jj, that's fine, and like I said upthread, I don't much care what people personally believe as opposed to what they do, and I mostly just keep my mouth shut when family or friends talk turn to god, even though I'm still not sure exactly why I should. I don't try to convince anyone of anything, but they all sure spend a lot of time trying to save my heathen soul.
― Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:34 (fifteen years ago)
lol, I am kind of giggling at the "why don't more atheists go to church?" questions because CLEARLY you folks don't know enough professional choristers
also Phil N you are kind of insane
― STOP DREAMING ABOUT HORSES, THIS IS REAL LIFE (HI DERE), Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:35 (fifteen years ago)
The practical difference would be that one believes in God and the other one doesn't. To take examples, I could easily imagine a beef between an atheist who says the Bible is a bunch of stories meaning that it is all fiction and should be treated as on a par with the last Steven King novel, and a Christian who says the Bible is a bunch of stories meaning it is a guide written by spiritual leaders full of allegories that help one to live ones life.
― emil.y, Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:36 (fifteen years ago)
(Also, haha, Hi Dere, I completely forgot about members of my family who go to church to sing. Though I don't think they are atheists, more lapsed protestant agnostics.)
re: who would it moderate --On people who don't think the Bible is just a bunch of stories, basically.I feel like a lot of the culture war is being lost against them (e.g. global warming, science teaching, stem cells, gay marriage, etc...) and it would be helpful for decent, church-going folks, going, every now and then, "hold on, there, fellas. remember, the bible is just a bunch of stories."and then there'd be murmors and scattered shouts of "the deacon's right!"
― Philip Nunez, Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:38 (fifteen years ago)
and then they have an orgy
― wk, Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:39 (fifteen years ago)
*I* only go to church to sing. Which makes it extremely disappointing when I'm somewhere with a disappointing hymnal full of thin, reedy, modern arrangements that strip out the harmonies to make it easier for the amateur pianists in someone's PRAISE CHORUS to follow along.
Although tbh when the parts I know don't fit, I just sing them louder.
― Q: What's small, clumsy, and slow? A: A toddler. (Laurel), Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:40 (fifteen years ago)
my dads an atheist & played the organ in the local church for 20+ years. guy just likes playing the organ. i sometimes used to go along with him as a kid & sit next to him, help pulling out the stops. it was fun!
― zappi, Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:41 (fifteen years ago)
haha I do the same thing
also I make up descants for praise songs (note: I am a bass/baritone)
― STOP DREAMING ABOUT HORSES, THIS IS REAL LIFE (HI DERE), Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:42 (fifteen years ago)
descant praise
― k¸ (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:42 (fifteen years ago)
my one major problem with atheism per se is that it doesn't offer any sort of alternative to the many other good things that religion can offer -- wisdom, values, community, etc. and if the only virtue of atheism is "being right" it's small comfort against creeping nihilism.
ffs if you want to know why some atheists might be uncomfortably shrill it's because they get told that this is how they feel
― call all destroyer, Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:50 (fifteen years ago)
this is not contributing to this discussion but i had to post this hilarious rapture image YT link somewhere
― Baluchistan of Landscape Avocado (Pillbox), Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:50 (fifteen years ago)
btw I'll cop to being mostly a nihilist but it doesn't mean I'm not capable of awe and wonder and I'll those other "spiritual" things
― Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:51 (fifteen years ago)
"I could easily imagine a beef between an atheist who says the Bible is a bunch of stories meaning that it is all fiction and should be treated as on a par with the last Steven King novel, and a Christian who says the Bible is a bunch of stories meaning it is a guide written by spiritual leaders full of allegories that help one to live ones life."
Stuff like this, though, doesn't feel like an interfaith beef. I mean, I don't feel the Bible is bereft of life lessons, so I could theoretically have the same beef with this godless dude tag-teaming with my new Xian buddy, also because I like Stephen King.
― Philip Nunez, Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:53 (fifteen years ago)
Oh God (ha), did I spell Stephen King wrong? Sorry, I've been quite careless with my post editing today.
But anyway, surely it isn't an interfaith beef, because atheists by definition don't have faith. Also, there are many gradations between my two examples, those two were merely illustrations to prove that there IS a practical difference in attitude.
― emil.y, Thursday, 9 September 2010 22:59 (fifteen years ago)
I get there would be a kind of 'tude divide between atheists who have no use for the church and those whodo voluntarily attend, but I can't imagine atheists that do attend going to hear scary stories, unless it'ssome hellhouse kind of thing.also, i spelled it wrong, too! but i felt compelled by an unseen presence to change it.
― Philip Nunez, Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:14 (fifteen years ago)
cad, the point i want to make is that atheism doesn't really have a cultural traditions parallel to religious culture. and i said 'atheism' -- i'm not trying to describe any particular atheist as lacking wisdom, values, or a sense of community. but it seems to me that an atheist those things have to be found outside of atheism -- or if you crib these things from a religion, in spite of it.
just -- i think of atheism as negating the existence of god and by extension, religion. that void gets filled somehow, and it'd be nice to see atheists advocating humanism / an ethical life / whatever rather than see certain atheists shitting on ppl's beliefs and giving y'all a reputation.
― tangelo amour (elmo argonaut), Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:35 (fifteen years ago)
agree with all of that--i think most reasonable atheists do advocate an ethical life! but i don't think it's a failing of atheism not to provide those things (why would it want to) and disagree that it doesn't have virtues beyond "being right."
― call all destroyer, Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:37 (fifteen years ago)
i disagree completely tbh. the assumption that these behaviours/instincts somehow come from religion as opposed to religion being perhaps the prevalent way of celebrating these existing and natural behaviours- that seems backwards to me.
― k¸ (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:40 (fifteen years ago)
Okay CAD now I'm kind of confused, partially because I'm not sure which things you mean by "those things" and therefore it seems contradictory to be okay with atheism not providing the values I'm thinking of yet still argue it has virtues beyond "being right".
I mean, you look at religions and most of them have a moral code baked directly into them. If you are granting that atheism does not have an inherent moral code, what are its actual virtues?
xp: that feels like a tomayto/tomahto objection but I can't put my finger on exactly why
― and by "Heavens!" i mean WATERFALLS OF BIDDY (HI DERE), Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:42 (fifteen years ago)
yep. esp considering that said behaviours are actually pretty much across the board beneficial in an evolutionary sense xpost
― Gerard Depardeauxnt (jjjusten), Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:43 (fifteen years ago)
hi dere jj just splained why it isn't and btw tomato is just pronounced tomato fyi also
― k¸ (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:45 (fifteen years ago)
those things being the things elmo mentioned originally.
i think it's a virtue of atheism that i wake up every day knowing (to the extent i can) that no supernatural force is acting on my life. i think it's a virtue knowing that if i want to change something in my life, i can do it without something like prayer.
― call all destroyer, Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:46 (fifteen years ago)
I'm atheist, but I will stan for the King James bible as a) a work of literature b) a work of literacy in the sense that it opened up reading to those outside the 'privileged' class because you had scripture in English and other vernacular languages all of a sudden and that, like Greek myth or whatnot, there are recurring tropes that people are expected to know as canon (lol) in literature and the other arts, as well as popular culture.
However, I have this thing where I think forms of Christianity which use what I call 'Bibles for slow readers' are full of people who are generally not very bright.
BTW my atheism has always been underpinned by a very specific moral code: that I don't need some notional supreme being thing to reinforce my idea of the difference between right and wrong/good and evil because any intelligent person should be able to work out that hurting other living things or telling lies are shitty things to do.
― maintenant avec plus de fromage (suzy), Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:47 (fifteen years ago)
Atheism cannot have an inherent moral code, because it is not a belief system. It is an absence of belief in God. But the reason why religions have moral codes at their core is because they are created by people. Atheists are people. Therefore they are just as equipped as the religious to provide morality etc.
― emil.y, Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:47 (fifteen years ago)
suzy otm about another virtue of atheism
― call all destroyer, Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:48 (fifteen years ago)
I think my argument is that it doesn't particularly matter where they came from; they got baked into the social construct we call religion and, barring some massive cataclysm that drastically reshapes humanity, they are going to stay there, so arguing that those behaviors are totally independent from religion is kind of akin to arguing that black and white are not actually colors; yes, in strict terms you are correct, but it is not a practical distinction to make.
so yes I did basically concede the point, you're welcome
― and by "Heavens!" i mean WATERFALLS OF BIDDY (HI DERE), Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:50 (fifteen years ago)
Just because there's no deity involved, that doesn't mean atheism isn't a belief system. Non-belief is also a belief of sorts /ouroborous
― maintenant avec plus de fromage (suzy), Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:50 (fifteen years ago)
also suzy's virtue is pretty easy to classify as "being right", to go back to elmo's original argument
― and by "Heavens!" i mean WATERFALLS OF BIDDY (HI DERE), Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:51 (fifteen years ago)
I think my argument is that it doesn't particularly matter where they came from; they got baked into the social construct we call religion and, barring some massive cataclysm that drastically reshapes humanity
I think maybe the Enlightenment provided for a means (in Western culture obvs) of ascertaining morals and ethics and values that were independent of, and in some cases contrary to, religious values and ethics. Like, they ran on a parallel track and could be derived independently and practiced independently.
― Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:53 (fifteen years ago)
if atheists had awesome embroidered robes and geodesic temples and rites and folklore and shit i would be all over in a heartbeat.
― tangelo amour (elmo argonaut), Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:53 (fifteen years ago)
The Enlightenment also brought us non-Latin Bibles, yo.
A few years ago someone used the gambit of 'you should thank God blah blah blah' on me and I pointed out that whenever people use the G-word on me it has more to do with what they want emotionally from me than what is actually necessary - also a bit like blaming your own fart on the dog.
― maintenant avec plus de fromage (suzy), Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:55 (fifteen years ago)
jeez hi dere i think it's a pretty big distinction to make when someone (or a lot of people? i dunno) claims atheists somehow are at a disadvantage in their ability to relate to those behaviours
― k¸ (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:56 (fifteen years ago)
re: robes and domes, wouldn't you prefer we take over catholicism? we'd get a whole city.
― Philip Nunez, Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:57 (fifteen years ago)
Only when you make it so. It certainly isn't analogous to a religion. Perhaps for someone like Dawkins, or people who identify as 'Humanist' in a certain way. But certainly not for me.
― emil.y, Thursday, 9 September 2010 23:58 (fifteen years ago)
atheism isn't a 'belief' as i'd understand it. in fact just whatever emily says i'll go with itt tbh
― k¸ (darraghmac), Friday, 10 September 2010 00:00 (fifteen years ago)
"Bibles for slow readers" is like the best thing I've seen all day btw.
― Shock and Awe High School (Phil D.), Friday, 10 September 2010 00:01 (fifteen years ago)
I'm not sure skepticism operates on a physical level the same way that belief does. I think you have to on some level hold the belief in order to be skeptical of it. Someone with neuro-bio help me out here.
― Philip Nunez, Friday, 10 September 2010 00:02 (fifteen years ago)
i think you have to on some level be cold to be hot
― k¸ (darraghmac), Friday, 10 September 2010 00:04 (fifteen years ago)
I think you have to on some level hold the belief in order to be skeptical of it.
Not true. You have to be able to consider it, which would include viewing it from both (or, if you want to reject binaries, multiple) sides. This is not the same as 'holding the belief', which would mean believing it. But of course, the only reason why I consider this particular belief, which is entirely unimportant to me, is because society asks me to make a decision. Really, I would've been much happier had it not been a question at all.
― emil.y, Friday, 10 September 2010 00:08 (fifteen years ago)
This is where I assert that you are conflating atheism with humanism.
― and by "Heavens!" i mean WATERFALLS OF BIDDY (HI DERE), Friday, 10 September 2010 00:09 (fifteen years ago)
don't think so, am merely reacting to what was said upthread re: what atheists as misisng out on, tbh
― k¸ (darraghmac), Friday, 10 September 2010 00:12 (fifteen years ago)
'are missing'
what i mean is that whatever neural construct is formed to model/consider the belief is on a physical basis equivalent to having that belief, and the act of skepticism is one of dismissal, where this construct is inhibited, not one where a new 'non-belief" construct is formed.
this solves the ouroborous problem, which requires an equivalency between belief and non-belief, though it requires you to accept an equivalency between belief and consideration, at least on a neurological level.
i'm pretty sure i misspelled ouroubroous.
― Philip Nunez, Friday, 10 September 2010 00:15 (fifteen years ago)
whatever neural construct is formed to model/consider the belief is on a physical basis equivalent to having that belief
although this sounds impressive, it's really quite mad
― k¸ (darraghmac), Friday, 10 September 2010 00:16 (fifteen years ago)
ie visualisation for appreciation/valuation != belief on a physical nor any other level, and i can't think for a second how you'd claim it
― k¸ (darraghmac), Friday, 10 September 2010 00:17 (fifteen years ago)
but it seems to me that an atheist those things have to be found outside of atheism
Well sure. Atheism is sort of a non-thing. It's like you're saying that baldness doesn't come with a hat included so bald people have to look outside of their baldness to find a way to cover their head. Of course. Baldness just means that you have no hair. It doesn't mean that you have no hair but you're also part of some organized community that provides free hats. I think.
― wk, Friday, 10 September 2010 00:19 (fifteen years ago)
fwiw i never said that atheists are missing out on anything; i said atheism doesn't provide much
― tangelo amour (elmo argonaut), Friday, 10 September 2010 00:20 (fifteen years ago)
i might be conflating the studies where people imagining themselves making free throws activated the same parts of the brain as people actually training, and both groups improving by about the same amount. that and something about mirror neurons.
― Philip Nunez, Friday, 10 September 2010 00:20 (fifteen years ago)
seems i'm picking you up wrong in any number of small ways, elmo, but can you pls explain what the sentiment was, in context of 'here's what religion provides, and atheism doesn't'
― k¸ (darraghmac), Friday, 10 September 2010 00:22 (fifteen years ago)