Basic logic. Same test for all.
We're on a philosophy forum. That means that all of us are held to the same test: "Does it actually make sense?"
This is exactly why people with your mindset, Mr Can, should be resisted. It is entirely your business with whom you do, or do not argue, but to justify it by claiming that it is an act of kindness, is a dangerous excuse for totalitarianism. How else would you treat us for our own benefit? That you will not tolerate dissent is the intellectual cowardice of fascism.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Wed Jun 14, 2017 9:50 pmNot at all, actually. I speak of what I know, and imagine others to be doing likewise. I have no stake in seeing anyone put down. But I understand that it's a threat to some people when their ideology is put to the test and fails...and they lash back. I understand it, but feel no need to reciprocate.
I do have "selective hearing," as you put it. In fact, there are particular things you'll note I've chosen routinely not to hear. And they are as follows:
1. Blasphemy in which the speaker is calling Divine Judgment down upon himself. To encourage that would be hostile beyond belief, as it would mean I was encouraging the speaker to harm himself. What kind of person would do that?
2. Personal insults...what's the point? They're irrelevant to any question at all, and they only demean the speaker.
3. Gratuitous contradiction -- contradicting without providing good reasons or rationale. For what's the value of getting into a "Yes it is" / "No it isn't" kind of exchange? Where does such a thing go?
4. Things that could unnecessarily embarrass the speaker if drawn to public attention -- such as missing an all-too-obvious obvious point in some way, or saying something overly stupid that refutes itself. Sometimes it's just better to ignore a very ill-judged remark or argument than to point out its faults.
5. Useless rhetorical flourishes, like swearing, bullying, grandstanding, typing in big font, posting irrelevant pictures or memes...and so on.
There are a few other times I will ignore something, but I choose (I trust) for good reasons in each case.
The key is that I try to respond to issues and ideas, not personalities or gestures of rhetoric.
My axiom is simply that conversation is a privilege on all sides, not a right for anyone; so anyone has a right to choose when and if they respond to anything. When someone engages you, they're doing you a favour (unless they're just doing one of the above things), and it seems reasonable to me to keep it civil. Anybody has a right at any time to decide what they will and will not talk about.
Of course, by email it can be no other way. Anybody who does any of the five above is clearly just blustering about in impotent rage, not focusing on the issues at hand.
I'm also not thin-skinned, if you hadn't noticed; it doesn't bother me a bit what anybody says about me personally. For in the first place, that's nothing to the issue; and in the second, who the heck has any idea here who or what I really am?![]()
Carry on as you see fit. I shall do likewise.
I did not ask a question here. By saying, "Yes" are you saying that you did not show any decency on purpose?
Interpretaton/projection
Judgement/interpretation/projection
Yes.
The facts of the world and phenomenology, and requests for doable actions, is about the limit of meaningful discussion that you can stick to.
Is that what you would really do?
There are no "converts" because a human being can not just decide to change from one thing into another thing. A human being is a human being. If you want to ever understand what that truly is, then you will ask Me clarifying questions. "Converts" is just another label placed on the person.
Would you expect to make any new discoveries and thus make new "facts" of "this world" by doing that? Or, by just reading what has already being written about a topic, would you just expect to find the already known "facts" of "this world"?
Does that make you feel excited?
I feel bored reading what you write now.
Really?
Does that amaze you?
No, that is what 'you' got.
But I have absolutely no interest in that at all.
I'm not making any claim about why atheists convert to Christianity, that would be a big job. I would suggest meanwhile that a literature review, grassroots bottom-up ethnographic interviews with sorting and tallying of trends, combing for deeper psychoanalytic interpretation, and a collection of bigger trends as Yang (2005) did would be a pretty solid methodological come at it. You could probably get that published in a good journal, or present at a high-level conference, or take a graduate or doctoral degree.
Yes, Sartre talked about that kind of thing a lot in Being and Nothingness.No human being can be a "atheist", "christian", nor even a "muslim", so how and why do some human beings even think there could even be a "conversion" or that they could "convert" another?
Are you feeling angry about something?Did you assume that I had some sort of interest in this?
I hope I did not make things to hard for you this time, did I?
The business of studying a text in context is key. If you find a paper with the words, "Your wife is cheating," then your first question should be, "Does this mean MY wife?"Science Fan wrote: ↑Thu Jun 15, 2017 5:28 pm IC: The words are the words, and the quoted section expressly states, without any ambiguity, that the condemnation applies to all atheists and agnostics, and presumably, other religious people who do not accept Jesus.
Which Biblical passage did you have in mind? I know of no such at all.atheists are demonized
You really need to read more carefully, SF. There is absolutely no mention in the passage of what Christians ought to do to "treat" anybody. Rather, it is an explanation of how God Himself will treat those First Century Hebrews who might be inclined willfully and knowingly to reject His Son by choosing to revert to the Old Covenant.why should the Christians treat the ancient Jews so horribly and not modern-atheists?
As above, there is none there. We are not told to be unkind to Jews or Atheists.Why the double standard?
Who is saving mass murderers and rapists? And who says Jews are not worth saving? That's not merely wild extrapolation, it's a reading that no part of the text or context will bear. I might remind you that that doesn't even make sense. Messiah Himself is a Jew, as were all of his disciples, and the entirety of the first church...look it up, if you doubt it. And as for Atheists, the term is unknown in all of the Bible. It's pretty hard to "demonize" anybody you don't even name.Why should ancient Jews have been considered not worth saving, while mass murderers and rapists were considered worth saving?
Misreading is a fault of the reader, particularly in this case. As the old saying among exegetes goes, "Reading without context is a pretext." It's like I said about the note about somebody's wife: if you jump wildly to the conclusion that it has to be your own wife who is being named, and it turns out not to be, then the fault would be your own.3. If the passages are so easily subjected to misreading, then that alone makes the Bible an imperfect work.
Again, where? The word doesn't even appear in the Bible anywhere. Check out any concordance program, and you'll see I'm right.The very fact that the Bible demonizes atheists
The words are the words though...God in the flesh is the word / logos..God becoming known in the word itself...the unknown no thing believed to be thing as it becomes known through the word. Drop the word and it's attached meaning/belief and what is actually there ...??Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jun 16, 2017 1:59 am The business of studying a text in context is key. If you find a paper with the words, "Your wife is cheating," then your first question should be, "Does this mean MY wife?"What would be absurd would be just to assume, without a context like why it was said and to whom, that it was YOUR wife that was being indicated, and act accordingly.
That's an example of why a reasonable interpreter takes stock of the context, and does not just say, "The word are the words."
But you can believe as you choose, of course.
So which is it, Mr Can? Do you study texts in context; or do you take people at their word?
So the believer is a word like I said.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Fri Jun 16, 2017 12:28 pmNobody but a Gnostic, I expect. But that's pretty much true of Gnosticism in general.
You're in good company, doc. Well, if you call the pope 'good': https://www.americamagazine.org/faith/2 ... pe-francis
So your assumption would be that "unbeliever" and "Atheist" are the same term? I disagree. "Unbelievers" would include a lot more people than that. Agnostics don't believe. Nor do Hindus, Muslims, Zoroastrians...let's fill out the list. And plenty of them are, in name at least, "Theists" too.Science Fan wrote: ↑Fri Jun 16, 2017 2:57 pm For example, "Do not be yoked together with unbelievers. For what do righteousness and wickedness have in common? Or what fellowship can light have with darkness?" (2 Corinthians 6:14).
Well, not JUST Atheists, if such had been known back then, but, as I say above, absolutely anyone who does not believe in the truth, actually.In this passage, believers are prevented from marrying atheists, precisely because, it is claimed, atheists are "wicked."
Ha....demonize atheists...