and yet you wasted five of 'em on me:Dubious wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 1:06 amGet the hell lost. You aren't worth a single sentence. If your posts lately are due to senility, I apologize for all my insults. If not, as mentioned before...get the fuck lost. You said you'd comply but here you are again adding to your bucket of useless shit.henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 12:09 am What would be the most reasonable, rational conclusion on the existence of something for which there was never any validation of having existed or even any necessity for it?
awkward
Why should I believe in sumthin' for which there is no evidence and no need?
better
Why should I believe in god when there's no evidence such a being exists and when I have no need of him?
even better
I deny god. I don't need god. No evidence you offer will move me.
nailed it
I get a![]()
God given rights. Do you really have any?
- henry quirk
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Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
...which is minuscule compared to all the others that were wasted on you and not just from me. Now, if you don't want to prove yourself a liar, do what you said and stay away from me. That way we'll get along just fine!henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 1:14 amand yet you wasted five of 'em on me:Dubious wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 1:06 amGet the hell lost. You aren't worth a single sentence. If your posts lately are due to senility, I apologize for all my insults. If not, as mentioned before...get the fuck lost. You said you'd comply but here you are again adding to your bucket of useless shit.henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 12:09 am What would be the most reasonable, rational conclusion on the existence of something for which there was never any validation of having existed or even any necessity for it?
awkward
Why should I believe in sumthin' for which there is no evidence and no need?
better
Why should I believe in god when there's no evidence such a being exists and when I have no need of him?
even better
I deny god. I don't need god. No evidence you offer will move me.
nailed it
I get a![]()
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Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
That's because it's not really any kind of good argument. It could even be totally true, but not for the reason you think. So it's not really any kind of concession.
You mean if Creation itself could get started without a Creator? Or if there had been no revelations, whether to particular men, or to collectives, or in a book, or by a vision, or by any other means? Or if there had been no Incarnation? And if there had been no miracles, no Jesus Christ, no crucifixion, no salvation, no morality, no ultimate justice and no objective purpose to our existence?What would be the most reasonable, rational conclusion on the existence of something for which there was never any validation of having existed or even any necessity for it?
That's quite a hypothetical. But it's not much of a question, really. And the answer is straightforward: in that case, whether a position is rational or not wouldn't matter one bit. Believe a truth or believe a falsehood, or believe nothing at all, and we all still end up as dust and nothing.
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Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
We have no contract: I'll post as I like. If you feel put upon: file a complaint.Dubious wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 2:06 am...which is minuscule compared to all the others that were wasted on you and not just from me. Now, if you don't want to prove yourself a liar, do what you said and stay away from me. That way we'll get along just fine!henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 1:14 amand yet you wasted five of 'em on me:Dubious wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 1:06 am
Get the hell lost. You aren't worth a single sentence. If your posts lately are due to senility, I apologize for all my insults. If not, as mentioned before...get the fuck lost. You said you'd comply but here you are again adding to your bucket of useless shit.
Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
So in short, you're nothing more than a fucking liar on top of all your other outstanding qualities. It figures! Just make sure it's devoid of context that way I won't have any reason to respond.henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 2:45 amWe have no contract: I'll post as I like. If you feel put upon: file a complaint.
Keep emulating the big CEO in the BIG HOUSE!
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Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
Dubious wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 2:56 amSo in short, you're nothing more than a fucking liar on top of all your other outstanding qualities. It figures! Just make sure it's devoid of context that way I won't have any reason to respond.henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 2:45 amWe have no contract: I'll post as I like. If you feel put upon: file a complaint.
Keep emulating the big CEO in the BIG HOUSE!
Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
...and this is for being a snot-nosed arrogant asshole.


Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
I didn’t expect any concession but I am surprised that you even considered the possibility.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 2:32 amDubious wrote: ↑Sun Jun 21, 2020 10:02 pm It's ironic that you didn't notice having indirectly acquiesced to the argument by stating "God could have reasons for wanting to do things in exactly that way"...
That's because it's not really any kind of good argument. It could even be totally true, but not for the reason you think. So it's not really any kind of concession.
No! That’s not really what I mean for most of the conditions you outline.What would be the most reasonable, rational conclusion on the existence of something for which there was never any validation of having existed or even any necessity for it?You mean if Creation itself could get started without a Creator? Or if there had been no revelations, whether to particular men, or to collectives, or in a book, or by a vision, or by any other means? Or if there had been no Incarnation? And if there had been no miracles, no Jesus Christ, no crucifixion, no salvation, no morality, no ultimate justice and no objective purpose to our existence?
Let’s subsume all that you describe under the heading of revelation which it appears to be in one form or another. But what defines a “revelation” if not usually an intense mental or spiritual experience, even a soul-shaking one, that however powerful does not in itself presuppose a reality for the revelation to make sense. Minds can be convinced without any such recourse to reality not unlike believing in conspiracy theories. Mystical experiences do not require the catalyst of an actual god existing to take place; it may even be a limitation. So again the question stands.
I’m surprised you would say something like this - which I so thoroughly agree with – after having so often invoked an afterlife as a reason to believe in the first place.Believe a truth or believe a falsehood, or believe nothing at all, and we all still end up as dust and nothing.
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Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
You never disappoint Henry. A deist is just someone who packages all those things one does not know into a single convenient concept that can be placed in corner out of the way of all the things one does know and can actually do something about.henry quirk wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 1:11 am Man, I'm about to disappoint you...
I'm a deist,
You can take back the atta-boy if you want...![]()
Keep the atta-boy. You deserve it.
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Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
Of course. It's a very basic question, but not at all a difficulty, really. Even if it were true that God chose to speak through specific human agencies, that would tell neither for nor against their truthfulness.
Their truthfulness would be a separate question: your question only asks why the mediating agencies are what they are, not whether or not the message they contain is true. It does not follow that if a man says X, then X is automatically false.
Well, I answered the hypothetical situation you presented, even though I think it arbitrarily denies all of the above. And I wrote:No! That’s not really what I mean for most of the conditions you outline.What would be the most reasonable, rational conclusion on the existence of something for which there was never any validation of having existed or even any necessity for it?You mean if Creation itself could get started without a Creator? Or if there had been no revelations, whether to particular men, or to collectives, or in a book, or by a vision, or by any other means? Or if there had been no Incarnation? And if there had been no miracles, no Jesus Christ, no crucifixion, no salvation, no morality, no ultimate justice and no objective purpose to our existence?
I simply accepted the logical consequences of your hypothesis. I did not say it was my hypothesis.To which you replied:Believe a truth or believe a falsehood, or believe nothing at all, and we all still end up as dust and nothing.
I’m surprised you would say something like this - which I so thoroughly agree with – after having so often invoked an afterlife as a reason to believe in the first place.
As for the afterlife, I do not think I have offered it as "a reason to believe." I have, however, said that I believe in the afterlife, and that if such a thing exists, there are certain important consequences for the present.
You and I are both speaking of what follows logically from our first principle, our basic hypothesis about what is true and false about life. You are saying there's no God...that's your hypothesis. I'm saying there is, and that is mine. I know what my reasons for thinking what I think are, but I was asking about your reasons for choosing your hypothesis. You said it was that men speak for God; I said that that was a non-sequitur, since what men say can be true or false. And there we are. That's the story so far.
It's a perfectly good question, too. For the fact that a man or woman has had a mystical experience neither attests for or against its truthfulness.Let’s subsume all that you describe under the heading of revelation which it appears to be in one form or another. But what defines a “revelation” if not usually an intense mental or spiritual experience, even a soul-shaking one, that however powerful does not in itself presuppose a reality for the revelation to make sense. Minds can be convinced without any such recourse to reality not unlike believing in conspiracy theories. Mystical experiences do not require the catalyst of an actual god existing to take place; it may even be a limitation. So again the question stands.
Or to strengthen your question, we might even say this: it is said Mohammed went into a cave and had a vision. Jews and Christians (and Atheists) all think that if Mohammed had a vision at all, there's no reason to think his vision was anything more than a private mystical experience, with no reference to truth. So it's clear that even religious people, except perhaps for the very naive, automatically accept the claim "I had a vision" as indicative of truth.
So far, so good? I think we're agreeing thus far.
Well, what makes us reject the claim of Mohammed? The answer is remarkably similar for Jews, Christians and Atheists. It's that the Koran fails basic tests of truthfulness, such as correspondence to reality, accuracy to its own claims, empirical and historical facts, and rational coherence. So Jews, Christians and Atheists are on good grounds when saying, "If there is a revelation of God, that one isn't it."
But that doesn't warrant any of them jumping to the further conclusion, "Because Mohammed lied, so did every other claimed revelation." Each revelation has to be judged on its own merits...rather like all scientific hypotheses or all rational statements have to pass muster on their own merits. Some are always false, and some are sometimes true. It's always on an individual basis that we know -- not on a sweeping claim that all revelations must be false merely because they claim to be revelations.
Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
That makes some sense. It also seems to make sense that the "truths" and "lies" of the human world are for the human stage alone. To extend beliefs to apply to some kind of "heavens" or existence beyond the human world is imagination, the conditions and details of which naturally vary greatly among countless human imaginations. Books are the word and product of man too.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 2:32 am Believe a truth or believe a falsehood, or believe nothing at all, and we all still end up as dust and nothing.
So, which imaginations are to be believed? Does it matter for anything more than the experience we are having as humans?
I think not, other than the nature of it (expansive or contractive) may affect some form/quality of energy that merges back into some kind of totality when the human body dies. My impression is that no judgments or needs of the human/physical world are applicable beyond the human/physical world. "Beyond it" being where there is no fear, no desire, no worry, no judgment, no emptiness, no pain, no separation, no good, no bad, etc. Surely these ideas and feelings belong to, and are produced by, the limitations of the human experience.
What might the ABSENCE of such human qualities feel like? Can we feel acceptance for something like that? Can we enjoy exploring in these physical forms while we are in this physical world? Can it be beautiful and cherished without knowing all that it is?
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Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
Well, it makes sense only in a very limited way, and only if it is true that there is no God. Then, it's inescapable. However, if that supposition is not true, it is literally the most foolish and counterproductive (even suicidal) belief a person can possibly have.Lacewing wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 3:18 pmThat makes some sense.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 2:32 am Believe a truth or believe a falsehood, or believe nothing at all, and we all still end up as dust and nothing.
So everything depends that first supposition.
It also seems to make sense that the "truths" and "lies" of the human world are for the human stage alone.
That's definitely not true. After all, the definition of a "lie" is a statement manifestly disproved by reality. A "truth," then, is a belief that is justified by expressing precisely the way things actually are in reality.
Were that not so, there would be no difference between a truth and a lie, and we wouldn't even know what either was.
So, which imaginations are to be believed?
None. "Imaginations" are not the kinds of things that correspond to "belief." That's why we call children's playful delusions "make believe"; because we want them to understand that there's a difference between reality and imagination, and they won't do well in the world if they indulge exclusively in the latter at the expense of the former. We don't want them to "believe" in Goldilocks and the Three Bears: we want them to entertain the story imaginatively, but not to start believing in talking bears.
My impression is that no judgments or needs of the human/physical world are applicable beyond the human/physical world. "Beyond it" being where there is no fear, no desire, no worry, no judgment, no emptiness, no pain, no separation, no good, no bad, etc. Surely these ideas and feelings belong to, and are produced by, the limitations of the human experience.
Well, where would this place beyond "fear, desire, worry, judgment...etc." actually be? If the statement at the start of this message is true, and there is no God, there is no such place. There is only black oblivion forever. That's not even as good as unconsciousness...it's the great NOTHING.
And if we really understand what that means, that's hardly consoling. But it would be the inevitable destiny of every last one of us.
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Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
I wouldn't say that about Deists, though I'm not one; but actually, I can't think of a better definition of "Atheist" than that. Except that the Atheist then goes on to tell himself that he can be significant and "actually do something," whereas his own creed assures him he never can, since all is simply the inevitable product of material forces.RCSaunders wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 2:15 pm A deist is just someone who packages all those things one does not know into a single convenient concept that can be placed in corner out of the way of all the things one does know and can actually do something about.
So he doesn't even treat his own worldview as something worthy of his own belief. In actual practice, he just can't live with it.
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Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
I admit the statement was not exactly a rigorous explanation of deism, only a comment in a lighter conversation with Henry. I'm not sure Deism can be rigorously defined since those who claimed to be deists, historically, held widely different views from Paine, to Franklin, to Jefferson, and possibly a closet deist, Madison. (Paine has also been described as an atheist and agnostic.) I would not attempt to define any of them and think it's necessary to take the word of those who claim a view for their own description of it. Why would they lie about what they believe?Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 5:27 pmI wouldn't say that about Deists, though I'm not one; but actually, I can't think of a better definition of "Atheist" than that. Except that the Atheist then goes on to tell himself that he can be significant and "actually do something," whereas his own creed assures him he never can, since all is simply the inevitable product of material forces.RCSaunders wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 2:15 pm A deist is just someone who packages all those things one does not know into a single convenient concept that can be placed in corner out of the way of all the things one does know and can actually do something about.
So he doesn't even treat his own worldview as something worthy of his own belief. In actual practice, he just can't live with it.
I find it interesting that those who are not themselves atheists (or agnostics or deists) are always so quick to explain exactly what those others believe. What do you think about those who claim to know what theists are when they wrongly characterize what you know you believe?
Since I am not any of those things I have no opinion on what they believe beyond whatever any of them claim. In all of that, the only one's who ever seem to have the least concern with such things as, whether one is, "significant," or not, are those who believe their own lives have no meaning except second-hand, that is, in the opinion or judgement of others, like the religious (it's what God thinks of me), celebrities (its what the public thinks of me) or politicians (its what the voters think of me).
I have never heard or read anything by any atheist that even hints they have slightest interest in whether, "he can be significant," or not. As for whether or not they can "actually do something," if they can't, what do you care what they believe. You seem to think they can do something, and don't like what they do.
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Re: God given rights. Do you really have any?
That's because Atheism is about as complicated as a hammer.RCSaunders wrote: ↑Mon Jun 22, 2020 7:03 pm I find it interesting that those who are not themselves atheists (or agnostics or deists) are always so quick to explain exactly what those others believe.
Atheists themselves claim it means either "the disbelief in God," or "the belief in no gods." It has nothing to it beyond that. Anything else a putative Atheist believes, like say a political or ethical view this or that Atheist person happens to favour, has to be supplemented by some ideology more substantive than Atheism, since Atheism itself contains no precepts concerning such things. They'll proudly tell you the owe you no explanation of anything further.
So what they believe is dead easy to say. Even they say so.
Well, their "belief" or "unbelief" is irrelevant to the question. Either life has an objective significance, or it has none. There's no middle alternative there. One cannot create an objective significance for one's life by fooling oneself into believing it has one.In all of that, the only one's who ever seem to have the least concern with such things as, whether one is, "significant," or not, are those who believe their own lives have no meaning except second-hand...
Well, I'm a Christian of a free-will sort, and as such, believe that people are not merely a product of prior causes-and-effects in the material realm, and have actual individual volition. So I know that people can do things, and so in perfect consistency, I can like or dislike what they do. There's no contradiction there.As for whether or not they can "actually do something," if they can't, what do you care what they believe? You seem to think they can do something, and don't like what they do.
The Materialist Atheist, though, is by definition a Determinist: so his own creed tells him that there is no "him" independent of those things who is capable of choosing or doing anything. Yet he doesn't listen to his own creed, and continues to live as if he CAN do something...which tells you he secretly knows I'm right about all that, and he's wrong -- even when he doesn't want to admit it.
If he were right, he could live out his own creed...but he cannot, so he shows he's operating in bad faith.