Consequences of Atheism

Is there a God? If so, what is She like?

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uwot
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Re: Consequences of Atheism

Post by uwot »

uwot wrote:I keep telling you, Gus, intellectual light-weights readily confuse coherence for truth.
The Inglorious One wrote:The atheist's lack of depth and lack of insight into higher realms of thought and awareness cannot, as I said, be anything other than detrimental to the planet's health and the health of human race.
I rest my case.
sthitapragya
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Re: Consequences of Atheism

Post by sthitapragya »

Gustav Bjornstrand wrote:
Shtita wrote:What you call a state of awareness, I have personally found to be a state of denial. The refusal to let go of the brainwashing we get from childhood about God. Since childhood, most people we look up to believe in God. That tells us that there must be a God since all these people we admire and look up to believe in God. The problem is that most people suffer from the inability to let go of that psychological crutch and as a result transfer the same psychological baggage to the next generation.
It seems unquestionable that religious positions - in a large degree if the truth be told - are attempts to re-inhabit an 'ancient position' which has been decimated. Here we would have to speak about the way that old religionists support an intuition about God's existence (which I would not deny but see no reason why not to look into it and question it) through symbolical forms which are held in the imagination - the imagination: that place in man where he imagines his world. A great deal of focus is required to understand man's conceptual structure and how it 'reflects' (to use a common metaphor) a reality but is not itself Reality. To understand man in general, and man-as-man, requires an examination of this, man's most important capability.

There is indeed such a thing as 'brainwashing' and it is strongly evident in numerous settings. The hard, strict, inflexible religious positions which are held to by religious zealots is a real thing. It can certainly be examined and spoken about. Yet too there is political brainwashing, and social brainwashing, ideological brainwashing, and also efforts to invade, gain a foothold in, and seek leverage in man's inner (imagined, sentimental) conceptual world. If we are going to refer to a specific religious brainwashing, we need overall to examine 'brainwashing' as a function of modern society. We would have to include public relations and propaganda, social situation and coercion, and many other things. Additionally, we would have to be willing to examine the far opposite of 'religious brainwashing' by examining the philosophical or religious mind at its best, and in its best circumstance. I find that numerous of the English philosophers/religionists of the same school as Willey to carry the whole thing off very admirably. These are men who have carefully studied intellectual history, who have mastered numerous languages, who are well-apprised by scientific method and influence, and who in no sense shirk the task of examining their religious understanding. So, what this means is that though there is indeed a low end, there is also a high end.

It must also be said, I think, that the low end tends to remain the low end. Meaning, there is a class of men who is not interested in gaining the higher ground. To all appearances they will remain, even when given the opportunity, at a lower level of use of their conceptual faculties. These men if the structure of religious life is taken from them, or significantly disrupted and undermined, will simply transfer their allegiance, as it were, to some other structure or form. Sport-obsession, political-obsession, sexual-obsession, etc. It is unwise to refer to the lower denominator in these conversations.
Just look at the words you have used: "an attempt to quantify an unquantifiable." How can you ever attempt to quantify that which is unquantifiable? It IS unquantifiable. So there can only be belief.
You are admitting that there is something 'unquantifiable'. What occurs *here*, in this existence, is and will forever be the source of mystery and wonder. Yet there is a way to deaden oneself to that awareness. To speak about that, to arrive at some understanding of how this deadening occurs, is relevant to these conversations. In this sense we are 'brainwashed' by our social structures to learn to see our reality as quotidian, non-spectacular. Often people rebel against the vision-structure that dominates perception. They seek to break through a veil, to break the spell of 'dreaming man' and to gain for themselves an opening in their perception-structure to a new, a different, and a more vitalising Vision of the world, of life, and of reality.

I suggest to you that whatever your particular vision or understanding is of 'atheism', it certainly feels to me one that lacks imagination, creativity, spark, and does not in itself communicate wonder, openness, new ways to assemble the 'stories' of perception, and seems overall to function like a damper. In bad circumstances, under some level of 'regime' (say at a university or in some cultural setting) it could very well function authoritatively as authoritarianism. I refer to Obvious Leo (and Vege-Taxi hopped on this ride as well) and the beginning of a position that describes those who have religious outlook as mentally ill, as requiring intervention by psychological authority to control the deviation.

Though I would not say that you, Sthita, seem to desire such an eventuality, it is a real issue, and these ideas are floating around. In this sense those who hold to 'religious imagination' and those who seek *experience* of divinity in the life they live, seek to break away from controlling structure in the mental sphere. I am certainly suggesting that some part of this present conversation, polarised in mind-numbing circularity, takes the shape it does because *we* resist aspects of modern mechanism in thinking. This of course should be brought out and spoken of in a wide-ranging and fair conversation.
You say many people "get it" today. What happens when they "get it"? What changes for them? What purpose does "getting it" serve? Those who get it still suffer from the same problems that those who do not "get it" do. They get angry, frustrated, sad, depressed, happy exactly like those that "don't get it" among the believers do. People like me who "don't get it" still are happy, live fulfilled lives, spend time with our children, live honorable lives, do charity, work for the betterment of humanity and the society around us. I don't see any difference in the believer me and the non-believer me. Both are exactly the same. The only difference I see is that I see happiness and a good life as independent of the belief in God.

You are ignorant of a huge and wide social and literary history that has been going on for 300 years. If you desire to talk about the 'religious imagination' and what it does/can do (to put it grossly), I'd suggest references to Shakespeare's imagined constructions. Let's suppose that you wanted to speak about 'religious remorse' or the power of the an element of retributionary conscience that arises in man: Macbeth. Or an inner scenario of seeing into the hubristic mind that undergoes a terrifyingly difficult transformational process brought on by its own self and attitude: King Lear. Or a way of understanding how temptation at the most inner levels, at fundamental levels inside of a person and out of the grip and reach (in this sense) of the mundane and mechanical world: Othello. There are hundreds if not THOUSANDS of examples that could be cited, and here, on this darling forum peopled by philsophically illiterate nit-wits, no one is there to hear! Why is this? What has happened to the inner man here? Should it begin to dawn on you 'what has happened', you will begin to grasp and possibly with some alarm what concerns me and others, and why these issues have importance for us.

If you look overall at the effort on this forum of the atheist crowd, it is a destructive and narrowing effort based in coercion and authoritarianism. If you cannot see what I am referring to, I don't know if I can help much in that process. There is so much more that can be said about all of this, and there is no one home to have the conversation. You definitely earn a B+ (even a begrudged A-) simply because you stick with the conversation and with argument of some level.
I am okay even if God exists. I have no problem if tomorrow it turns out that you were right and I am wrong and God actually exists. Even after that fact is clear to me, nothing in my life will change. I will carry on exactly as I am doing now because the principles and the code of honour which I have arrived at are my own conclusions and based on my own convictions. They are completely independent of and have nothing to do with the existence or non-existence of God.

Existence exists. And this is outside of any possibility of your encapsulation. I suggest a fuller opening to that fact as the place all of us must start from. But you will need to remember that I am calling for a total and new relationship to the Question. I am suggesting that we cannot, now, visualise what a remodelled existential platform is or will be. We cannot because it is still forming. Again, all of this is part of a larger, a wider, a more important conversation, and yet here people are fighting the battle against the religionist of their own 'imagined world'. I suggest reading the article Inglorious posted from The Guardian. It provides a platform of understanding what must be avoided and transcended.
However, I am okay even if God does not exist. If tomorrow it turns out that I am right and you are wrong, nothing will change for me again. I will carry on exactly as I am carrying on right now. Can you say the same?
This is non-intelligent. You are stuck in an argument with your own category. I do not think that Inglorious is stuck in nor interested in that category or in enacting as a character the role you have sketched for him. I will leave him to make his own statements and will simply say that you have no idea at all what another man's process is or has been in regard to these things. For you, God did not ever really *exist* and you seem to speak to an unreal shadow, a figment of your imagination that you describe as being your 'religiousness' of previous times. This is shallow. Your understanding has only functioned at the most shallow level but you want to peg this on others. This is all fairly typical for, in the end, we are battling the demons of our own imagination. But there is a way around this and out of the boring circularity: To begin to enquire about other men's experience. To begin to look into the literary material - reflecting inner experience - out of which our *world* has been constructed (Occidental world I mean principally).

You are solidly and obviously an ignorant man in these areas.
Didn't read any of that because i have now categorized you as one of those pathetic bitter people who have read a lot but have no concept of what they actually believe in. You have no resemblance to any of the true believers of God who are usually graceful and humble. You are arrogant and bitter and well read. But you confuse well read with intelligent. You might have read a lot, but remember I can store more books in a computer. It does not make it intelligent. Your thoughts which you pen down, your narrow minded bigotry and your hubris classify you as someone who is so far away from God that you are closer to your version of an atheist than I am. So No. I am not reading any of your crap anymore. You are just not worth the effort.
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Re: Consequences of Atheism

Post by The Inglorious One »

It's hard not to believe that a cultural narrative that regards Ultimate Reality as a "You" is going to promote behavior that quite different than one that regards it as an "it. "
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Re: Consequences of Atheism

Post by The Inglorious One »

sthitapragya wrote:Didn't read any of that because i have now categorized you as one of those pathetic bitter people who have read a lot but have no concept of what they actually believe in. You have no resemblance to any of the true believers of God who are usually graceful and humble. You are arrogant and bitter and well read. But you confuse well read with intelligent. You might have read a lot, but remember I can store more books in a computer. It does not make it intelligent. Your thoughts which you pen down, your narrow minded bigotry and your hubris classify you as someone who is so far away from God that you are closer to your version of an atheist than I am. So No. I am not reading any of your crap anymore. You are just not worth the effort.
Sure you're not taking about me?
sthitapragya
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Re: Consequences of Atheism

Post by sthitapragya »

The Inglorious One wrote:
sthitapragya wrote:Didn't read any of that because i have now categorized you as one of those pathetic bitter people who have read a lot but have no concept of what they actually believe in. You have no resemblance to any of the true believers of God who are usually graceful and humble. You are arrogant and bitter and well read. But you confuse well read with intelligent. You might have read a lot, but remember I can store more books in a computer. It does not make it intelligent. Your thoughts which you pen down, your narrow minded bigotry and your hubris classify you as someone who is so far away from God that you are closer to your version of an atheist than I am. So No. I am not reading any of your crap anymore. You are just not worth the effort.
Sure you're not taking about me?
Not in the least bit.You might get abusive sometimes, which by the way is just tiring and stops the whole discussion, but otherwise, I have no issues with you at all. You look down on atheists with contempt maybe which I find to be healthy in any opposing view camps. But you are not a bigot and nothing in your posts suggests that you believe that atheists are essentially bad.
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Gustav Bjornstrand
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Re: Consequences of Atheism

Post by Gustav Bjornstrand »

Sthita wrote:Didn't read any of that because i have now categorized you as one of those pathetic bitter people who have read a lot but have no concept of what they actually believe in.

What has actually happened, this is of course my opinion, is that you have lost the general argument. However to have 'won' is not much of a gain since, essentially, you have no 'argument' and just some personal anecdotes, some opinions which - I have suggested - need to be more fully developed. 'Pathetic bitter person' is really the quintessence of the unproductive aspect of the ad hominem fallacy. You are now in a position that all that is left to you is a personal attack, and one that is concocted and quite inaccurate. You have given expression here to the a priori that you began with, and this is pretty common: a person will generally end with almost precisely the predicates they began with if they do not make a conscious effort to expand (or shrink) the predicates they start from.

Frankly, we cannot ever read enough. But I think that you are admitting what is one of my main issues with you as an intellect: you simply have not read at all. What I find interesting, if strangely perverse, is that you are stating that - and on a philosophy forum where the ideal must be wide education and wide reading - that you dismiss the relevancy of wide reading as essential to understanding the depth of the issues. This is a bullshit argument. It is really quite perverse and points up another important point I have tried to make: People who have no qualification to spout conclusives, and people who are caught up in social trends (atheism I categorise in this way, at least insofar as most here have engaged it), really need to do their homework, and they need to resist the tendency to open their mouths before they have really organised a cogent position. I accept that today anyone can pipe-up and churn out oppositional paragraphs, but I am suggesting that this is not productive work or engagement. It fits into a pattern of general destructiveness.
I have now categorized you as one of those pathetic bitter people who have read a lot but have no concept of what they actually believe in.
The perversity of your stance, and the weakness of your argument, certainly allow you to make any statement you want now! It is all red herring material and has no bearing on any part of the argument being explored. However, what I have tried to point out is that I don't think any of us really has certainty about 'what to believe in'. For example I have a wide range of experience which I refer to when I think of spiritual life. But how would I successfully present that to another person who does not have that experience? Or what if I notice that many biting arguments are sent up which operate against 'a conceptual pathway to the possibility of a relationship with the divine' but that I have not really sat down and organised a discourse of defence? It is not exactly the same as 'not knowing what you believe in', it is that one searches for a way to express it. Additionally, I think it is a stronger position to hold to some level of uncertainty about 'what to believe' (what to conclude about existence essentially). You are also wrong about bitterness. I think you confuse biting sarcasm with bitterness! My understanding is that of those who come to battle the atheistic perspective, each one of you fails quite miserably in your appointed task. I have contempt, it is true, because you do not take your own project seriously enough. But I take it seriously. And as I said I will gain even if you lose.
You have no resemblance to any of the true believers of God who are usually graceful and humble.

Now you are really showing that you have no argument at all! You don't believe in 'God' and yet you refer to a supposed outcome of godly behaviour or relationship. This is only absurdity. If the godly are humble it is because they are involved in a self-deceptive sham. As you continually say it is all the result of 'psychology' and so the falsely modest and 'humble' behaviour must also be a false-product of a 'psychological' aberrance. How odd you are!

But I take issue with the notion that an activist believer or religionist is 'humble' as you say. True, it is another conversation altogether but I see a religious position (say reforming Christianity) as anything but humble in the sense you mean. It all has to do with decisiveness in relation to ideas and choices and values. 'Humility' is not really a category here. Anyway, only the genuinely humble should be humble. People like me are best off being ourselves ...
You are arrogant and bitter and well read. But you confuse well read with intelligent.

None of this is relevant at all to any part of this important conversation. What matters here is the basic and the core predicates that are in operation in us and around us. What matters is being able to identify how our 'beliefs' about all things are choices of interpretation and that all choices in the idea-realm have consequences. To understand what I am speaking about, and what you and all others here should be speaking about were we to take the questions seriously, requires many years of close and careful reading. You seem to desire to state here that you are 'intelligent' and I would remind you that some posts back you described YOURSELF as completely mediocre. I accept your self-analysis. You are certainly a capable man but you have no understanding of what you are talking about, not in a sense that would enable you to make any decisive statements. Too, and I only suggest this to you, you seem to project some of your own 'bitterness' onto me. Quite typical really. We all have to watch out for projections (in the psychological sense of course!)
Your thoughts which you pen down, your narrow minded bigotry and your hubris classify you as someone who is so far away from God that you are closer to your version of an atheist than I am. So No. I am not reading any of your crap anymore. You are just not worth the effort.
Bizarre. The atheist's appeal to God and the godly as part of an argument against theism? But if I am 'close to atheism' this must be a good thing, no? Maybe we will now reverse roles. :shock:

I suggested, or rather Alizia T. suggested, that you should stay down on the ground. I think it better that you took her advise. You have basically abandoned the field of argument. Have it your way ...
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Gustav Bjornstrand
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Re: Consequences of Atheism

Post by Gustav Bjornstrand »

Having just finished Willey's 'Christianity Then and Now', I am reminded of what I think is a Core of the Christian belief-set in a quintessential sense. I would contrast this with the 'neti-neti' ('not this, not that') approach in the Indian metaphysical system which has more to do with distinguishing what is Unreal (everything) from what is Real (the particle or core of the innermost self) and places man in an abstracted relationship to 'the world'. Indian spirituality is not really about the transformation of the individual, it is about the negation of the individual.

The essence of a relationship to Christ, and to God, and also to life, society, friendship, love, family and children (in the ideal sense), is coming into and toward repentance (μετάνοια = metanoia). The whole idea of 'sin' and that of identifying oneself in a fallen condition is that one begins to understand the degree to which one has fallen, or is in a debased condition, and the relationship with a personal and 'living God' is the process of allowing God to operate in oneself and to bring one to regeneration. The regenerative possibility and undertaking is very much at the centre of Occidental processes.

This is really I think the Core of Christianity and this is why Christianity cannot ever be separated from the personal relationship to divinity. You cannot have a personal relationship, as Inglorious has pointed out, with an 'it'. To visualise God as an intelligence that interacts with one is part of the core definition. The process is one of and for an inner man, who then turns back to his outer world bringing his inner efforts into the practical sphere. There has to be an inner man to undergo the process and Occidental process have to do with the invention of self. We are all outcomes of these historical processes. And when we cut ourselves off from the processes that produced us, we run the risk of severing ourselves a way from 'the possibilities of self'. Nihilism, for us, takes on odd forms as a result.

You have to have an Inner Man to have an inner life. And a large part of the Christian emphasis seems to be on defining this 'area'. Harold Bloom wrote in 'The Invention of the Human':
  • "Personality, in our sense, is a Shakespearean invention, and is not only Shakespeare's greatest originality but also the authentic cause of his perpetual pervasiveness."
These inner processes, with the outer expression, have more to do with sentiment (our feeling about things, about everything) and relationship much more than it is one of abstract removal of oneself from the field of life. This is a great strength of the Christian platform. At a perverse level though it leads to a maudlin sentimentality and other defects. Liberalised Christianity tends to negate the formative and the ethical building blocks and thus lead to a liberal sentimentality, but that is of course another topic.
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Re: Consequences of Atheism

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I've read quite a bit about the "neti, neti' approach. It does seem to be more about negating than understanding the inner life. Some books I've read can be summed-up in two words: shit happens. Western Apophatic theology seems to me to have more direction than the customary "neti neti" approach. It (neti neti) is no dIfferent than atheism in that respect and has the same disregard for the inner life. Atheists in the West have no inkling of how much their values are gleaned from their religious, particularly Christian heritage,. The problem is that while they've adopted the sentiment, they reject the source of the values behind them.

Gustav, I really do not understand sthitapragya's dislike for you. Perhaps your clarity poses more of a threat to his established ideas than my 2x4? I don't know.
Last edited by The Inglorious One on Thu Oct 15, 2015 5:59 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Consequences of Atheism

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It is part of a general pattern of 'game'. Those who play this game will in one moment 'hate' someone and favour another, then flip-flop and hate the other and favour the former. Then, they will throw up their arms in dismay at the whole, useless conversation when it does not go their way. The most intriguing aspect is when they say 'I don't read your posts' but then comment on them ...

It is all high-humour and rather delightful.
Atheists in the West have no inkling of how much their values are gleaned from their religious, particularly Christian heritage.
This is so very true. I would describe it at even more fundamental levels: The Occidental self is a creation of a long relationship with values and ideals (and also metaphysics and nearly everything else) that are thoroughly Christian. But of course 'Christianity' requires a definition at this point, and Christianity is a joining and blending of pagan philosophy and humanism and a new relationship of personalism of a quite unique order.
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Re: Consequences of Atheism

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I don't think I've ever see a cogent argument coming from the atheist camp in PN. Religion is a "meme" or "crutch," atheism is not a belief, "God" is a violation of Occam's razor, chance is a causative agent, I don't need "God" to live a good life, atheists are more intelligent and creative, God is not a necessary concept, etc. is, to me, all rather amusing and shows an incredible lack of insight, thought and investigation. I have no respect for it at all -- and I'm not an "enemy" or "bigot"? I don't think atheists themselves are essentially "bad" (nor do you, I'm sure), but I do think the ideas they espouse are worse than worthless.
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Post by henry quirk »

"I don't think I've ever see a cogent argument coming from the atheist camp in PN."

If I see no evidence of fire in my house (no smoke, no flames, no heat, etc.) then it's reasonable for me to say 'I don't think there's a fire here'. I may be wrong, but -- as a limited creature -- I assess best as I can with the information available to me.

In the same way: if I see no evidence of god or gods in the world then it's reasonable for me to say 'I don't think there's a 'god' here'. Again: I may be wrong. but -- as a limited creature -- I assess best as I can with the information available to me.
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Post by The Inglorious One »

henry quirk wrote:"I don't think I've ever see a cogent argument coming from the atheist camp in PN."

If I see no evidence of fire in my house (no smoke, no flames, no heat, etc.) then it's reasonable for me to say 'I don't think there's a fire here'. I may be wrong, but -- as a limited creature -- I assess best as I can with the information available to me.

In the same way: if I see no evidence of god or gods in the world then it's reasonable for me to say 'I don't think there's a 'god' here'. Again: I may be wrong. but -- as a limited creature -- I assess best as I can with the information available to me.
Lack of evidence, indeed. It's rather amusing and shows an incredible lack of insight, thought and investigation; and perhaps most significantly, a total lack of wonder as to why things are the way they are.
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Re: Consequences of Atheism

Post by uwot »

The Inglorious One wrote:Atheists in the West have no inkling of how much their values are gleaned from their religious, particularly Christian heritage,.
Some of us do, Inglorious. In fact some of us know so much about it, we can explain why the cult of a Judaic misfit was adopted by the flagging Roman Empire, 300 years after the reported events. If you have the appetite for it, Inglorious, I could contextualise that account with the antecedent Greek, Mesopotamian and Egyptian mythology. I'm sure others could add to the palette.
The Inglorious One wrote:The problem is that while they've adopted the sentiment, they reject the source of the values behind them.
Do you think so, Inglorious? Might the problem not be with those sparsely educated folk who believe history started in 1AD?
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Re: Consequences of Atheism

Post by The Inglorious One »

...Greek, Mesopotamian and Egyptian mythology. I'm sure others could add to the palette.
Are you illiterate uwot? Or do you just ignore what has already been addressed?
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Post by henry quirk »

" Lack of evidence, indeed. It's rather amusing and shows an incredible lack of insight, thought and investigation; and perhaps most significantly, a total lack of wonder as to why things are the way they are."

HA!

As I say: I may be wrong, however nuthin' offered by any theist I've encountered here or anywhere moves me. As I told Mannie elsewhere in-forum *'I want to touch the piercings in his hands and side'. For me: nuthin' less will do.









*or, as I prefer, 'if you claim there is fire, you must show me the smoke, the flames, or -- at least -- let me touch the hot door behind which the fire lurks...nuthin' less will do'
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