position 2 encompasses both believing and not believing and that's nonsensical, so there must be something wrong with your classification.
Therefore, you don't believe Bigfoot exists. If you also take a completely impartial, agnostic view toward the existence of gods you are also not taking position number 1. Therefore, you lack belief in the existence of gods.
But you also lack disbelief.
Your religious agnosticism is an atheistic position.
But that classifaction confuses the issue. And leads to the contradiction above. So why use it?
Its better to keep things clear by having 1 be theism, 2 be agnosticism, and 3 be atheism. If you simply lack a belief in god, but don't take the position that god does not exist, then your not an atheist but an agnostic.
But that doesn't happen with people like you, presumably, because you want to call yourself an atheist, even if you don't want to take the position that god does not exist. Why is that?**
Personally, I think its for the shock value. You get a reaction from people when you claim atheism that you don't get from agnosticism. And its totally ghey to fall back onto: "Well, I don't believe that god doesn't exist, I just don't believe that he does." Shallow and pedantic.
Atheism is not the claim that gods don't exist, it is simply the lack of belief that gods exist. It is literally "not Theism", which understandably covers a wide range of beliefs, including completely impartial agnosticism.
I don't think that's correct.
quote:
The dictionary says that the definition of atheism is the belief that there is no god.
People on this forum have said that this is incorrect. They’ve said that atheist are ‘without a belief in god’ but are not ‘with a belief in no god’. The claim is as follows:
A-: without
Theism: a belief in god.
I couldn’t argue with that because I didn’t really know where the word came from and that claim seemed pretty good.
Then, I saw the following line in the dictionary under the definition of atheism:
quote:
{< Gk athe(os) godless + -ISM}
from The Random House Dictionary of the English Language, The Unabridged Edition, Published in New York by Random House, Inc. 1983 page 93
This says, to me, that the claim that atheism means ‘without a belief in god’ but not ‘with a belief in no god’ is wrong. The word is greek in origin and is actually a belief that god doesn’t exist.
That's from Message 1, from back in 2005 Damn! 5 years ago...
** that might be a better question to answer in the other thread linked just above.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 320 by Phage0070, posted 07-25-2010 7:21 PM Phage0070 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 375 by Phage0070, posted 07-29-2010 12:35 PM New Cat's Eye has replied

New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


(1)
Message 380 of 479 (570948)
07-29-2010 1:37 PM
Reply to: Message 375 by Phage0070
07-29-2010 12:35 PM


Re: confusing the issue
There are two major problems with your thought here. The first is your terminology: "Disbelief" is rejection or lack of belief. That is not the same as belief that Bigfoot does not exist, and does not equate with position 3.
Sure it does. If you disbelieve Bigfoot, then you believe that it doesn't exist. Perhaps the disclaimer of 'positive' disbelief is in order to reduce the ambiguity.
The second problem is that you completely missed the significance of the word "not". Position 2 is included in both not believing to exist and not believing to not exist and that's just reasonable.
Sure, but with your classification, Position 2 also encompasses both believing and not believing. That is what's nonsensical.
Disbelief is not the same as believing to be false. Agnostics have disbelief.
I disagree. Agnostics don't believe nor disbelieve. They're neutral. Disbelief is believing to be false, especially with the qualifier of positive disbelief.
Perhaps because thats not what the words mean? Or because there is a wider range of beliefs than that?
But that is what the words mean. Or at least, what they did mean until some agnostics decided that they wanted to call themselves athiests.
Someone who claims that there are no gods (which you seem to have confused with atheism for some reason)
Because that's what atheism means... the belief that god doesn't exist.
The issue is that the term "atheist" literally means "not-theist",
Not originally... that's what the agnostics who want to be atheists have changed the meaning to be. I don't understand the point in that.
so you cannot simply label #3 as "the atheist position". It simply isn't the case.
According to the proper definition of atheism, that is exactly the case.
On the flip side, theists claim that they *know* gods exist for the power and control this offers, as well as social gain.
Maybe some do but I don't.
Only when pressed will people like jar or RAZD or even you admit that their belief is personal, unprovable, and not absolutely certain. Merely acceptable to them for personal reasons.
Myself, RAZD and jar have all been upfront about ourselves recognizing that our theism is irrational. We didn't have to be pressed.
Far more than shallow and pedantic, I consider such behavior dishonest and unethical. Now if you are done throwing insults and measuring your dick, how about you get back on topic?
Like I said, your reply would have been better in the other thread I linked to.
"athe(os) godless"
"Theos" is Greek for "deity" or "god". Atheos is then the lack of a deity or god... which means godless.
No. The greek origin is not for simply not being with god, it is for being without god. It isn't simply lacking a belief in god, it is believing that there is no god.
Someone who does not believe a god exists obviously is "godless"
Not necessarily... they could be agnostic.
so that fits nicely.
I don't think so.
However that does not imply a positive claim that gods don't exist.
Yeah, now that people are using the wrod differently. But its suppose to and that is the meaning the word came from.
I'm still lost on why the agnostics want to call themselves atheists so bad

This message is a reply to:
 Message 375 by Phage0070, posted 07-29-2010 12:35 PM Phage0070 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 384 by Phage0070, posted 07-29-2010 3:29 PM New Cat's Eye has replied

New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


(1)
Message 385 of 479 (570990)
07-29-2010 3:45 PM
Reply to: Message 384 by Phage0070
07-29-2010 3:29 PM


Re: confusing the issue
I don't care about a position on a *claim*... I'll take your retreat as being unable to show where I'm wrong in what I'm actually saying.
ABE:
You weren't talking about a claim when I jumped in:
From Message 320:
quote:
Disbelief is not the same thing as lacking belief. There are in general three answers to the question of belief in Bigfoot's existence:
1) I believe Bigfoot exists.
2) I don't know/care/etc.
3) I believe Bigfoot does not exist.
Completely impartial agnosticism, your position, is number 2. Number 1 is belief in Bigfoot. "Not believing" in Bigfoot encompasses everything that isn't number 1; that means 2 and 3, and any additional options we happen to dream up later.
I think I've shown why you're wrong.
Yes, that is its original meaning. You can see this in other words with Greek roots: For instance, gnostic and agnostic. A gnostic claims to *know* (the Greek word "Gnosis" means knowledge) while an agnostic does *lack* knowledge.
This is the exact same linguistic term used in theism and atheism from the Greek root of "Theos", meaning "deity or god". Theos - theism is the jump from "deity or god" to "belief in deity or god". Similarly the jump from atheos to atheism is the jump from "lack of deity or god" to "lack of belief in deity or god".
It really is that simple.
But you're wrong...
as I showed in Message 374:
quote:
The dictionary says that the definition of atheism is the belief that there is no god.
People on this forum have said that this is incorrect. They’ve said that atheist are ‘without a belief in god’ but are not ‘with a belief in no god’. The claim is as follows:
A-: without
Theism: a belief in god.
I couldn’t argue with that because I didn’t really know where the word came from and that claim seemed pretty good.
Then, I saw the following line in the dictionary under the definition of atheism:
quote:
{< Gk athe(os) godless + -ISM}
from The Random House Dictionary of the English Language, The Unabridged Edition, Published in New York by Random House, Inc. 1983 page 93
This says, to me, that the claim that atheism means ‘without a belief in god’ but not ‘with a belief in no god’ is wrong. The word is greek in origin and is actually a belief that god doesn’t exist.
Edited by Catholic Scientist, : see ABE

This message is a reply to:
 Message 384 by Phage0070, posted 07-29-2010 3:29 PM Phage0070 has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 386 by Phage0070, posted 07-29-2010 3:49 PM New Cat's Eye has replied

New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


(1)
Message 387 of 479 (570993)
07-29-2010 3:54 PM
Reply to: Message 386 by Phage0070
07-29-2010 3:49 PM


Re: confusing the issue
It isn't a retreat, it is simply what we were talking about from the start.
You must've missed my edit. My bad.
You were not talking about a claim when I jumped in...
From Message 320:
quote:
Disbelief is not the same thing as lacking belief. There are in general three answers to the question of belief in Bigfoot's existence:
1) I believe Bigfoot exists.
2) I don't know/care/etc.
3) I believe Bigfoot does not exist.
Completely impartial agnosticism, your position, is number 2. Number 1 is belief in Bigfoot. "Not believing" in Bigfoot encompasses everything that isn't number 1; that means 2 and 3, and any additional options we happen to dream up later.
I think I've shown why you're wrong.
You are just rambling on your own tangent, and if my unwillingness to follow you makes you claim victory, that is up to you.
I've outlined your error and showed where you're wrong. So yeah, that was my intention.
World English Dictionary:
n
rejection of belief in God or gods
[C16: from French athisme, from Greek atheos godless, from a- 1 + theos god]
Your linguistic interpretation is false.
I don't think so. The definition has changed.
I still don't understand why agnostics want to call themselves atheists.
Edited by Catholic Scientist, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
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New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


Message 389 of 479 (571003)
07-29-2010 4:23 PM
Reply to: Message 371 by crashfrog
07-29-2010 2:26 AM


That wouldn't be on topic in this thread and I've laid out the evidentiary case against God many times in the past.
So, per the topic of this thread...
Say we have a religion that believes in god.
How would you identify it as false?
Or do you have links to the times in the past?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 371 by crashfrog, posted 07-29-2010 2:26 AM crashfrog has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 390 by crashfrog, posted 07-29-2010 5:37 PM New Cat's Eye has replied
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New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


Message 391 of 479 (571028)
07-29-2010 5:47 PM
Reply to: Message 390 by crashfrog
07-29-2010 5:37 PM


Say we have a religion that believes in god.
I'm sorry, believes in what?
Of course What was I thinking?
Have a nice day.
ABE:
Although. that makes me wonder just what the fuck you were talking about when you said this:
quote:
That wouldn't be on topic in this thread and I've laid out the evidentiary case against God many times in the past.
Edited by Catholic Scientist, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 390 by crashfrog, posted 07-29-2010 5:37 PM crashfrog has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 392 by crashfrog, posted 07-29-2010 5:57 PM New Cat's Eye has replied

New Cat's Eye
Inactive Member


(1)
Message 394 of 479 (571038)
07-29-2010 6:35 PM
Reply to: Message 392 by crashfrog
07-29-2010 5:57 PM


"God" as an utterance doesn't communicate much meaning to me. I'm prepared to debate the existence of whatever you refer to when you say "God" but you need to tell me what that is, first.
Or, you could define it in your argument.
Or, you can just use whatever you were when you said:
quote:
I've laid out the evidentiary case against God many times in the past.
It's like saying "let's debate the existence of vampires." Ok, but which vampires? Buffy-style, who crumble when staked or burned by the sun and cast no reflection? Blade-style, who transmit vampirism virally and are destroyed by silver? Twilight-style sparkly pheremone vampires? The naked space vampire chick from "Lifeforce"? One-legged hopping Chinese vampires? (For serious, Chinese vampires hop.) You'd have to be more specific.
If you said you had a case against vampires, and then I asked you for it, why wouldn't you just assume we're talking about whatever vampires you meant in the first place?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 392 by crashfrog, posted 07-29-2010 5:57 PM crashfrog has replied

Replies to this message:
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