Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Mar 06, 2023 4:26 pm
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sun Mar 05, 2023 6:13 pm
An 'atheist' can live as well and possibly much better than a victim of bad-thinking and bad-perceiving Christian projection.
I refer you to my message to Big Mike, above.
You've made the same error he made, and it needs the same correction.
Allow me to perfect the statement I made earlier:
Atheism, as a stance, as a predicate-platform, and even if one that becomes common and universal, will not in itself inhibit any person from living well nor from living ethically.
The basic position of atheism, and therefore of an atheist, seems to be "To propose that a god exists, and can be appealed to or relied on, does not hold up to close scrutiny. Therefore, as an atheist I can let that false-belief go."
There are other ways that it could be stated, too. For example "If there is a god that god has not demonstrated himself to me in a way that has any impact at all on my perception of the world and how it functions. Though some say that god (some inconceivable, originating intelligence) must *logically* be supposed, this proposed god does not enter my perceptual world at any point, and therefore though it could be true that such a god created everything, I do not need to give any energy to investigating it or even worrying about it. Sufficient it is to dedicate my energy to what is within my existential wheelhouse'".
It does seem very clear, to me anyway, that our own 'moral systems' are composites from different cultures, different philosophical systems, and perhaps can be presented as that which divides Greek rationalism (ethics) from Hebrew revelation. In my own view, in my own experience, I have always been more influenced to 'act well' and to conduct myself according to 'good behavior' through rational arguments and not through the 'command' of god.
So, and in fact as it happens, when people have shifted from a position of god-fear to one of "I must make the best choices for myself based on what I feel and believe the best ethical decision to be" it seems to me that people then become more
authentically moral.
However, I would not deny (and never have denied) that when a god-construct begins to crumble -- as it has crumbled for the majority with whom you harangue here -- that the people who lived in *god-fear*, but not in an authentic relationship to ethics and morals, when these people have the ground taken out from under them they often do not have defined self-restraint. They correspond to fat, flabby people who have not ever had to exercise their moral and ethical muscles. So, it seems to me that they can easily fall into many of the traps of sensuality, lust, avarice and power-craving which, generally speaking, are man's most seductive traps.
Therefore I acknowledge that religion, and an imagined god sitting up there observing all we do and threatening punishments, is a *picture* that has always had a restraining function.
But it seems to me that a mature man can begin to do away with that imagined restraining power and take on the burden himself.
Again, I am not in any sense an atheist as I have defined it. But I agree with those who opt for the atheist's platform. In fact I would even go so far as to say that if we were to hold in our minds the image of Jesus as pictured in the Gospels -- at the very least a thoughtful and a subtle intelligence -- that such a one would understand and appreciate the atheistic perspective I have outlined here and which seems more 'mature' than whatever it is that you propose.
Make sense? It is a curious way of transvaluing the apparent value that you put forward which to many of us does not seem much of a value at all. I.e. is devoid of valuable content that we can identify.
To try to get a grasp of why people believe the things they believe, and why they cling to fantasies, projections, wild hopes, and so much else, requires a real humanistic psychology. The more that one studies man the more such a perspective is needed.
All of this I cover in the Moral Revival section of my
Ten Week Internet Self-Transformation Course -- so what is holding you back Immanuel?!?