"I asked God t...
 

  You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more

[Closed] "I asked God to help me"

833 Posts
84 Users
0 Reactions
9,087 Views
Posts: 7846
Free Member
 

You atheists are no different to people banging on about how 29ers are stupid without ever having ridden one.

Will we go to hell if we decide not to?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:31 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

What utter bobbins

Atheism is not a belief.

The belief in the superiority of religious people is absolutely inherent and central to the faith. Otherwise it would be pointless and there would be no drive to convert. All you need to do is read the pronouncements even moderate leaders with an open mind to see this.

"chosen people" "righteous"


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:33 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Well, another day, another religious thread. These are so predictable and soooo (in my opinion) pointless. A hundred and fifty something posts, and as ever, it goes nowhere. What would some of you people do without this to argue about? As far as I can see, nobody is trying to 'convert' anybody, and nobody is using religion on this thread to view anybody as 'lessor' than themselves. I'm not going to use the word 'respect', as that just seems to give people something else to rear up about, so how about some manners? A lot of people have personal beliefs, which they dont attempt to impose on others, so why would you feel it's ok to insult them?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:34 am
 MSP
Posts: 15473
Free Member
 

What is a fundamentalist atheist? What are the fundamentals of atheism that must be adhered to in order to attain the title?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:36 am
Posts: 7846
Free Member
 

What would some of you people do without this to argue about?

Work! Anyway if God didnt want us to debate it he wouldnt have given us the Internet!


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:39 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

😀


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:39 am
Posts: 21016
Full Member
 

Mitch, most of us are just engaging in debate.

People from the non belief side are perfectly willing to explain our non belief, in the context of debate.
You're more than welcome to question my views, laugh at them if you like.
I won't be offended.

If you wish to justify an opinion, sadly, you have to expect the same in return, from some at least.
It's just human nature, part of the the ineffable whotsit of thingy, er life.

We've luckily reached a stage of evolution in a minority of countries where this kind of game is now possible.
Don't take your ball in because the other side are now, finally allowed to play by the same rules.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:48 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Rusty - I dont, for a single second, have a problem with debate. I enjoy p**s taking as much as the next person, and dont take any offence from it. What I get annoyed about (to be honest, I even think 'annoyed' is too strong a term) is the assertion that if you dont want to touch Dawkins where he wees, you're some kind of moron.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:52 am
Posts: 7846
Free Member
 

Me and MSP still want to qualify for "fundamentalist" status. Do we get badges?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:53 am
Posts: 4143
Free Member
 

"A lot of people have personal beliefs, which they dont attempt to impose on others, so why would you feel it's ok to insult them?"

Couldn't agree more Mr B Match but more importantly...

Is your wife wearing a woolly jumper today?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:54 am
Posts: 7846
Free Member
 

is the assertion that if you dont want to touch Dawkins where he wees, you're some kind of moron.

Its often believers who bring up Dawkins*.

*Other authors exist.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:55 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

She left for work at about six Ro5ey , and as I recall, she was sporting some sort of suit thing. I do like to imagine there was a jumper under there somewhere though!


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:55 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Tme for some culture, then:
"The sea is calm to-night.
The tide is full, the moon lies fair
Upon the straits; on the French coast the light
Gleams and is gone; the cliffs of England stand;
Glimmering and vast, out in the tranquil bay.
Come to the window, sweet is the night-air!
Only, from the long line of spray
Where the sea meets the moon-blanched land,
Listen! you hear the grating roar
Of pebbles which the waves draw back, and fling,
At their return, up the high strand,
Begin, and cease, and then again begin,
With tremulous cadence slow, and bring
The eternal note of sadness in.

Sophocles long ago
Heard it on the Aegean, and it brought
Into his mind the turbid ebb and flow
Of human misery; we
Find also in the sound a thought,
Hearing it by this distant northern sea.

The Sea of Faith
Was once, too, at the full, and round earth's shore
Lay like the folds of a bright girdle furled.
But now I only hear
Its melancholy, long, withdrawing roar,
Retreating, to the breath
Of the night-wind, down the vast edges drear
And naked shingles of the world.

Ah, love, let us be true
To one another! for the world, which seems
To lie before us like a land of dreams,
So various, so beautiful, so new,
Hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light,
Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain;
And we are here as on a darkling plain
Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight,
Where ignorant armies clash by night."

Say hello, wave byebye.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:56 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Sorry about that surfer, I was just being lazy, and it wont happen again. 😉


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:58 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

fundamentalist atheist described: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rj-eskow/my-new-years-eve-dream-ab_b_37567.html?

Essentially: The fundamentalist atheists are an active and highly vocal subset of atheists who object to a great many things, not the least of which is being described as 'fundamentalist atheists.

Sound about right? or are you now trying to say that TJ isn't highly vocal, who objects to pretty much everything? (including himself when he gets confused).


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 10:59 am
Posts: 4143
Free Member
 

Happy Days !!


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:00 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Haven't read all the thread but just to throw in a thought:
God doesn't have a religion, we chose to spilt up the teachings of holy men whether it was Jesus, Allah, Krishna, whoever, to serve our own purposes.
The core of all fundamental teachings is the same and they often cross reference each other.
If we took one thing from all these teachings it would have to be:- LOVE ALL.
Somewhere in our interpretation of all these teachings we seem to have forgotten that simple bit.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:01 am
Posts: 7846
Free Member
 

The fundamentalist atheists are an active and highly vocal subset of atheists who object to a great many things, not the least of which is being described as 'fundamentalist atheists.

Bit like errr.... Atheists then?

Fromn this point on I will refer to myself as an "extreme fudamentalist atheist" just to give it... you know.. a bit more cred.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:01 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

that ok, as long as its me,me,me,me,me,me,me,me,me,me et al. your atheist views will be fine.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:02 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 


Well, another day, another religious thread. These are so predictable.....

Most of the posts from the free-thinking, libertarian atheist could in fact just be cut'n'pated from the last thread - nothing new to say, just the same old generalisations and provocations 😆


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:03 am
Posts: 7846
Free Member
 

Somewhere in our interpretation of all these teachings we seem to have forgotten that simple bit.

Really? what about where the "love" is obscured by the killing and smiting bit? or is that just another misinteretation?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:03 am
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

Atheism is not a belief.

Not really possible to prove the non-existence of God, so I think I do classify it as a belief.

"chosen people" "righteous"

Have you spent much time with religious people, TJ? They don't all talk like that. It does say that kind of thing a lot in the Bible, but then you're onto the subject of how literally one interprets the Bible, which I believe has been discussed at some length already 🙂

The fundamentalist atheists are an active and highly vocal subset of atheists who object to a great many things, not the least of which is being described as 'fundamentalist atheists.

Bit like errr.... Atheists then?

Not really. I'm an atheist, and I'm arguing for religion, had you noticed?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:04 am
 MSP
Posts: 15473
Free Member
 

The fundamentalist atheists are an active and highly vocal subset of atheists who object to a great many things, not the least of which is being described as 'fundamentalist atheists.

OK so there is no blowing up, crashing into things, general killing and maiming involved. They sound a lot safer to be around than the fundamental religious types.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:06 am
Posts: 7846
Free Member
 

Not really possible to prove the non-existence of God, so I think I do classify it as a belief.

In the same way as NOT believing in the tooth fairy is a "belief" I like your thinking 😀


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:06 am
Posts: 7846
Free Member
 

The fundamentalist atheists are an active and highly vocal subset of atheists who object to a great many things, not the least of which is being described as 'fundamentalist atheists.

Bit like errr.... Atheists then?

Not really. I'm an atheist, and I'm arguing for religion, had you noticed?

No. How does that make any sense?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:08 am
Posts: 21016
Full Member
 

Mitch, for the vast majority of human existance, religion has been forced on to societies as a means of control.

Finally, people are now, in a very small number of places, allowed to question this.
Not surprising that they use a vocal, erudite public figure as a means of shorthand when expressing their views.
Sound familiar?

The big difference is that no one is claiming that Dawkins will give them eternal life or absolve them of their sins.

The fact that when told to think for themselves, some people miss the point by a mile is again a wonderful and ironic example of human falability, or evolution in action, as you prefer.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:10 am
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

How could it not make sense?

I don't believe in God, but I strongly object to the mis-interpretation of religious teachings and beliefs apparently for the sole purpose of insulting people's intelligence. Not very nice, and also pretty friggin feeble from an intellectual point of view.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:10 am
Posts: 7846
Free Member
 

How could it not make sense?

I don't believe in God, but I strongly object to the mis-interpretation of religious teachings and beliefs apparently for the sole purpose of insulting people's intelligence. Not very nice, and also pretty friggin feeble from an intellectual point of view.

So where does the "fundamentalist atheist" bit come in that you were refering to?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:12 am
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

I thought you were saying that all atheists are "an active and highly vocal subset of atheists who object to a great many things"..?

If not, then please accept my apologies and ignore my last few posts.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:14 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

nasty bunch of zealots determined to force their views on others

I completely agree, anyone who tries to impose their own personal belief on others doesn't deserve the time of day and shouldn't be given access to public forums.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:14 am
Posts: 7846
Free Member
 

If not, then please accept my apologies and ignore my last few posts.

Apology not required 🙂


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:17 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

And I really, really dont have a problem with that rusty - we should question things, that's healthy. My sole objection is to being labelled as stupid for believing in God. We're not all fundamentalist, creationist homophobes, and I, for one, dont take the bible literally, and I dont automatically do what the bloke in the pointy hat tells me to do. I'm very much aware that this is 'cherry picking' with regards to Catholicism, but I think I can live with that. 🙂


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:18 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Mitch, for the vast majority of human existance, religion has been forced on to societies as a means of control.

I am sorry that's bollocks, Homo sapiens emerged around 200,000 years ago. First written word is around 600BC, so how on earth can you say for the majority of human existence religion has been used to control society? As we don't actually have a clue what happened for the vast majority of our species existence on this planet.

As you are an atheist please provide some facts to backup your statement as without proof nothing can exist.

Or do you want to change that to

for the vast majority of *MY* existance, religion has been forced on to societies as a means of control.
As you seem believe the whole universe revolves around you.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:18 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

In the same way as NOT believing in the tooth fairy is a "belief" I like your thinking

Of course, so therefore it naturally falls to those who say there's no tooth fairy to prove that there's no tooth fairy.

Doesn't it....


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:18 am
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

No. In the absence of any means of proof, we are all free to believe as we see fit. And there's really no point in arguing about it or slagging each other off.

END OF THREAD.

Booyah!


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:22 am
Posts: 5559
Free Member
 

If you don't like to read it, don't. The idea that one is supposed to keep ones widely held, mainstream and inoffensive views to oneself just to protect your little mind is quite ridiculous.

Yes you should ram it down our throats and insists that it is not offensive as another person dies of AIDS whilst you wage holy war against the Infidels for your god or gods

read an interesting book on religion, which pointed out that many fundamentalist atheists are so because they can't believe that there is anyone or anything in the world more important than them ...

yes that right anyone who disagrees with god is almost certainly an ego manic who thinks the world resolves around them… Obviously when you have no actual arguments to put forward to support your view you should do the rational thing and slur all those who disagree with your view in an ad hominem attack….i am pretty sure this is what Jesus would do

also pointed out that many fundamentalist atheists justify there beliefs by highlighting the extremists in religions (such as the god hates fags lot) to justify there extreme Ego belief system.

See above this is not even an argument it is just an insult masquerading as a point
So when I say God hates fag is an aspect of religious intolerance what I really mean is I am an ego maniac and I am the most important thing EVER. That is even less credible and rational than your belief in a god. What a terrible argument

From http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rj-eskow/my-new-years-eve-dream-ab_b_37567.html?

They're dogmatic. Their movement is based on a piece of dogma which can't be challenged without enraging them.

Has this man read any holy book. ..what an odd argument he seems confused between an atheist and a person of faith

Fundamentalist atheists think they already know, without study.

I did not read any further as that point is BS you cannot reasonably accuse those who don’t adhere to the big sky fairy as the ones who don’t study. To be fair both sides study but neither has any evidence so take your pick have some faith or assume it is not real.

Not really possible to prove the non-existence of God, so I think I do classify it as a belief.

You cannot prove a negative so the list of beliefs you must have is limitless as the set includes everything made up that has no actual evidence to support it
Not a wise way to live your life IMHO

In the absence of any means of proof, we are all free to believe as we see fit.

Its daft to accept everything you cannot disprove as you cannot disprove anything false I just make up.
The invisible spaghetti monster or the earth resting on invisble turtles standing on invisible elephants as not accepting this as true.
Can I go on..I get your point but it a daft principle by which you choose to assimilate information. It makes no sense to accept things which have no evidence but yes you can if you wish.
Ps if these beliefs are not culturally acceptable you are classified as mad - they need the caveat of culturally accepted to stop us saying religious folk were mad


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:25 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

In the absence of any means of proof, we are all free to believe as we see fit

Strange how the religious keep asking the atheists to "prove" the absence of their ridiculous deity thing, then.

A sort of desperate fall-back position.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:25 am
Posts: 77347
Free Member
 

You atheists are no different to people banging on about how 29ers are stupid without ever having ridden one.

By that argument I'm qualified to say Christians are stupid. (-:

I read an interesting book on religion, which pointed out that many fundamentalist atheists are so because they can't believe that there is anyone or anything in the world more important than them

Pro-religion text in "making things up" shocker. Does the author provide any evidence for this? Or does she just know that most people reading it will be used to disregarding a need for evidence in favour of "it's in a book so it must be true."

The core of all fundamental teachings is the same and they often cross reference each other.
If we took one thing from all these teachings it would have to be:- LOVE ALL.

That's a lovely thought. It's a pity that the practice doesn't seem to quite work like that. Perhaps it'd be more accurate to say "LOVE ALL (so long as they're like us or we can make them like us)".

Not really possible to prove the non-existence of God, so I think I do classify it as a belief.

We've done this before. It's not a belief, it's an absence of belief, which might sound pedantic but it's an important distinction. For example, do you think that there aren't tiny pink unicorns in your skirting board? Would you call that a belief?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:28 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Strange how the religious keep asking the atheists to "prove" the absence of their ridiculous deity thing, then.

prove it! 😆


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:30 am
Posts: 17915
Full Member
 

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:30 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

That's a lovely thought. It's a pity that the practice doesn't seem to quite work like that. Perhaps it'd be more accurate to say "LOVE ALL (so long as they're like us or we can make them like us)".

Cougar - how many of the world's population would you estimate follow a religion? Of those, how many would you consider extreme/intolerant? How many are co-existing with others of different/no-faiths? How many areas of conflict are based on religious views (really not the rhetoric?)? If all religious people are determined not to love others and prefer to impose their beliefs on others through whatever means necessary, why are we not in a constant state of war? How many irreligious societies are capable of intolerance/violence/genocide etc?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:35 am
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

Strange how the religious keep asking the atheists to "prove" the absence of their ridiculous deity thing, then.

A sort of desperate fall-back position.

Never heard that one.

The thing is, Woppit and others, there are lots of complete cocks who are religious. Also lots who are atheists.

Don't confuse being a cock with being religious - they are NOT the same thing.

Yes you should ram it down our throats and insists that it is not offensive as another person dies of AIDS whilst you wage holy war against the Infidels for your god or gods

How can you conflate an open minded and reasonable Christian with some idiot in Africa on an ego trip? Makes no sense.

You cannot prove a negative so the list of beliefs you must have is limitless as the set includes everything made up that has no actual evidence to support it
Not a wise way to live your life IMHO

Straw man. No-one is interested in the limitless set - the existence of pink unicorns in the skirting board is not important. However the question of the existence of God is quite important to many people.

If someone started talking to me about pink unicorns as if it were really profoundly important to them, I wouldn't argue with them. However if they got angry with me for not believing, I would.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:36 am
 grum
Posts: 4531
Free Member
 

And I really, really dont have a problem with that rusty - we should question things, that's healthy. My sole objection is to being labelled as stupid for believing in God

How do you feel about the Mormons and the whole magic spectacles thing? Or the Scientologists with this stuff:

A Scientology spokesman has confirmed that Scientologists believe that mankind's problems stem from brainwashed alien soul remnants created millions of years ago by genocidal alien overlord Xenu. The admission follows years of attempts to dismiss the story, first leaked by defectors, as anti-church propaganda.

A core doctrine of Scientology belief is that freeing the human body of attachment to alien soul remnants, or Thetans, created by Xenu when he kidnapped millions and brought them to earth for a fiery execution, is key to achieving spiritual progress and relief from worries. ®

Genuine question btw.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:37 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

So TJ, given that you feel religion should be "in private behind closed doors" and the organised church is some kind of mailcious indoctrination device - how would you see the church's central role in the fight against totalitarianism ?
Specifically I'm thinking of the election of the Bishop of Kraków, Karol Wojty?a, as Pope.
His subsequent pilgrimage to Poland and famous speech calling for the respect of religious traditions and advocacy for freedom and human rights triggered widespread support for Solidarno?? in Poland and the PSC in UK.
Even more relevant was the role of the Church of St Nicholas in Leipzig and it's support for the Monday Demonstrations which eventually became the centre of peaceful revolt against Communist rule.
Would you have supported Left wing toatalitariansim and it's religious persecution, or be one of those stood in the street facing down troops with only a lighted candle and religious faith for your protection ?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:39 am
Posts: 3705
Free Member
 

a thing of great beauty....

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:40 am
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

Best religious thread post ever, hilldodger.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:43 am
Posts: 7846
Free Member
 

A Scientology spokesman has confirmed that Scientologists believe that mankind's problems stem from brainwashed alien soul remnants created millions of years ago by genocidal alien overlord Xenu. The admission follows years of attempts to dismiss the story, first leaked by defectors, as anti-church propaganda.

A core doctrine of Scientology belief is that freeing the human body of attachment to alien soul remnants, or Thetans, created by Xenu when he kidnapped millions and brought them to earth for a fiery execution, is key to achieving spiritual progress and relief from worries. ®

Sounds reasonable to me unless you have proof that it is not the case?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:44 am
 grum
Posts: 4531
Free Member
 

So TJ, given that you feel religion should be "in private behind closed doors" and the organised church is some kind of mailcious indoctrination device - how would you see the church's central role in the fight against totalitarianism ?

Churches (the Catholic church at least) have often been on the side of the oppressors/establishment throughout history, there will obviously be some exceptions though.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:44 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

molgrips -Have you spent much time with religious people, TJ? They don't all talk like that.

No they don't say out loud they are superior but what you don't want to see is the assumption of superiority that underlies all abrahamic faiths. All that emphasis on a sinner repenting, the drive to convert, the assumption that morals come from god and without a belief in god one can have no morals, the belief they have a right and a duty to spread the word. Its all based on the assumption that to be a believer is to be a better person than an unbeliever.

Hilldodger - thin argument. A little influence for good when it suits them that you overstate does not alter the harm they have done - as on previous debates on this I accept religions can do good as well. A hungry and homeless TJ has been fed by them.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:48 am
Posts: 21016
Full Member
 

Rich, I'm happy to change that to 'the vast majority of documented human existance'.
Happy now? 😀

And I think you'll find that the universe appears, at the moment, to revolve around Simon Cowell, not me.

Mitch, I would never call you stupid for believing in God.
I would argue that there is no rational, repeatable evidence for the existance of any kind of supernatural phenonema, including a belief in a supreme being.

How you choose to interpretate the data is entirerly up to you.

Hilldodger, replacing one tired, worn out means of oppression and indoctrination with another is a victory for no one.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:49 am
Posts: 5297
Full Member
 

We've done this before. It's not a belief, it's an absence of belief, which might sound pedantic but it's an important distinction. For example, do you think that there aren't tiny pink unicorns in your skirting board? Would you call that a belief?

If you believe. It's a belief.

If you believe there is no creator, then that is what you believe in: your belief.

I've never not believed in tiny pink unicorns because they have never been brought to my attention. To not have a belief is to be free of any thought to believe in. Completely empty.

If you believe the Universe to be as science describes it. Then that is your belief.

If you believe yourself to be doing everyone else a favour by rudely telling everybody that your idea of our existence is much betterer than theirs, then that is also your belief.

Etc.

Beliefs make up the self. Something that is absolutely at the center of all of our opinions, religious or otherwise.

They are what we are.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:50 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Wojtyla is a fine example of an apparently intelligent mind over thrown by dogma.

After the attempt on his life and subsequent recovery, he claimed that a magic invisible female fairy called "Our [i](sic)[/i] Lady of Fatima" (with whom he had, apparently, a "special" relationship) had protected him by suspending the laws of physics and deflecting the course of the bullet.

One wonders, if this odd entity is that powerful, why she didn't deflect the bullet to miss him completely, thereby saving the team of medical experts the bother of fighting for 11 hours to do the actual hard work.

So now whe're back to the bladder kicker-about with the same sort of silly notion as the former wearer of the magic hat...


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:51 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

TandemJeremy - Member

Hilldodger - thin argument. A little influence for good when it suits them that you overstate

I guess the citizens of Poland and the former GDR may feel otherwise !!


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:56 am
Posts: 7846
Free Member
 

Shouldnt there be quotes around some of that Woppit you little rascal! 😉


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 11:57 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

butcher - Member

If you believe the Universe to be as science describes it. Then that is your belief

Good point, I would be certain that almost all people who accept "science as truth" have no way of validating most of it's claims.
So yes, scientific fact is for almost all people a belief system.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:00 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

😆


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:01 pm
 grum
Posts: 4531
Free Member
 

Good point, I would be certain that almost all people who accept "science as truth" have no way of validating most of it's claims.
So yes, scientific fact is for almost all people a belief system.

Sort of, but with the key difference that science is all about questioning (not always how it's taught in schools mind you) - not just blindly following your interpretation of an old book, even when it's clearly misguided and harmful.

None of the religion defenders going to comment on the Scientology beliefs? Let's be honest, you think it's pretty daft don't you, but of course there is no comparison with Christianity because it's been around for a couple of thousand years and therefore has legitimacy.

I'm not a fan of being a dick to people for no reason btw, I was raised as a Christian and lots of my family are practising Christians. However, I see no reason why Christianity should be above criticism, and religion is still foisted upon people constantly. It seems to be most of the whinging from religious leaders about persecution etc is based on the fact that religion has enjoyed an extraordinarily privileged position in society, and now that is starting to wane slightly they don't like it.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:05 pm
Posts: 5559
Free Member
 

Good point, I would be certain that almost all people who accept "science as truth" have no way of validating most of it's claims.
So yes, scientific fact is for almost all people a belief system.

There may be a belief that the empirical method is the method by which we find truth . More accurately if is about eliminating infinite error like believing in pink unicorns or gods when we have no evidence they exist

What they find are not beliefs they are "facts".
Assuming this method is best may be a belief but there is also a lot of evidence to support this belief.

Furthermore you can get them to change their mind by having better evidence and this is not possible with a believer in religion. They have decided IRRESPECTIVE of the evidence a scientist has decided ONLY because of the evidence. we are not tied to gravity by Faith in a diety for example but you will need to disprove it empirically

Butchers post above is guilty of the fallacy of equivocation re using FWIW


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:12 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:17 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

surfer - Member
Shouldnt there be quotes around some of that Woppit you little rascal!

Ah! Well spotted.

With apologies to the good Professor, then... 😉


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:17 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

grum - Member

Sort of, but with the key difference that science is all about questioning

Try telling that to a scientist trying to get a non-conventional set of experimental data past the much beloved "peer review system"

Litle side story about "scientific questioning"....

...a while back I was working with an unfashionable "New University" (ie ex polytech) trying to get a modest little paper published that went against the orthodoxy.
We were rejected by journal after journal withour even being sent for review....

...so, tagged a colleague from MRC Cambridge as an author and got him to submit on his organisation's headed paper - Bingo, accepted in the top ranked journal on "editors discretion"

Science as questioning truth and objective reality my ass 😆


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:19 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

No they don't say out loud they are superior but what you don't want to see is the assumption of superiority that underlies all abrahamic faiths. All that emphasis on a sinner repenting, the drive to convert, the assumption that morals come from god and without a belief in god one can have no morals, the belief they have a right and a duty to spread the word. Its all based on the assumption that to be a believer is to be a better person than an unbeliever.

Erm, not quite. Well, not really at all.

"Emphasis on sinner repenting" - one of the absolute core belief of Christianity is that there is NOTHING that WE can do to make ourselves better in the eyes of God. So no amount of repenting makes you a "superior" person

"Drive to convert" - I'll agree that most Christians would love to share their faith, but this is very rarely now done as a 'concersion' drive. The vast vast majority of churches will use things like Alpha courses etc to invite people to learn more about Christianty. If someone chooses to accept an invitation OF THEIR OWN FREE CHOICE, you can hardly say that is any different to inviting people to a lecture on Darwinism.

"only a believer can have morals" - your right in your first statement that most Christians would believe morals come from God, but it is absolutely incorrect that they think you can only be moral if you are believer. That is clearly evident in the world and really requires no further discussion!

Do some Christians believe they are 'superior' to others? Sadly, probably yes. Is it a basis for the entire faith as you keep claiming? Absolutely 100% not. I realise I'm a touch biased ere, but I honestly can't see how it would be possible to think that if one has done enough research to thoroughly dismiss the religion.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:20 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I was really trying not to bite ... but I've failed.

butcher
I do not think that word means what you believe it means.

No matter how much you believe it means that, it will not change the meaning of the word.

Absence of belief, is not belief.
Atheism, is not a religion
Failing to collect stamps, is not a hobby.
Baldness, is not a hairstyle.

It would be churlish to mention that the ease with which you change the meanings of words to suit your own arguments, and then imply that everyone who merely disagrees with your definition is some sort of fundamentalist grammatarian, is a perfect metaphor for what passes for reason in the rest of your befuddled brain.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:23 pm
Posts: 77347
Free Member
 

Cougar - how many of the world's population would you estimate follow a religion? Of those, how many would you consider extreme/intolerant?

You're missing my point. I'm not talking about people's actions, I'm talking about religious teachings. The suggestion was that most religious texts promote a 'love all' philosophy, I was positing that perhaps that's not entirely accurate. Many religions are intolerant in nature; arguably, by design. If a core tenet of a faith isn't to encourage others to join you (or more insidiously, discourage them from not doing) then it has a lesser chance of survival. If a teenage Muslim girl decided that actually, she was going to denounce Islam and become a Roman Catholic, what do you reckon would be the reaction of her family and community?

The fact that, as you say, the vast majority of people are largely tolerant of others' beliefs and cultures is a credit to out modern societies; but it's happened despite religion, not because of it.

How many are co-existing with others of different/no-faiths?

You said it yourself. We co-exist, it's hardly peace and love and kittens. Come back to me when Mr Khan next door and I are exchanging Christmas cards and I'm popping round for Eid dinner. We're getting there but we're not yet the big happy melting pot that we'd like to think.

How many irreligious societies are capable of intolerance/violence/genocide etc?

You're perilously close to a straw man, there. Plenty are capable of it, a cause is a cause after all, one man's terrorist is another's freedom fighter. I'm struggling to think of anyone who's attempted genocide in the name of atheism though; generally, terrorism is fuelled by a belief system, and atheism is not a belief system, it's an absence of one (hence why I said earlier that this was an important distinction).

If someone started talking to me about pink unicorns as if it were really profoundly important to them, I wouldn't argue with them. However if they got angry with me for not believing, I would.

I think I'd suggest they had counselling.

a thing of great beauty....

A white child with blonde hair and blue eyes. No wonder they thought he was the messiah, he wouldn't exactly have been inconspicuous in the middle of Israel.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:24 pm
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

No they don't say out loud they are superior but what you don't want to see is the assumption of superiority that underlies all abrahamic faiths

I'm aware of that, of course. But there's a big difference between the doctrine as 'spelled out' (which it really isn't) in the bible and the opinions and beliefs of the practitioners. The bible hasn't changed much in centuries, but Christianity has evolved beyond recognition in many areas.

A little influence for good when it suits them that you overstate does not alter the harm they have done

I really struggle to link atrocities commited in the name of religion with religion itself. I cannot see this as a valid leap.

Is football responsible for football hooliganism?

The fact that, as you say, the vast majority of people are largely tolerant of others' beliefs and cultures is a credit to out modern societies; but it's happened despite religion, not because of it

In general, yes, but I think that there's a strong argument that a lot of our tolerance and acceptance could derive (eventually) from the teachings of that bloke from Galilee, what's his name now?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:25 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Anyone know the joke of the religious guy in a flood who turns away the lifeboat and the helicopter because he believes God will save him?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:29 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

I really struggle to link atrocities commited in the name of religion with religion itself. I cannot see this as a valid leap.

Condoms and aids. direct actions and influence peddling by the catholic church is responsible for millions of preventable deaths. Just one example of direct harm caused by mainstream tenets of faith


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:32 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

A Scientology spokesman has confirmed that Scientologists believe that mankind's problems stem from brainwashed alien soul remnants created millions of years ago by genocidal alien overlord Xenu. The admission follows years of attempts to dismiss the story, first leaked by defectors, as anti-church propaganda.
A core doctrine of Scientology belief is that freeing the human body of attachment to alien soul remnants, or Thetans, created by Xenu when he kidnapped millions and brought them to earth for a fiery execution, is key to achieving spiritual progress and relief from worries. ®

.

Sounds reasonable to me unless you have proof that it is not the case?

.
Indeed I do.
.
...many witnesses have reported Hubbard making statements in their presence that starting a religion would be a good way to make money

.
There are many documents relating to the fact that the formation of Scientology was purely a scam to make money, and to have it classified as a religion as a tax scam.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:32 pm
 grum
Posts: 4531
Free Member
 

There are many documents relating to the fact that the formation of Scientology was purely a scam to make money, and to have it classified as a religion as a tax scam.

But lots of people have sincere, deeply held belief in scientology. By suggesting its a scam, aren't you just being intolerant and needlessly offensive to Scientologists?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:34 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

Not really.

There is documented proof that it is a scam.

I'm not "suggesting" that it is a scam. I'm just reporting that it has been already been proven that it is.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:37 pm
Posts: 2009
Free Member
 

"Muamba thanks god for his recovery" shocker ......he's from war torn Africa and like many many other Africans he most probably has very strong religious beliefs so is it so unbelievable that he makes a statement thanking god.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:37 pm
Posts: 91000
Free Member
 

Condoms and aids. direct actions and influence peddling by the catholic church is responsible for millions of preventable deaths. Just one example of direct harm caused by mainstream tenets of faith

I know. But the tenet isn't 'shag without condoms' it's 'don't shag unless you are married' which is a big difference.

Do you think it's only down to religious teachings? Or do you think that perhaps men don't like wearing johnnies and are choosing this particular doctrine as a convenient excuse? Seems like people are ignoring the 'no sex before marriage' thing cos it suits them.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:40 pm
Posts: 77347
Free Member
 

The vast vast majority of churches will use things like Alpha courses etc to invite people to learn more about Christianty. If someone chooses to accept an invitation OF THEIR OWN FREE CHOICE

Because they know full well that the most effective way of creating followers with unquestionable faith is to have as many as possible born unto believing parents and indoctrinated from an early age. What happens when a religion promotes the family unit and is against contraception and homosexuality? Oh look, huge families of ready-made disciples.

it is absolutely incorrect that they think you can only be moral if you are believer

Yet people have expressed this view on this very forum. We're not just making it up to be controversial.

Do some Christians believe they are 'superior' to others? Sadly, probably yes.

To be fair, you can cross out "Christians" and put "people" in that sentence.

Failing to collect stamps, is not a hobby.

Brilliant. I'm writing that down.

Anyone know the joke of the religious guy in a flood who turns away the lifeboat and the helicopter because he believes God will save him?

Page two of this very thread.

http://singletrackmag.com/forum/topic/i-asked-god-to-help-me/page/2?replies=224#post-3714909


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:43 pm
Posts: 10315
Full Member
 

Anyone know the joke of the religious guy in a flood who turns away the lifeboat and the helicopter because he believes God will save him?

I think you will find that Cougar posted it a few pages ago


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:44 pm
Posts: 77347
Free Member
 

But the tenet isn't 'shag without condoms' it's 'don't shag unless you are making babies' which is a big difference.

Sure. One of them is a lot more likely to get obeyed than the other, for a start.

It's been proved, time and again, that "don't do it" simply doesn't work, and "if you're going to do it, be careful" is far more effective. Look at drug culture as an example. In the 80s, "just say no." Today, "talk to Frank."

For all that I think of organised religion, I honestly don't believe that that Catholic 'every sperm is sacred' mantra was ever intended to be applied to a populace in the grip of a mortal STI epidemic.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:49 pm
Posts: 7846
Free Member
 

It goes something like

"Atheism is a religion in the same way that not collecting stamps is a hobby"

Cant recall who said it originally, may have been Dan Dennet.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:53 pm
Posts: 77347
Free Member
 

I'm not "suggesting" that it is a scam. I'm just reporting that it has been already been proven that it is.

Wow. Imagine that it's been created a couple of thousands of years ago, rather than sixty. We'd never have known, and might've ended up with billions of people being sucked in and blindly believing as fact something someone made up to control and exploit the masses. Wouldn't that be terrible? Thank god no-one did that, eh.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:53 pm
Posts: 4143
Free Member
 

""Muamba thanks god for his recovery" shocker ......he's from war torn Africa and like many many other Africans he most probably has very strong religious beliefs so is it so unbelievable that he makes a statement thanking god."

Exactly what point are you trying to make here?


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:55 pm
Posts: 77347
Free Member
 

"religious person is religious" I think.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:56 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
 

heres a link for you all that might be more suited to this topic:
http://www.humanism.org.uk/home
http://richarddawkinsfoundation.org/

Just a reminder, your on a MTB forum.


 
Posted : 23/04/2012 12:56 pm
Page 3 / 11

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!