are you an atheist?

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I'm Irish Roman Catholic (IIRC)

But that's a background as opposed to practicing. I'm happy enough that nothing happens for a reason, that there are basic constants in this particular universe, and that there is no overarching consciousness controlling it all.

I can dig Dawkins as a science writer, and I kinda enjoy that he's out there pissing off organised religions, but I think he'd be better off chilling out with some bones in a lab somewhere doing some actual work.

May be half naked, but knows a good headline when he sees it (darraghmac), Monday, 7 June 2010 16:32 (thirteen years ago) link

Are there any mainstream rappers outed as atheists?

Philip Nunez, Monday, 7 June 2010 16:32 (thirteen years ago) link

I like being atheist *but* it's no fun unless you've read the Bible

yeah! i'm an atheist/anti-religion because i was raised in a religious household with all the attendant crap that comes with that, but i'm so glad i do have that knowledge of xtianity and its workings

لوووووووووووووووووووول (lex pretend), Monday, 7 June 2010 16:33 (thirteen years ago) link

Without god how would rappers win Grammys?

thirdalternative, Monday, 7 June 2010 16:33 (thirteen years ago) link

oh, mainstream

haha I'm gonna post this anyway

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ii1dtebj24M

amazing track, mebbe they got personal religions tho

Mark Ronson: "Led Zeppelin were responsible for hip-hop" (acoleuthic), Monday, 7 June 2010 16:33 (thirteen years ago) link

I can't think of any public figure atheist who happens to be black, interestingly enough.

thirdalternative, Monday, 7 June 2010 16:34 (thirteen years ago) link

this will end well

Mark Ronson: "Led Zeppelin were responsible for hip-hop" (acoleuthic), Monday, 7 June 2010 16:36 (thirteen years ago) link

I'm Irish Roman Catholic (IIRC)

But that's a background as opposed to practicing. I'm happy enough that nothing happens for a reason, that there are basic constants in this particular universe, and that there is no overarching consciousness controlling it all.

i like Dara Ó Briain's thing about being catholic, which i totally agree with.

"I’m staunchly atheist, I simply don’t believe in God. But I’m still Catholic, of course. Catholicism has a much broader reach than just the religion. I’m technically Catholic, it’s the box you have to tick on the census form: ‘Don’t believe in God, but I do still hate Rangers.’"

Lil' Lj & The World (jim in glasgow), Monday, 7 June 2010 16:37 (thirteen years ago) link

I feel like Obama's religiosity is a marriage of convenience, and still count him on the team.

Philip Nunez, Monday, 7 June 2010 16:37 (thirteen years ago) link

also (and I have really no reason to think this, but I do) I suspect Kanye is secretly agnostic.

Philip Nunez, Monday, 7 June 2010 16:39 (thirteen years ago) link

there is no overarching consciousness controlling it all.

To me, this is like denying your own role in the perception & creation of this quantum dance of energy we call reality.

Adam Bruneau, Monday, 7 June 2010 16:39 (thirteen years ago) link

suspect your quantum dance and Darraghmac's quantum dance aren't the same?

tomofthenest, Monday, 7 June 2010 16:44 (thirteen years ago) link

I'm Irish Roman Catholic (IIRC)

that's Irate Irish Roman Catholic

mdskltr (blueski), Monday, 7 June 2010 16:44 (thirteen years ago) link

I think Mrs V's Catholicism is much as darragh describes. I self-identify as atheist because non serviam, basically, plus all the world's established faiths are so obviously human inventions.

every time i pull a j/k off the shelf (Noodle Vague), Monday, 7 June 2010 16:49 (thirteen years ago) link

Science is a human invention too.

Adam Bruneau, Monday, 7 June 2010 16:56 (thirteen years ago) link

Uh, science doesn't claim not to be. /No Dawkins

every time i pull a j/k off the shelf (Noodle Vague), Monday, 7 June 2010 16:58 (thirteen years ago) link

my favourite of them all (along with red pepper hummus) xp

mdskltr (blueski), Monday, 7 June 2010 16:58 (thirteen years ago) link

yuck. waste of perfectly good hummus.

tomofthenest, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:03 (thirteen years ago) link

not to negate your personal hummus experience, of course.

tomofthenest, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:04 (thirteen years ago) link

god dawkins sucks so bad

gorilla vs burrr (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:05 (thirteen years ago) link

Prefer Jalapeno or that North African one Sainsbury's do

every time i pull a j/k off the shelf (Noodle Vague), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:05 (thirteen years ago) link

was talking about militant atheist evolutionary biologists there

every time i pull a j/k off the shelf (Noodle Vague), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:06 (thirteen years ago) link

Are there any mainstream rappers outed as atheists?

― Philip Nunez, Monday, June 7, 2010 12:32 PM (33 minutes ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

"I run with a thievin squad/and none of us believe in god" - Big L

gorilla vs burrr (Whiney G. Weingarten), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:08 (thirteen years ago) link

In the last year or so, I've really been opening up to faith in God, however. It's the beginning of a journey and I'm still shaky on a lot of it, but it's there. Just to clarify my "no" vote as not being agnostic.

― kingkongvsgodzilla, Wednesday, May 21, 2008 5:39 AM (2 years ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

Egad, what a weird time in my life. I was doing heavy praying at the time - saying the Lord's Prayer in my head over and over again on the bus. The praying was fun! I'm back to being just a plain old boring agnostic nowadays though.

kkvgz, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:12 (thirteen years ago) link

kingkongvsgodzillavsgod

Mark Ronson: "Led Zeppelin were responsible for hip-hop" (acoleuthic), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:17 (thirteen years ago) link

but surely most theists are ok with "that sort of science", though?

The lightning thing was just an example to display that not all atheists are militant, non spiritual, non magical rationalists.

peacocks, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:18 (thirteen years ago) link

i don't even think atheist is the right word? mostly i say i'm irreligious or not religious. sometimes i say i'm a materialist but then people think i'm into money.

goole, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:19 (thirteen years ago) link

in a long discussion about this a few years ago i realized why i have trouble calling myself "an atheist": it's not because my views on the limited question of "do you believe in god" are at odds with atheism, it's because i don't think that limited question is really very interesting. i have trouble identifying myself with a label that mostly just says what i don't believe, and nothing at all about what i do believe. i'm not any kind of theist at all, a- or otherwise. i mean, there are lots of things i don't believe in, but i don't go around calling myself an a-unicornist or whatever. whether there's a higher intelligence, a supernatural force, a judgmental deity handing out gold stars or damnation, none of those things intrigue me. i think scientific and philosophical questions are much more rewarding and challenging than specifically religious questions. microbiology, astronomy, theoretical physics, ethics, those things are fascinating to me. "does god exist," not so much.

a tenth level which features a single castle (tipsy mothra), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:19 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah but who goes around introducing themselves as "hi I'm an atheist!"? the word only arises in a conversation about whether you believe in God or not

every time i pull a j/k off the shelf (Noodle Vague), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:21 (thirteen years ago) link

yeah but who goes around introducing themselves as "hi I'm an atheist!"?

surprising number of sex-starved libertarian truthers

Mark Ronson: "Led Zeppelin were responsible for hip-hop" (acoleuthic), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:22 (thirteen years ago) link

I don't like Hawkins' militantism -- it ought to be a big tent and basically if on some level you appreciate there's BS going on then I feel you can ride the atheist train.

Philip Nunez, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:23 (thirteen years ago) link

xpost

yeah I meant to elaborate that as "what sort of civilized human being introduces themselves as etc etc"

every time i pull a j/k off the shelf (Noodle Vague), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:23 (thirteen years ago) link

After reading William James, I can't help but feel like human beings lose a lot of really incredible phenomenological experiences by ditching this long historically embedded way of interacting with each other and the world (through spirituality/religion/etc). That said, if you make your religious/emotional decisions intellectually instead of emotionally, losing something like that might feel less important to you. But for me, since it intellectually seems like a wash (along the lines of tipsy, I just don't see the value of arguing about whether God exists), I make my decision using an emotional topography. Does it give me rituals and ways of understanding things like marriage, life, death, community, etc to believe in God? And in my case it does -- I love reading the Bible for archetypes + ways of being in the world. That doesn't mean that I feel compelled to follow strict religious jurisprudence, but more like it means more to me to learn about the individual and community from reading about Joseph in Egypt than it does to read about Antigone + Creon (tho I love reading both). And it helps me understand where I came from, and who my ancestors and people are and what they believed, and keeps me in touch with a broad history of common human experiences.

nb I'm the guy on the conspiracy theory thread who said he loves conspiracy theories because they seem to be a really important part of the human experience. So YMMV.

Mordy, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:29 (thirteen years ago) link

whether there's a higher intelligence, a supernatural force, a judgmental deity handing out gold stars or damnation, none of those things intrigue me

I don't really understand this. If you thought there might be a grain of truth in any of it, I couldn't imagine anything more intriguing. Even as a study of historical/cultural behaviours/philosophies/traditions, religion is a helluva subject. So are hobbits, though.

May be half naked, but knows a good headline when he sees it (darraghmac), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:33 (thirteen years ago) link

well for one thing how could you really grasp conceptually an intelligence greater than yr own...? defies logic in many ways

there is no overarching consciousness controlling it all.

To me, this is like denying your own role in the perception & creation of this quantum dance of energy we call reality.

― Adam Bruneau, Monday, 7 June 2010 16:39 (54 minutes ago) Bookmark

I don't see that- it's a denial that the dance is being directed. It's a moshpit, not a waltz.

May be half naked, but knows a good headline when he sees it (darraghmac), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:35 (thirteen years ago) link

You can't have either a waltz or a moshpit without music. The music in this case being your own consciousness, combinations of materialist subjectivity, ages-old cell-embedded psychological history, the effects of planetary/solar/astronomical gravity & radiation, and the constant influence of unseen dark matter, particles & waves that are too extreme to be detected by current scientific instruments.

I think the idea that YOU are the one directing the dance is not incompatible with the idea of an infinite and eternal consciousness creating the universe. In fact they are both, on some level, the same thing.

Adam Bruneau, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:45 (thirteen years ago) link

"ditching this long historically embedded way of interacting with each other and the world (through spirituality/religion/etc)"
but atheism is a part of this tradition, too. if you re-read chronicles of jesus with jesus-as-atheist in mind, it makes for a richer reading.

Philip Nunez, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:45 (thirteen years ago) link

bruneau u crazy

goole, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:46 (thirteen years ago) link

Even if you can somehow create a secret history of atheist-Jesus, the fact still remains that much of human history involves participation in religion, religious experience/sentiment/affect etc. Even if there's members of human history who never really bought into it.

Mordy, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:47 (thirteen years ago) link

I can never, ever dig the "you create your own reality" scene. Part of this is just having known too many ultra-jerks who were into Seth Speaks/Jane Roberts, including that most formative of people, the high school boyfriend.

breaking that little dog's heart chakra (Abbott), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:49 (thirteen years ago) link

It's so solipsistic.

breaking that little dog's heart chakra (Abbott), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:49 (thirteen years ago) link

re: secret agent jesus, You don't have to construct a secret atheist backstory -- just reread the gospels with the idea that these are the actions of an atheist seeking to break apart orthodoxy.

Philip Nunez, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:51 (thirteen years ago) link

I believe there are ways to deal with the world even if you've jettisoned ritual, but there's nothing that more details the feelings of loneliness and sadness than covering up your mirrors, taking off your shoes, and sitting on the ground when a loved one dies. Tearing your shirt when you first find out. Having all your friends and family visit you for a week to share with you about the dead and talk about life and remember things with you. Like that completely captures the experience of dealing with this horrifying and frightening experience of dying that I don't know how I'd understand if I didn't have that ritual to grab onto. Or every Saturday having friends come to a table together to sit down and eat bread and talk about the world and the things that are bothering us and tell over stories that we heard from our parents and grandparents -- these traditions are really important to me, and often the presence of God never even matters in light of the presence of the other human beings.

Mordy, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:53 (thirteen years ago) link

Seth Speaks/Jane Roberts

? never heard of this. off to google I guess...

my only real problem with the "you create your own reality scene" is just that, damn, pretty sure I could come up with a better, less depressing reality than this one. like, it's true on some levels and def. a trip to think about, but on the crude material plane you still have to deal with shit like gravity and other people and death and the passage of time and stuff like that.

xp to Philip about atheist jesus -- I don't know the Gospels as well as I know the Old Testament/Prophets, but it seems pretty clear to me that a simple reading of them requires God-believing Jesus. If for nothing else than comments like, "No one comes to the father but through me," and historically situating him requires putting him in an era where true atheism would be an anachronism.

Mordy, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:55 (thirteen years ago) link

One of my problems with it is they* say you literally choose everything, like if you got raped, you 'chose' for that to happen on an unconscious level, or if an earthquake kills 8,000 in Guatemala, all 8,000 of those Guatemalans simultaneously 'chose' to die. Not that I'm saying anyone here is espousing that.

*they = say, Jane Roberts again, or the people in the "What the Bleep movie," those type of hardline New Agers

(sorry for interrupting this other secret Jesus conversation)

breaking that little dog's heart chakra (Abbott), Monday, 7 June 2010 17:56 (thirteen years ago) link

Magical thinking is totally bogus imo. Not just intellectually, but emotionally it feels very false to me. The world doesn't feel like I can just choose to have whatever happen happen. And a lot of my experience in life is figuring out how I can make things work, and get things done, using the limited power and influence I have. Why would I abandon a way of looking at the world that gets things done for me, and that gibes with my gut feelings about how things are, for a system that promises much more but ultimately feels much emptier of meaning? I want a world where tragedies are capricious and mysterious and where I can't always control everything. I don't want a world where I ask the Universe for a cadillac and then try to figure out why my asking wasn't powerful enough to get it (or how I might be secretly undermining myself). Just too utilitarian an approach (and then on top of that, it kinda seems intellectually insane).

Mordy, Monday, 7 June 2010 17:59 (thirteen years ago) link

Okay maybe I mis-used the term. The world doesn't feel like I can just choose to have whatever happen happen. is not at all what I meant by "magical thinking." And congratulations for making me look it up, because I didn't know it was a specific "thing" and I will now have to stop using it at all, ever.

I just meant the idea that there are things beyond one's ken, a sense of fitness in the existent Universe, that there is a way things should work together that is more than cold logic. I need some poetry and some mystery, you know?

the soul of the avocado escapes as soon as you open it (Laurel), Monday, 7 June 2010 18:09 (thirteen years ago) link

Oh yeah. I agree with that. The world is a confusing, mysterious place!

Mordy, Monday, 7 June 2010 18:10 (thirteen years ago) link


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