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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 6:55 am 
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Do not presume to say that stating fact as fact in any way equates to stating myth and superstition as fact. No I'm not talking about the existence of god. At this point, your personal beliefs aside, stating that the earth is 6000 years old, or that species were discretely and individually created, is akin to saying that the earth is flat and rests on the back of a giant turtle. By default, at this point, science is simply the assumed fact in any discussion. It is not proselytizing to teach it or to assume it. Stating otherwise, however, is proselytizing, as you are presenting ideas that go against observable facts, no less evident or plain than the earth being roughly spherical and orbiting the sun. Most religious people also accept this, so it has nothing to do with Religion vs. Secularism.

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Last edited by Talya on Thu Mar 20, 2014 8:09 am, edited 2 times in total.

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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 6:56 am 
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Rorinthas wrote:
No, I'm trying to compare how some secular people act about the issues of debate that are important to them vs. some religious people. The merit of the ideas has no standing on the fact there are parallels in their behavior. Staunch ideologues are staunch, regardless of their ideology. I can no more convince you of the merits (or lack thereof) of the ideas listed above than you can me, because the belief or disbelief in them are central to our core beliefs, as the dripping sarcasm of your above post confirms.

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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 9:40 am 
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Diamondeye wrote:
TheRiov wrote:
We can pare back the analogy if you're really having problems seeing the parallels.


I'm having a hard time seeing them because they are there only in a vague, general sense. Another point you may not have considered is that a military commander has UCMJ and command authority over me, and his order presents legal pitfalls for both of us, that could turn out very badly depending on how things went. If you're suggesting anyone is subject to legal penalty for not reciting the pledge of allegiance, I'd like to see your evidence.

You mean the way that teachers have authority over children in a public school setting? Failure to comply with teaching instructions carries with it an implicit threat and real consequences. But Nowhere in the scenario I created did I say you were ordered to do anything; simply that you were asked.
ie. You modified the scenario to discredit it.
Second, I made no mention of how many people were asked, you again, modified the scenario again, to create another objection to it.
So the only other parallel you're objecting to really is the fact that I made it explicit rather than burying it deep within another oath? Fine. Wrap it into the Pledge. You don't think the phrase "One nation with no God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all" would stick in your craw?



Next: There is a VAST difference between a "Christian Nation" than a "Nation with a Christian Majority" -- The Vatican is a Christian Nation. Iran post 1979 was a Muslim nation, Pre-1979 it was a nation with Muslim majority. The United States is a Nation with a Christian Majority. Don't confuse the two.

That's fine. Christianity first came about as a non-state religion. Only with Charlemagne did it become a state power too. Compare with Islam and Judiasm where the state and the church were lead from the same place for a good portion of its history.


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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 3:13 pm 
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Talya wrote:
Do not presume to say that stating fact as fact in any way equates to stating myth and superstition as fact. No I'm not talking about the existence of god. At this point, your personal beliefs aside, stating that the earth is 6000 years old, or that species were discretely and individually created, is akin to saying that the earth is flat and rests on the back of a giant turtle. By default, at this point, science is simply the assumed fact in any discussion. It is not proselytizing to teach it or to assume it. Stating otherwise, however, is proselytizing, as you are presenting ideas that go against observable facts, no less evident or plain than the earth being roughly spherical and orbiting the sun. Most religious people also accept this, so it has nothing to do with Religion vs. Secularism.


So because there is a "consensus" i'm not allowed to question your views . Thanks for proving my point

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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 3:29 pm 
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Xequecal wrote:
The reason you never see belligerent behavior from atheists is because there is 1 atheist for every 100 Christians. Of course you're a lot less likely to encounter them. The fact that they don't have strength in numbers probably also discourages them from acting like assholes because they have no one to back them up if someone gets angry.


Atheists, like pretty much everyone else, tend to congregate with similar people so yes, they have people to "back them up". Furthermore, we've established that they DO act belligerent sometimes.

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The real problem is that unlike atheism, religious fundamentalism basically gives fundies a shield to hide behind. Atheists cannot make absurd claims like that the Earth is only 6000 years old or that God sends natural disasters to punish us for legalized abortions and gay rights, (These two claims courtesy of the Illinois Republican 9th district House nominee) and then hide behind their faith when people call them on their bullshit. "Men and dinosaurs lived together at the same time" being taught in "science" classes to millions of children is an utter farce. It would be like having a History class where you teach that World War I was fought in 1872. But it's grudgingly accepted by everyone else, because faith.


Except that none of those claims is fundamentally absurd, no matter what Talya says. They appear to be wrong from the perspective of the atheist, and they rely on certain fundamental assumptions about the Bible and God that have theological and practical vulnerabilities, but they are not absurd because fundamentalists (hilarious, by the way, that "fundi" is ok with you but "nigger" doubtless is not) have supporting evidence from what they understand to be a historical account of that actually happening. The fact that other evidence appears to be much stronger makes that position scientifically weak, but by claiming it is "absurd" and that you are "calling anyone on their bullshit" you are right over the line into begging the question and circular argument.

THAT is the real problem - an inability on the part of atheists to not simply presume "our viewpoint is self-evidently true because science".

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Do not presume to say that stating fact as fact in any way equates to stating myth and superstition as fact. No I'm not talking about the existence of god. At this point, your personal beliefs aside, stating that the earth is 6000 years old, or that species were discretely and individually created, is akin to saying that the earth is flat and rests on the back of a giant turtle. By default, at this point, science is simply the assumed fact in any discussion. It is not proselytizing to teach it or to assume it. Stating otherwise, however, is proselytizing, as you are presenting ideas that go against observable facts, no less evident or plain than the earth being roughly spherical and orbiting the sun. Most religious people also accept this, so it has nothing to do with Religion vs. Secularism.


No. Do not presume to decide what is "assumed" or what is the "default". You do not get to do that. It is not prostelytizing to teach that science is science; it IS a form of prostelytization to extend that to claiming that anything at all is "myth and superstition". Religious people today have documentary evidence of certain past events happening regarding the world's origins. That documentary evidence might be allegorical, it might be actually true, and it might be completely inaccurate, BUT there is absolutely NO evidence whatsoever that it was anything other than completely sincerely written in an attempt, within the limits of its time period to document events.

We don't need to go over the relative strength of the evidence, we've hashed that out repeatedly and we both know that I don't support literal interpretations, and I agree the most straightforward interpretation of present evidence is the most likely, and that biblical original stories are allegorical. However, it could be that this is all simply illusion, and the Biblical account is correct in a literal sense. This DOES NOT fall into silly "flying spaghetti monster" or "invisible unicorn" "it could be true because there's no way to disprove it" arguments, all of which are circular in nature (invented on the spot for the express purpose of appearing absurd, then proclaiming fundamentalist views the same thing by fiat). As pointed out, there is no reason to think Biblical accounts were written other than completely sincerely, so fundamentalists HAVE EVIDENCE, no matter how weak that evidence might be, or how unnecessarily complicated the conclusions they draw are. There is a huge difference between being WRONG and being ABSURD, and fundamentalists appear to be the former, which puts them firmly in the category of "mistaken about interpreting the evidence", not "believing in myth and superstition."

Other religions have their own stories, which may also constitute evidence for THEIR views, but those either are essentially the same as Christianity, or in many cases are clearly weaker since they lack the same strength of connection to later, well-known-to-be-true historical events. Arguing that "they're all the same" is based on "I don't believe any of them to be true, therefore they're all equally false."

It is NOT in the same category as talking about the shape of the Earth or it's orbit, which are observable and confirmable at the present time, and which relying on rejecting observations of CURRENT conditions based on nothing more than obstinate insistence that the government is somehow fabricating evidence from space travel despite publicly observable launches of the technology in question to the point that it would actually cost more to fabricate it than it would to actually do it.

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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 3:46 pm 
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TheRiov wrote:
You mean the way that teachers have authority over children in a public school setting? Failure to comply with teaching instructions carries with it an implicit threat and real consequences. But Nowhere in the scenario I created did I say you were ordered to do anything; simply that you were asked.


Except that it is not the same, because teachers do not have anything remotely like UCMJ authority over children. Soldiers do not have parental oversight and intervention against a commander's actions. There is no implicit consequence for not reciting some or all of a pledge of allegiance in a classroom in a group setting which is A) very hard to detect and B) which teachers are taught and expected to accommodate.
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ie. You modified the scenario to discredit it.


No, I did not modify it in any way. This is an outrageous claim. You simply don't understand the military well enough to know why the example is inappropriate, but like most layment that doesn't stop you from trying to use your superficial knowledge of it to correct someone who DOES. You know what's even more annoying than atheists, evangelists, or people wanting to mow your lawn? The endless number of people in this country making opinionated claims about (or in this case, analogies to) the military based on a truly superficial understanding.

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Second, I made no mention of how many people were asked, you again, modified the scenario again, to create another objection to it.


No, I did not modify it, and it's irrelevant how many people were asked, you put it as the following complete sentence:
Code:
 "Hi. Would you like to commit blasphemy by denying the existence of your God today?"


The phrasing of this strongly indicates that he is directly asking me personally at that particular point in time. Unless you think commanders customarily address groups of soldiers with "Hi". I;m not "modifying" the scenario at all; you just gave out extremely limited information about it, and are now trying to complain that I filled in your gaps with my own assumptions. That's what people have to do in hypothetical scenarios; and the sort of person who comes back later and ***** about it is fundamentally dishonest.

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So the only other parallel you're objecting to really is the fact that I made it explicit rather than burying it deep within another oath? Fine. Wrap it into the Pledge. You don't think the phrase "One nation with no God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all" would stick in your craw?


I'd either interpret it as "with no God's teachings holding sway over others" or else just not say those 3 words.. just like I explained that I don't say a particular part of the Nicene Creed. Oh no, sometihng might "stick in my craw", whatever that's supposed to mean. The HUMANITY!

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Next: There is a VAST difference between a "Christian Nation" than a "Nation with a Christian Majority" -- The Vatican is a Christian Nation. Iran post 1979 was a Muslim nation, Pre-1979 it was a nation with Muslim majority. The United States is a Nation with a Christian Majority. Don't confuse the two.


I'm not. You're nitpicking semantics. It was very clear that I meant "nation with a Christian majority", and "Christian nation" lacks any generally accepted, rigorous definition; it's a colloquial term. I'm not "confusing" it; you are taking YOUR customary use of the term and telling me "not to confuse it" because of a nonexistent authority on your part to assign a generally-accepted meaning to it. Unfortunately for you, you don't get to do that.

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That's fine. Christianity first came about as a non-state religion. Only with Charlemagne did it become a state power too. Compare with Islam and Judiasm where the state and the church were lead from the same place for a good portion of its history.


I see no point in comparing it at all, since we are well off the topic which was "publicly acceptable behavior and rudeness". You are well into the normal non-faith-person territory of driving the topic all over the map to look for SOME problem with religion you can latch onto, no matter how disconnected from the original topic, and then pretend to have one the entire argument "BECAUSE CRUSADES AND WITCH BURNING!!!" or whatever.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 3:56 pm 
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Religions most certainly have their roots in humans trying to explain things they didn't understand. Things like rain, the sun rising and setting, the world being held up on the back of a giant or a large animal, the afterlife, and countless other things. Thousands of years ago, those stories were the best we had. Today, they are myth and superstition. It may still be true that the universe is carried on the back of a giant turtle crawling through a pond held up by five palm trees, but barring extraordinary new evidence the notion is laughable.

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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 4:00 pm 
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Quote:
The phrasing of this strongly indicates that he is directly asking me personally at that particular point in time. Unless you think commanders customarily address groups of soldiers with "Hi". I;m not "modifying" the scenario at all; you just gave out extremely limited information about it, and are now trying to complain that I filled in your gaps with my own assumptions. That's what people have to do in hypothetical scenarios; and the sort of person who comes back later and ***** about it is fundamentally dishonest.

And yet those same assumptions are your basis for rejecting it, rather than attempting to address the ACTUAL point I was trying to make (that you're glossing over the fact that religion IS pushed upon the non-believers) because YOU are a believer. You know damn well what the point I was making was, you just chose to use whatever limitations the analogy had as an excuse to attempt to discredit the argument. AKA textbook example of a straw man argument.


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 Post subject: Re:
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 4:08 pm 
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Corolinth wrote:
Religions most certainly have their roots in humans trying to explain things they didn't understand. Things like rain, the sun rising and setting, the world being held up on the back of a giant or a large animal, the afterlife, and countless other things. Thousands of years ago, those stories were the best we had. Today, they are myth and superstition. It may still be true that the universe is carried on the back of a giant turtle crawling through a pond held up by five palm trees, but barring extraordinary new evidence the notion is laughable.


We actually don't know anything about what's going on outside the universe at all. If you're assuming that documentation of events is solely a matter of humans trying to explain things, you're again jumping from "I have strong evidence that things are like this" to "I'm assuming it because of the nature of the contrary claims". Claims about past events may or may not be "myth or superstition", but they cannot all be lumped together "because science", even if science is still a better explanation than any of them.

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 Post subject: Re: Re:
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 4:16 pm 
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TheRiov wrote:
Quote:
The phrasing of this strongly indicates that he is directly asking me personally at that particular point in time. Unless you think commanders customarily address groups of soldiers with "Hi". I;m not "modifying" the scenario at all; you just gave out extremely limited information about it, and are now trying to complain that I filled in your gaps with my own assumptions. That's what people have to do in hypothetical scenarios; and the sort of person who comes back later and ***** about it is fundamentally dishonest.

And yet those same assumptions are your basis for rejecting it, rather than attempting to address the ACTUAL point I was trying to make (that you're glossing over the fact that religion IS pushed upon the non-believers) because YOU are a believer. You know damn well what the point I was making was, you just chose to use whatever limitations the analogy had as an excuse to attempt to discredit the argument. AKA textbook example of a straw man argument.
[/quote]

Your point WAS in fact addressed - namely, that nothing is being "pushed" on anyone. Pointing out that an analogy is inaccurate and inappropriate is not a straw man argument; by that reasoning any analogy, no matter how wildly inaccurate could be used to make any argument on any subject at all, and pointing out problems with that is somehow a "straw man".

Yes, I had to make certain assumptions about your scenario, but they were logical assumptions based on the limited information you provided. Your point has been addressed repeatedly - simply feeling social pressure to conform as a social minority is unavoidable; EVERYONE feels this in SOME area of life or other. Your idea of "pushing" religion is so broad as to constitute a feeling of entitlement to protection from the religious expression of others (see references to getting cards and social media expressions and such above). If that is what you're defining as "pushing" religion, then it goes out of the category of "obnoxious" and into "so what", and possibly even laudible since it excellently highlights your oversensitivity and feeling of entitlement to protection of your fragile minority beliefs.

Furthermore, atheists do exactly the same thing, just by different methods, and less frequently by virtue of their being fewer of them. All you're doing here is looking for a victim card to claim, and throwing around asinine claims about "modifying the scenario" and "strawman" and flailing about for any error on my part you can use to claim "I found a mistake on your part! Obviously you are totally wrong! Religious people constantly push religion on everyone else, who are clearly above reproach since they're part of the minority I belong to want to white knight on behalf of, and mysteriously believe is immune from obnoxious behavior!"

As for your claims about what I'm doing because I'm a believer, my annoyance with the extremes of believers have been WELL explored in the past, so any contention that I'm simply defending "my group" is utter horseshit; I've repeated them to some degree here. I've never contended that religious people are not sometimes obnoxious; I've pointed out that they are neither uniquely so, nor excessively so relative to other groups. You're projecting your own defensiveness about your victim adopted minority status onto me in the face of insurmountable past evidence that I don't think that way.

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Last edited by Diamondeye on Thu Mar 20, 2014 4:37 pm, edited 2 times in total.

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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 4:19 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
Except that none of those claims is fundamentally absurd, no matter what Talya says. They appear to be wrong from the perspective of the atheist, and they rely on certain fundamental assumptions about the Bible and God that have theological and practical vulnerabilities, but they are not absurd because fundamentalists (hilarious, by the way, that "fundi" is ok with you but "nigger" doubtless is not) have supporting evidence from what they understand to be a historical account of that actually happening. The fact that other evidence appears to be much stronger makes that position scientifically weak, but by claiming it is "absurd" and that you are "calling anyone on their bullshit" you are right over the line into begging the question and circular argument.

THAT is the real problem - an inability on the part of atheists to not simply presume "our viewpoint is self-evidently true because science".


1. Being a fundamentalist is a choice, being black is not. Do you consider "fatty" to be a supremely insulting and unacceptable word for any and all situations?
2. The fact remains that when religious people spout implausible claims, they get special protection from criticism for those claims simply because they're religious. Yesterday someone came into work talking about how she's started using craniosacral therapy to treat her back pain. She has a whole lot of faith in her belief that that therapy will help. My response was basically, "this is stupid, CST is total quackery, and you got scammed out of whatever money you paid for it." If, on the other hand, someone had come into work gushing about how they prayed for relief from their chronic pain and God listened and lessened the pain, and I were to respond similarly, I would probably be fired immediately.


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PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 4:21 pm 
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How exactly would that work since I don't consider myself an atheist? As stated in this thread, I'm a church goer and a believer. I teach Sunday school. I just can divorce myself from my own bias in a way you don't seem to be able to.


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 Post subject: Re:
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 4:27 pm 
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TheRiov wrote:
How exactly would that work since I don't consider myself an atheist? As stated in this thread, I'm a church goer and a believer. I teach Sunday school. I just can divorce myself from my own bias in a way you don't seem to be able to.


Except that you clearly cannot. If that's the case, then all you're doing is adopting a minority to white-knight on behalf of and their associated biases. You can't get away with taking such an obviously biased and one-sided position just by claiming "but I'm not one of them!" This makes you no different than a male feminist spouting made-up statistics about domestic violence.

It's doubly hilarious in view of your refusal to acknowledge my own often-expressed, in this thread and elsewhere, exasperation with zealous evangelists, that you want to claim YOU can overcome your bias, but I can't. The hypocrisy is spectacular.

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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 4:36 pm 
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Xequecal wrote:
1. Being a fundamentalist is a choice, being black is not. Do you consider "fatty" to be a supremely insulting and unacceptable word for any and all situations?


Irrelevant. You're still just excusing a pejorative term against a group just because you don't like it. "Fat people" are not a group; they're a category of a particular body issue.

Quote:
2. The fact remains that when religious people spout implausible claims, they get special protection from criticism for those claims simply because they're religious. Yesterday someone came into work talking about how she's started using craniosacral therapy to treat her back pain. She has a whole lot of faith in her belief that that therapy will help. My response was basically, "this is stupid, CST is total quackery, and you got scammed out of whatever money you paid for it." If, on the other hand, someone had come into work gushing about how they prayed for relief from their chronic pain and God listened and lessened the pain, and I were to respond similarly, I would probably be fired immediately.


No they don't, and no you probably wouldn't. You'd get away with a drive-by snipe at religion, and MAYBE an admonishment not to do it anymore, and if they came in "spouting" (by which you really mean "talking about things I don't like hearing") about atheism in a negative way, YOU would most likely be able to make a complaint and have at least as good a chance of having action taken. You would also have a much stronger chance of having complaints to a government agency taken seriously if your position wasn't addressed to your satisfaction as government agencies are notoriously protective of minorities and tend not to take majority complaints very seriously.

Furthermore, you were really being kind of an *** in the first place. The difference between the two is no that religion gets special protection, but that groups get special protection. "People who get CST" is not a group; religion is.

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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 5:06 pm 
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Xequecal wrote:
1. Being a fundamentalist is a choice, being black is not.


If religion is a choice, then so is sexuality. Or, conversely, they are both who you are.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/07/110714103828.htm

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New research finds that humans have natural tendencies to believe in gods and an afterlife. Research suggests that people across many different cultures instinctively believe that some part of their mind, soul or spirit lives on after-death. The studies demonstrate that people are natural 'dualists' finding it easy to conceive of the separation of the mind and the body.


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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 5:30 pm 
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Spirituality seems to not be a choice for many. Your religion however is very much a choice.


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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 5:33 pm 
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Lenas wrote:
Spirituality seems to not be a choice for many. Your religion however is very much a choice.


Clearly. It's good to know the next time some jackass starts carrying on about religious people having been "brainwashed" that we all agree they are full of ****.

I would also point out that bigotry against demographic groups is not suddenly ok because it's a "choice". Clearly, all those Jews could have avoided causing an internet meme by just choosing not to be Jewish any more, right?

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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 5:39 pm 
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Don't get all defensive, I was only stating that Arathain's interpretation of the Science Daily article seems to be incorrect. He was saying that we're hard wired for religion, but there is a difference between a religion and the belief in an afterlife.

You can't stop from being Jewish genetically but you could certainly stop practicing Judaism and convert to something else.


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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 6:26 pm 
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Lenas wrote:
Don't get all defensive, I was only stating that Arathain's interpretation of the Science Daily article seems to be incorrect. He was saying that we're hard wired for religion, but there is a difference between a religion and the belief in an afterlife.

You can't stop from being Jewish genetically but you could certainly stop practicing Judaism and convert to something else.


No, I get it. You're splitting hairs. Religion is a fairly obvious result from commonplace spirituality and socialization.


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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 7:14 pm 
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No it's not. There are many people in the world that would call themselves spiritual and not identify with any religion. You're falsifying what the article actually states based on your own worldview of two different things being the same. I'm not arguing semantics here, I would admit it if I were.


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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 7:56 pm 
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
No, I get it. You're splitting hairs. Religion is a fairly obvious result from commonplace spirituality and socialization.


The point is that believing in a higher power may not be a choice, however believing in specific points of dogma most certainly is.

Diamondeye wrote:
Irrelevant. You're still just excusing a pejorative term against a group just because you don't like it. "Fat people" are not a group; they're a category of a particular body issue.


How about "truthers" then? That's also a pejorative term used to label a group with beliefs I don't like, it's certainly not on the same level with calling people niggers.


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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 9:16 pm 
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Xequecal wrote:
Arathain Kelvar wrote:
No, I get it. You're splitting hairs. Religion is a fairly obvious result from commonplace spirituality and socialization.


The point is that believing in a higher power may not be a choice, however believing in specific points of dogma most certainly is.


So what?

Diamondeye wrote:
Irrelevant. You're still just excusing a pejorative term against a group just because you don't like it. "Fat people" are not a group; they're a category of a particular body issue.


Quote:
How about "truthers" then? That's also a pejorative term used to label a group with beliefs I don't like, it's certainly not on the same level with calling people niggers.
[/quote]

I should not have to clarify this, but since it's the Glade, I do: I'm talking about demographic groups. Hence why I pointed out that fat people are not a group, even though they could be by some definitions; that is clearly not the definition of group I'm using, and since racial and religious groups are both demographic groups, that shouldn't have been hard to figure out.

"Truthers" are also not a group in that sense, either.

Here's an example that might help you - "Women" are a demographic group; "feminists" are not.

In any case, you're engaging in an awful lot of effort to justify using the term "fundi". Your own little special form of bigotry is pretty important, isn't it?

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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 9:26 pm 
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Lenas wrote:
No it's not. There are many people in the world that would call themselves spiritual and not identify with any religion. You're falsifying what the article actually states based on your own worldview of two different things being the same. I'm not arguing semantics here, I would admit it if I were.


There are a ton of little non-denominational churches around the country that do not identify with any religion outside their own congregational level. What makes these people that do it at the local level "religious", but an individual who does it by himself is "spiritual but not religious"?

Practically everyone is religious, even if that religion includea taking it as an article of faith that there is nothing supernatural. People claiming to be "spiritual but not religious" are just making up their own doctrine and dogma as they go, and claiming it isn't "religion" because they think "religion" means "church buildings" and "preachers telling you rules you don't like". They're religious; they're just making up whatever "rules" suit them instead of adopting a more commonly-accepted doctrine - which is understandable to a certain degree, if not for the implication of "I'm better and more accepting and tolerant than all those 'religious' people out there."

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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 9:31 pm 
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A religion is a system of faith and worship. To believe something greater than us or an state of being beyond our own exists does not mean you follow a set of beliefs or have any particular feelings about it. You may say it's a small difference but I think it's an important one. Just because many people don't follow these rules doesn't mean that they all themselves are part of the same group.

Edit - I'll point out that calling yourself spiritual can only be taken as the belief that you have a soul. That by itself does not denote a belief in a higher power, just that there are forms of being other than what we recognize as natural.


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 Post subject: Re: Heh. Pretty much.
PostPosted: Thu Mar 20, 2014 9:36 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
Lenas wrote:
No it's not. There are many people in the world that would call themselves spiritual and not identify with any religion. You're falsifying what the article actually states based on your own worldview of two different things being the same. I'm not arguing semantics here, I would admit it if I were.


There are a ton of little non-denominational churches around the country that do not identify with any religion outside their own congregational level. What makes these people that do it at the local level "religious", but an individual who does it by himself is "spiritual but not religious"?

Practically everyone is religious, even if that religion includea taking it as an article of faith that there is nothing supernatural. People claiming to be "spiritual but not religious" are just making up their own doctrine and dogma as they go, and claiming it isn't "religion" because they think "religion" means "church buildings" and "preachers telling you rules you don't like". They're religious; they're just making up whatever "rules" suit them instead of adopting a more commonly-accepted doctrine - which is understandable to a certain degree, if not for the implication of "I'm better and more accepting and tolerant than all those 'religious' people out there."

Everything in this post is bullshit sophistry. Let's stop pretending there is no difference between believing in rationality and reason and believing in the invisible sky fairy. Earlier you pretended there's no such thing as "myth", that merely using the word is proselytizing. That's sheer idiocy. All superstition is myth. Every bit of it. That's pure rationality, pure reason. Which is the only thing that matters, at all, ever.

Ultimately, you helped me make up my mind on this thread, though. I was willing to concede you had some good points and thinking this was a good debate until this piece of **** of a post. Nobody else could torpedo your previously decent argument as well as you could. Thanks for proving that yes, there is a difference between the religious and the areligious.

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