Christianity

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attofishpi
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Re: Christianity

Post by attofishpi »

promethean75 wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 11:43 am Alright so your biggest problem wuz the voice u heard in your head, who u thought wuz god, saying mean things to u?

Bloody hell how did u pull through that mate?
NO!!

Read again my above post - this KUNT called GOD controls ALL reality - voices are FUCK ALL...and again, nobody you talk to, even next to you at the time are able to WITNESS what this KUNT can do.

..seriously, some of what this God did is here:- viewtopic.php?f=11&t=33214

..tip of the iceberg - 2022, just last year was rather harrowing - because I returned to the Tree of KNOW_LEDGE.


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promethean75
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Re: Christianity

Post by promethean75 »

Well I just think u had an 'episode' or 'incident'. I'm trying to use politically correct phrasing here and I'm at a loss. Normally it's called going crackers.

Or.

U r totally making this up to make us think Steven Spielberg wuz right and u are a cybersage who has special prophetic powers.

I knew another dude like that at ILP but he wus a class 2c disassociative pseudo-schizophrenic (that's when u pretend to be) while u r well socialized and exhibit no abnormal behavior or thoughts for a newage charlatan.
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Harbal
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harbal »

attofishpi wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 10:48 am I hope that clarifies (of course it doesn't) :D
Well it's given me a better picture, but there is also much that I'm not clear about. Even so, what you said was interesting. Thanks, Fishy.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Attofishpi: Do you understand Y I attempted suicide without feeling depressed? (of course you dont - U need to understand that this bully entity IS ALL reality - and what it can do, without anyone around you able to WITNESS).
This part interests me. Though it isn’t a new concept one new assertion is that of being trapped in a giant simulation as if generated by a somewhat malignant entity.

The Gnostics defined it as demiurge …

… and some in the East as ‘god’s exterior energy’. Implying an internal energy.

The exterior world remains ever the same: a cruel and merciless sphere though very beautiful. But the inner world relationship does change. So *god realization* becomes a choice one makes internally.

Does any if this jibe with your perceptions?
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Re: Christianity

Post by Belinda »

Immanuel Can wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 12:45 am
Belinda wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 12:11 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Jan 12, 2023 11:51 pm

The Second Coming

By William Butler Yeats

Turning and turning in the widening gyre   
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere   
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst   
Are full of passionate intensity.

Surely some revelation is at hand;
Surely the Second Coming is at hand.   
The Second Coming! Hardly are those words out   
When a vast image out of Spiritus Mundi
Troubles my sight: somewhere in sands of the desert   
A shape with lion body and the head of a man,   
A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun,   
Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it   
Reel shadows of the indignant desert birds.   
The darkness drops again; but now I know   
That twenty centuries of stony sleep
Were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,   
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,   
Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?
The end of the old authority must be the beginning of democracy.
Wouldn't that be nice.

Unfortunately, we're witnessing the end of any democracy, and the start of Globalist totalitarianism.
That seems to be the case. Jesus never promised heaven on Earth, or an easy victory over evil.
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attofishpi
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Re: Christianity

Post by attofishpi »

Alexis Jacobi wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 1:08 pm
Attofishpi: Do you understand Y I attempted suicide without feeling depressed? (of course you dont - U need to understand that this bully entity IS ALL reality - and what it can do, without anyone around you able to WITNESS).
This part interests me. Though it isn’t a new concept one new assertion is that of being trapped in a giant simulation as if generated by a somewhat malignant entity.

The Gnostics defined it as demiurge …

… and some in the East as ‘god’s exterior energy’. Implying an internal energy.

The exterior world remains ever the same: a cruel and merciless sphere though very beautiful. But the inner world relationship does change. So *god realization* becomes a choice one makes internally.

Does any if this jibe with your perceptions?
Alexis, Y don't U ask me what U actually want to know?

No point beating around a bush.

You could start with Y = why

Or go as far as to why the vowels have so much potence in English phonetics...but that would be daft...right? said the wise man as he left to write..

...you would overlook that, even the letter symbol Christ made when pinned up to a crucifix - Y

It ain't written by a 'great' wise philosopher to point out things that were always under an Englishman's NOSE.
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phyllo
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Re: Christianity

Post by phyllo »

iambiguous wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 2:33 am
Larry wrote: Thu Jan 12, 2023 10:32 pm
iambiguous wrote: Thu Jan 12, 2023 10:14 pm

Ah, back to Stooge mode again.

Now, why don't you actually respond to the points I raised above regarding the other accusation you leveled at me.


Note to others:

Larry and I go way back. He just doesn't like me. Why? Because I suspect that, chip by chip, I am chiseling away at his own murky "rooted existentially in God" moral objectivism. The Christian God I suspect.

Just don't ask him to being his own God or his own moral philosophy down to Earth.

Or, sure, maybe he will do that for you.
He has said several times that he does not want to be attacked.

But you are going to attack him if he says anything remotely 'incorrect'.

I'm a stooge for pointing this out??

I don't think so.

You're an idiot because you can't recognize and admit to what you are doing.
Right. And in no way has he ever attempted to attack me in turn?
Alexis Jacobi wrote: Wed Jan 11, 2023 7:32 pm What happens is ‘you-plural’ get overwhelmed by hysteria. Personally, I think you’ve been trained (brainwashed) so that certain topics push you over an internal edge. It is really amazing to me. And I have nothing more to say on the topic at this time.

Why don’t you pass the time playing a little solitaire?
I'm said to be hysterical here. Also straight out of the Manchurian Candidate: dangerously brainwashed?

And, what, in no way should black, brown and red folks feel attacked by him when he argues that the Northern European white stock is scientifically superior to them in intelligence? Because it's all just "theoretical"? What I am curious about is whether he avoids bringing his intellectual contraptions down to Earth because he has never given that part much thought, or if he does, we'll find out that he is a lot closer to the Nazi narrative than some here figured.

I'm not arguing that he is only that he won't clear up just what he does think ought to be done politically and legislatively to stem the "demographic crisis" in America

Now, let's get back to you responding substantively to the points I raised above...instead of popping up from time to time [as you did at ILP] in order to make me the issue. That is where the Stooge part comes in.
The only reason that I'm talking to you is to try to get you to tone it down.

Because, I think, the way you are posting is making him defensive and less likely to say anything.

Turn it down a few notches, please. And we will see what happens.

Of course, I'm assuming that you want him to open up. You may be here to shut him down.
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Harbal
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harbal »

phyllo wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 1:46 pm
Of course, I'm assuming that you want him to open up.
Having once cracked open a bad egg, and not wanting to go through a similar experience again, I have mixed feelings about his opening up. :|
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phyllo
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Re: Christianity

Post by phyllo »

Harbal wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 1:58 pm
phyllo wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 1:46 pm
Of course, I'm assuming that you want him to open up.
Having once cracked open a bad egg, and not wanting to go through a similar experience again, I have mixed feelings about his opening up. :|
It's a discussion forum. But only if people talk.
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Re: Christianity

Post by Harbal »

phyllo wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 2:04 pm It's a discussion forum. But only if people talk.
If you want to get him to talk I'd better keep a low profile; he seems to find my presence intimidating. I think he's a bit frightened of me, although he would never admit it.
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

I'm said to be hysterical here. Also straight out of the Manchurian Candidate: dangerously brainwashed?
The real point, the real thing to consider, is that we are all in this condition to one degree or another. This is one of my main points and it is one of the things that I have gleaned over the years. I was first introduced to the 'propaganda model' through Noam Chomsky's work. And through his phrase about 'unthinkable thought'. Later, Jonathan Bowden spoke on the same idea. That when a certain idea arises in the mind that "it is undercut immediately".
And, what, in no way should black, brown and red folks feel attacked by him when he argues that the Northern European white stock is scientifically superior to them in intelligence? Because it's all just "theoretical"? What I am curious about is whether he avoids bringing his intellectual contraptions down to Earth because he has never given that part much thought, or if he does, we'll find out that he is a lot closer to the Nazi narrative than some here figured.
However I did not, and I would not, make such an argument. The area that most draws my attention is the one that has to do with an 'anti-White posture'. Where it has come about that people who are white and of European ancestry have been trained in a sort of self-contempt. My understanding is that this arose in the aftermath of the two catastrophic European wars. It is not a simple topic. But it can be examined.

I am not sure what to say about "black, brown and red folks" feeling attacked. Today, there is a great deal of emphasis placed on what someone feels. That is why I made reference to The Shrieking Girl. These sorts of neurotic modes of feeling seem to me lunatic. Far worse to be associated with that sort of psychology than with the character in the Manchurian Candidate.

Here is the longer version of the Campus Incident should it interest anyone.

She represents a real disease in my view. What is the origin of this? What is the 'cure'? That is what interests me.
I'm not arguing that he is [but] only that he won't clear up just what he does think ought to be done politically and legislatively to stem the "demographic crisis" in America
My suggestion is that you drop the sense of righteousness that you have some sort of right or obligation to lead me along a path to some realization. I make efforts to avoid any insulting retorts on this forum but really, you are very very full of yourself. I note the same thing in Seeds. You act like 'God's Righteous Children'. You have special rights to insult and abuse as you see fit as well as to twist, distort and in fact to lie as you see fit. How did this right come to you?

I have been involved in examining this for a long time. I have many ideas on the topic. And so my focus is in that area.

In my view it is the attack on whiteness and white identity that needs to be explored. What it is, why it has come about, how and why it is managed and by what *interests*. Behind it I discern an undermining Marxian focus. I do not use the word loosely but quite specifically. This focus, this undermining, connects to a political and social praxis that I am (at this point though I was not always) profoundly opposed to.

Because this is so, because Marxian ideas and policies must be fought against, the first order of business is in seeing how deeply they have penetrated in our society and, most importantly, in our perception and our ideology. This is a work of critical self-analysis. It involves dismantling of idea-constructs and then reforming them along different lines.

What complicates this process is that anti-Communism and anti-Socialism were European movements in the 20th century. National Socialism and Italian Fascism were 'responses' to the Communist and Marxist threat. And so at the same time is ideological conservatism. And this is why one of the very powerful and common devices of Left-Progressives is to define anyone even remotely conservative as Nazi-esque. All you need to do is to examine one of Seed's recent posts. He employs the imago of Hitler as a (powerful and effective) symbol of an Ontological Malevolence that he is pretty sure that he can manage effectively. Hitler, in my view, has come to serve a function as a veritable Satanic figure.

Thus the entire issue gets exceedingly complexified because it is existential, weirdly 'spiritual', ontological, psychological and also a weird praxis of demonism that envelopes people. Once one has become subsumed in it, by the mood of it, by what it avails to a person (the power of absolute moral condemnation) those people get drunk with it. They get hysterical. They are taken over by a strangely malicious spirit.
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Alexis Jacobi
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Re: Christianity

Post by Alexis Jacobi »

Dubious wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 3:19 amWhat specifically about Christ and the whole Christ saga can be connoted metaphysically? Are you trying to supplant the religious with symbolic value now that Christianity has lost most of its value? Is this a new "resurrection" attempt based in philosophy?
I believe I have explained my views enough times. My reference-point is and remains that of the 16th chapter of the Bhagavad-Gita (Chapter 16: Daivāsura Sampad Vibhāg Yoga: Yoga through Discerning the Divine and Demoniac Natures). I suppose that I must apologize for holding to a rather simple and binary dichotomy but there you have it.
This chapter expounds on the two kinds of human nature—the saintly and the demoniac. Krishna explains that the saintly-nature develops in humans by cultivating the modes of goodness, by following the instructions given in the scriptures, and purifying the mind with spiritual practices. Such behavior attracts daivī sampatti or godlike qualities, eventually leading to God-realization. Contrary to this, the demoniac-nature develops by associating with modes of passion and ignorance and materially focused lifestyles that breed unwholesome traits in human personality. This leads the soul finally to a hell-like existence.
One way or another, to one degree or another, it is our activities and how we mold ourselves in this world (our thoughts, what we are exposed to and so much else) that determine who we are and also, ultimately where we go. We either ascend or we descend. That is my 'simplistic reduction'.

In my view (as I have said so many times) the Christian Story is a container of both pollution and exalted things.

I would certainly use the term resurrection if it were to mean renewal, revision, taking oneself in hand, defining what is really important and separating it from what is not.
Are you trying to supplant the religious with symbolic value now that Christianity has lost most of its value?
I'd put it differently. Behind all religious modes there is an awareness of things that are eternal to existence and being (those words have special connotation and I am not opposed to a Heideggerian inflection). Everything has to be reviewed, seen again from a fresh angle.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Harbal wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 12:48 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Jan 12, 2023 8:11 pm
Harbal wrote: Thu Jan 12, 2023 7:30 pm To become aware of some claim, give it some consideration, and conclude that it lacks enough plausibility to be taken seriously, therefore not including it among proposed accounts of states of affairs one regards as being true, or likely to be true.
Alright. Let's take that definition and work with it.

On what does one base the "conclusion" that it "lacks enough plausibility to be taken seriously," when it comes to the matter of God?
Well, in my case, I base that conclusion on my own experience of how the world that I know works. Certain causes always lead to certain effects, and certain things do happen, while other things never happen, so, based on these sorts of observations, I have arrived at a model with which I am able to compare any state of affairs that might be presented to me as fact. Now, the state of affairs that you, for example, present to me regarding God, most definitely does not comply with my model.
Is this not simply an elaborate way of saying, "I haven't seen it, so I don't believe it"? Or is there something else here?
I fear that if I were to accept all these accounts as genuine my mind would lose its way, and I would be unable to function properly in the world that I know.

That's very interesting. And you're not alone in that observation. For example, David Shenk in his (entirely secular) book Data Smog, says that when faced with all the data flooding into people's lives from the internet, the effect is a kind of information paralysis, where to make any commitment or believe anything comes to feel dangerous -- since, at any future moment, some new bit of information might appear, and then one might find oneself committed to a position that makes one a fool or exposes one as naive, or whatever. So he says the automatic default of the postmodern person is a kind of permanent "floating" without solid commitments, because of the fear caused by one seeming to float in an infinite realm of possibilities without any compass or orientation points.

Your commment reminds me of that, a little. That "my mind would lose it's way, and I would be unable to function property" suggests a similar feeling. Nevertheless, what we always have to remember is that reality and truth are inevitably singular. All that floating free really does to one is reduce the chances of being right to 0%. :shock:

So I see where you're coming from. You seem to opt for gripping on firmly to a kind of whatever-I-experience-is-what-there-is postion, and that makes you skeptical of the claim there might be a God.

However, what I submit to you is this: the data you know, from your own experience already, is, at best, equivocal, not decisive in favour of Atheism or even agnosticism. The vast majority of people, looking at the same data (and this even includes people like Dawkins) feel attracted to the belief that there is design, purpose, order and even wonder in this same world your "common sense" is suggesting to you is devoid of God...and their "common sense" is telling them there well might be a God, and even that it's likely there is.

And then, of course, there's that further problem to which your own common sense can direct you: namely, that you already know that what one person has experienced is not at all decisive of what anybody else can experience. It's not even decisive of what the one person will eventually experience. All it reflects is whatever he has experienced up to now...not of anything further.

Maybe we all assume our "common sense" is the "common" one. But it's not. It's not the sum of others' experiences. It's not even the sum of the experiences you and I are going to have.

And that's one thing that even common sense knows.
That's an obvious question, because according to neutral statistical gathering (the CIA factbook, for example) 92% of the world's population believes it's plausible, and another 4% thinks it might be plausible...leaving only 4% that are convinced it's not. And that's without taking the historical count into tabulation, which would surely be far higher, since for long periods of time there was practically nobody who thought otherwise.
I don't know that those statistics are accurate, to what extent they have been skewed, or to what degree the beliefs are significant to those who hold them, but popularity is no measure of good judgement. Remember the Osmonds?
:lol: Yes, they are a telling blow indeed. :lol:

I have been very careful in my remarks, you'll see, not to imply any argumentum ad populum, any fallacy holding that something becomes true because many people believe it. I recognize that as a fallacy, and would never offer that argument. So it wasn't my point.

But there is a relevant point to be made with reference to the general intuition that God exists. And it's that Atheism, far from being any kind of natural or automatic reaction of intelligent people or the default way of the world, is statistically an extreme minority position, not at all common-sensical, and not at all the natural product of viewing the evidence. As such, it certainly owes us some kind of explanation as to why it thinks we should abandon the common intuition to cleave to it, and thus to foreclose on the question of whether or not God exists. And if it cannot offer such, it surely cannot expect to be believed automatically.
My impression is that many, if not most, people go about their lives without much reference to God.

You'll find it's quite otherwise, I'm sure. But I don't know how wide your scope is, only that you won't extend it very far until that thesis is demonstrated incorrect.
I have never had the impression that those who are aware of my lack of religious beliefs have difficulty in taking me seriously in that particular regard.
Probably not.

But whether you are serious, or your basis for your "lack of religious beliefs" is serious are two different questions. People may take you seriously as a person, and fully believe you believe what you say, and have no affinity at all with the skeptical position you affirm. They may, in fact, take you seriously, and still believe you're incorrect in your assumptions about God.
I certainly don't think that somebody who claims to be an Atheist wants to say, "Y'know, I've never actually thought about God at all," or "I have no opinion." If he's an Atheist, he has both. He's thought about it, and he has an opinion. I think that's fair, don't you?
I suppose so.
But is it a rational opinion, or just a wish? That will have to be established on the quality of the evidence he produces.
Well, again, in my case it is an opinion for which there is no rational reason for it to be otherwise, and I do not consider it reasonable to present me with what I consider to be ludicrous claims and then demand that I produce evidence to justify my rejection of them.
I was with you until you interjected "ludicrous." Because the minute you add that pejorative, you need reasons for it, or else nobody has to accept it is "ludicrous." the word merely becomes a gratuitous insult, absent evidence warranting the claim.
But I also find that the average Atheist is only interested in thinking about the matter long enough to fix on some singular idea that satisfies him personally that he can dismiss the whole matter, and then stops thinking right there. That's why they never want to give evidence, but prefer to complain, "I don't owe any." It's because their disbelief is, even in their own awareness, not well-founded, and they're very keen not to have their reasoning examined, or their basis of disbelief questioned. It won't stand up well.
This account of what you "find" to be going on in the heads of average atheists has a strong flavour of something made up on the spur of the moment, and is not what you would expect from one who is ever mindful of the need for evidence.
Not at all. I've talked to a lot of Atheists, and found it so. And so could you. You could even go back to earlier posts in various threads on this site, and see the Atheists plead, "I don't owe any evidence, because I just fail to find reason to believe" (i.e. the agnostic defensive positon) and then, a message later, jump to "People are irrational to believe in God." (i.e. adopting the Atheist attack stance). They do both frequently, without any consciousness at all of the contradiction.

But if "rationality" is the problem, then the Atheist owes evidence. And if "I fail to find reason to believe" is the defense, then the sufficient Theist response becomes far too easy to satisify the Atheist: it's simply, "Well, I do find reason to believe." And worse still, for the Atheist, the Theists can add, "And if you had experience like ours, or thought harder than you are doing, you might find the reasons you lack." :shock:

Obviously that's highly unsatisfactory to any Atheist who who wants his position to seem rational or to become the default of others -- which, of course, many do. He's too easily defeated. So he needs evidence...but lacks it, permanently.
Atheists are quite obsessed with dismissing God. They work very hard at it
Maybe so when they find themselves on discussion forums, but perhaps not so much in their day to day lives.
Plausibly so. Most people's daily lives are preoccupied with daily trivia and the business of simply surviving. And even those who still find time to think often today suppress it with distractions and entertainments. So thinking's becoming a bit of a lost art.
My impression is that Dawkins thinks the matter to be important because of the damaging effect he believes religion to have on society. I agree with him in that I do believe when religion is practiced with too much enthusiasm it can be detrimental, and even dangerous, but I think his message has much more relevance in the USA than it does in my country.
That's the effect of a very strongly Leftist media propagandizing. I've seen the reports from outside the US, and the impression they give is of rabid hordes of right-wingers and religious conservatives being ready to explode onto the political scene and create "Handmaid's Tale" tyrannies.

It's rubbish, actually. Even the foaming Leftist press can't find these "hordes of right wingers" when they go looking for them. That's why they never show them...because if they knew where they were, they'd be there with cameras for sure. It would cement their case, which is designed to give the public in the US, and outsiders elsewhere, the impression of a massive, looming, right-wing threat. If they could find such evidence, you can bet your eye teeth they'd be blazing it across the airwaves. The fact that they can only point to rare individuals of extreme type, and never to mass movements, to political parties, or major voices of any kind, shows that the putative "right" is actually not a threat.

But to see that, one has to look beyond the propaganda and posturing, and simply ask, "Where are they?"
All my experiences of being among the religious have been in a C of E environment, where the danger of being bored to death is the biggest threat you are likely to be faced with.
Indeed so. I have to admit that I find the C of E exceedingly musty.
But that's a very different question than whether or not it's a serious matter. Plausibly, it's a matter that has simply escaped your serious interest.
No, it hasn't escaped my interest; that would imply there may be circumstances under which I would pursue it. That fact is, I don't consider God and religion worthy of my interest. True, I am putting effort into this discussion, but it is not because I have an interest in religion, it is because this is a discussion forum and I find preposterous assertions hard to ignore, regardless of the subject of their content.
Two more words that would imply a need for reasons and evidence: "preposterous" and "worthy of interest." Such firm conclusions on...what evidence?
Is your conclusion that there needs to be no careful consideration of the possibility of God that you simply "feel" that? Or have you another, stronger reason for that conclusion?
The possibility of God and the possibility of unicorns have similar credibility in my estimation, and that is the basis for my feeling that careful consideration is not necessary.
I would have guessed that's the way it is. So it's just an intuition.
I am not a spokesperson for these people. All I have to say about them is that they are not typical examples of atheistic behaviour.
Quite so. They're the Atheist's heroes and flag-bearers. So many Atheists laud them.
For every Dawkins there are probably a dozen fanatically religious crackpots spewing out there poisonous filth on the internet or in some pseudo church or other. Would it be fair to ask you to answer for them?
No, of course not: unless I praised them, or associated myself with them, or invited you to believe I was like them, or something of that kind. Which perhaps you personally don't do with Dawkins et al...but so very many Atheists do.
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

Lacewing wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 1:00 am The concept of there being 'no accounting' is not the same as being 'dead-and-done'. You are not allowing any other possibilities
Oh, there are certainly other "possibilities." I don't consider them probabilities, because most of them are inherently irrational and self-contradictory, and none of them makes an adequate account of what I believe to be the truth about God. But there are certainly other attempts to characterize an afterlife. Nobody denies that.

You could, for instance, believe in reincarnation. Or in universalism. Or in "The Singularity." These are all afterlife theories, for sure.

So which one of them do you subscribe to?
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Immanuel Can
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Re: Christianity

Post by Immanuel Can »

tillingborn wrote: Fri Jan 13, 2023 11:18 am
Immanuel Can wrote: Thu Jan 12, 2023 5:35 pmYou're a quarter right in your claim but also three quarters wrong.
I'm four quarters right: Nagel does not deny evolution.
I've covered this. I'm not bothering to cover it again for you. Sorry.
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