ChatterBank0 min ago
What Do The Faithful Have That The Rest Of Us Don’T?
375 Answers
With no explanation, Goodlife is constantly telling the ‘poor’ atheists here that they have nothing – and today Khandro said exactly the same. I'm curious. Just what is it that these chaps think they have that the rest of us lack?
Answers
Khandro, first Wagner ..... now Socrates …..
mmmm …… Right……
Moving on…..
In consideration of your claim that the religious have in their lives a spiritual dimension that atheists lack, I rather suspect that by pushing Jim on the question of love you may well be firmly en route to shooting yourself in the foot.
mmmm …… Right……
Moving on…..
In consideration of your claim that the religious have in their lives a spiritual dimension that atheists lack, I rather suspect that by pushing Jim on the question of love you may well be firmly en route to shooting yourself in the foot.
Dear Khandro,
I've been wathching but avoided interrupting the current local debate. But there seems to be a lull, so here goes.
I respect you as you know but you do make a rod for your own back.
By switching analogies/metaphors and quotes from Aesop to Socrates etc. you do make a rod for your own back and are currently having to fight on more than one front at the same time. As I see it your difficulties include:
(a) At root you have a determined refusal even to consider that all gods were created by man rather than vice versa. This despite your own admission of the obvious, that way beyond prehistory mankind has venerated a vast multitude of gods (your post 23.36 Wed 15/01/24) - what happened to them? - we killed them off actually and invented new ones! Or did they just die?
(b) You fail to recognise that analogies/metaphors move the listener further from the truth unless they enlighten as to the actual explanation you are trying to convey i.e. return to base. Ask any scientist or teacher etc.
(c) Your music example seems to say that it extremely difficult to convey appreciation of religion/religious spirituality/faith or whatever. Well if you chose Wagner's Ring I'd say it was bloody impossible.
Why the need for such deep understanding to be religious? Many people drive a car without knowing what the alternator is or where the battery is - so what's the intellectual religious challenge?
(d) You stick to the the word spiritual as though it only referred to religion. This is not so - as Naomi has pointed out many times and notably chrisgel (19.16 Mon 20/01/14) - It can refer to the brain's intelllect or emotion.
Indeed spitituality can be experienced by simply taking a long walk because this causes the brain to release mildly euphoric chemicals called endorphins.
See you later about other issues,
Regards,
SIQ.
I've been wathching but avoided interrupting the current local debate. But there seems to be a lull, so here goes.
I respect you as you know but you do make a rod for your own back.
By switching analogies/metaphors and quotes from Aesop to Socrates etc. you do make a rod for your own back and are currently having to fight on more than one front at the same time. As I see it your difficulties include:
(a) At root you have a determined refusal even to consider that all gods were created by man rather than vice versa. This despite your own admission of the obvious, that way beyond prehistory mankind has venerated a vast multitude of gods (your post 23.36 Wed 15/01/24) - what happened to them? - we killed them off actually and invented new ones! Or did they just die?
(b) You fail to recognise that analogies/metaphors move the listener further from the truth unless they enlighten as to the actual explanation you are trying to convey i.e. return to base. Ask any scientist or teacher etc.
(c) Your music example seems to say that it extremely difficult to convey appreciation of religion/religious spirituality/faith or whatever. Well if you chose Wagner's Ring I'd say it was bloody impossible.
Why the need for such deep understanding to be religious? Many people drive a car without knowing what the alternator is or where the battery is - so what's the intellectual religious challenge?
(d) You stick to the the word spiritual as though it only referred to religion. This is not so - as Naomi has pointed out many times and notably chrisgel (19.16 Mon 20/01/14) - It can refer to the brain's intelllect or emotion.
Indeed spitituality can be experienced by simply taking a long walk because this causes the brain to release mildly euphoric chemicals called endorphins.
See you later about other issues,
Regards,
SIQ.
Since it is extremely unlikely that as soon as someone falls prey to the JWs they develop a deep appreciation of Delibes and are moved to orgasm by Mendelsohn, it would be interesting to know how long this transition takes and what percentage increase in appreciation of the arts is imbued by newly acquired 'spirituallity'. It would also be interesting to know if the 'god' effect extends to other branches of the arts. I await the statistics with interest, but I won't hold my breath.
Dear Khandro,
I had hoped to move on with the debate but in the absence of stronger protest from LG or others, I say please modify your language.
We are used to your abusive terms like "hot air" or "flim flam" and they fall like water off a duck's back often amounting to an accolade insofar as the writer has defeated you in that area of debate.
However the use of the word "lying" is beyond the pale.
In my experience, if I say "I don't believe you" and they respond "Are you calling me a liar?", I then say "No, I accept that you believe what you say but I do not agree". That cools it.
SIQ,
I had hoped to move on with the debate but in the absence of stronger protest from LG or others, I say please modify your language.
We are used to your abusive terms like "hot air" or "flim flam" and they fall like water off a duck's back often amounting to an accolade insofar as the writer has defeated you in that area of debate.
However the use of the word "lying" is beyond the pale.
In my experience, if I say "I don't believe you" and they respond "Are you calling me a liar?", I then say "No, I accept that you believe what you say but I do not agree". That cools it.
SIQ,
Naomi - Well that was a marathon :-)
As this thread seems to have come to an end, I hope you won't mind if I recommend a video I watched recently.
It is 10 minutes long and is part of a series about a young mans' (American) de-conversion from Christianity.
I have watched the full series and have found it very moving and revealing.
As this thread seems to have come to an end, I hope you won't mind if I recommend a video I watched recently.
It is 10 minutes long and is part of a series about a young mans' (American) de-conversion from Christianity.
I have watched the full series and have found it very moving and revealing.