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Is Atheism a Religion? (Read 111249 times)
Grey
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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #435 - Mar 14th, 2013 at 10:26am
 
muso wrote on Mar 13th, 2013 at 9:32pm:
They probably know that we're dealing with perceptions of the divinity, and that perceptions are the only reality we have. It probably explains why most theologists are closet atheists.

Don't knock theologists. One of my best friends is a theologist.


I'm not sure I could be friends with anybody who called themselves a theologist. Most professions and trades build up their own esoteric language. I can understand that, when you're making a good living from a procedure that's very simple it makes semse to be secretive. Medics really need the shroud of naming to disguise the fact that they know very little.

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Myocardial infarction is the irreversible necrosis of heart muscle secondary to prolonged ischemia.
Sounds really learned, in comparison with, 'the pump broke'. God knows Doctors have to justify their pay scale somehow. But theologians, that's a whole different kettle of fish. I've got a friend who's a baptist missionary, but at least he's also an agricultural economist.

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Being = Living, as opposed to being a rock or a cat statue, but yes, we are almost in agreement. 

cogito ergo sum: cogito ergo vivo. 
ehyeh ʾasher ʾehyeh
(I Will Be What I Will Be)

It's the first person singular that denotes (sentient) life as opposed to existence.


That's meaningless tosh Muso. I expect better from you.
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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #436 - Mar 14th, 2013 at 5:51pm
 
Grey wrote on Mar 14th, 2013 at 10:26am:
That's meaningless tosh Muso. I expect better from you.


It was in response to Soren's claim that God was the condition of being. My answer was in the context of the Christian definition of God, which I don't accept, but you really ought to know what that is if you don't believe in it.

The Hebrew phrase usually translated as "I am the I am" is about more than just being. I'm saying that it signifies or implies that God is living, and that what people call God is just a property of living. It's not entirely at odds with my precept that God is a property of humanity - the human mind, because (with the minor exception of the creator god function), it ticks all the boxes in terms of the perception of god by theists.

Now do you understand what I'm saying? The god of the theists is a very interesting and fascinating phenomenon, because it involves the "humanity" organism. It's an amazing neural network that lives on as individuals die.    

Theology is really the study of humanity in all its idiosyncracies. Of course no theologist would say that in public. God is just a mirror of humanity.
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« Last Edit: Mar 14th, 2013 at 5:57pm by muso »  

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Grey
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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #437 - Mar 14th, 2013 at 7:35pm
 
muso wrote on Mar 14th, 2013 at 5:51pm:
Grey wrote on Mar 14th, 2013 at 10:26am:
That's meaningless tosh Muso. I expect better from you.


It was in response to Soren's claim that God was the condition of being. My answer was in the context of the Christian definition of God, which I don't accept, but you really ought to know what that is if you don't believe in it.
There's more than a dozen versions of Christianity, each with their own version of the nonexistent entity. 

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The Hebrew phrase usually translated as "I am the I am" is about more than just being. I'm saying that it signifies or implies that God is living, and that what people call God is just a property of living. It's not entirely at odds with my precept that God is a property of humanity - the human mind, because (with the minor exception of the creator god function), it ticks all the boxes in terms of the perception of god by theists.
'I am the/that I am' can mean just about anything you want it to mean. It's mumbo jumbo waffle.
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Now do you understand what I'm saying? The god of the theists is a very interesting and fascinating phenomenon, because it involves the "humanity" organism. It's an amazing neural network that lives on as individuals die.
The god of theists is just a lie, a con perpetrated on the ignorant and superstitious to gain power and money.   

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Theology is really the study of humanity in all its idiosyncracies. Of course no theologist would say that in public. God is just a mirror of humanity. 
theology is the study of a lie dedicated to perpetuating and obscuring. You do not need any mythology to study the idiosyncracies of humanity. All the god myth achieves is the blowing of smoke over the truth. Add theology to fascism and what do you have?

I see no point in bending over backwards to accomodate these charlatans in any way, shape or form.
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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #438 - Mar 14th, 2013 at 7:41pm
 
muso wrote on Mar 14th, 2013 at 5:51pm:
God is just a mirror of humanity. 

To paraphrase Xenophanes - If horses had gods, their gods would look like horses.

Anyway, we've got a new pope now... And a Jesuit!

Jesuits normally shun rank and are nearly always instructed to become Bishops.

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Soren
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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #439 - Mar 14th, 2013 at 9:32pm
 
Since we are a great deal smarter than horses, this little quip from a rhetorician was foreseen and the formulation therefore is that god created us in his image, not vica versa.

Anyway, about being. The I am that I am in Hebrew is more like 'I am who is being' (a verb). In other words the name of god is he who is doing, actively, the being. The name in hebrew is the essence of things. Adam named creation according to the essence of each. This is a great source of fun and jokes but the gist is that god's essence is his being, hence Being.

There can be endless fulmination against dogma but the inescapable fact remains that we live in language ("Language is the house of Being" as Heidegger put it) that is not our own making and so the concepts and the mental horizons as well as the mental furniture that come to us via language have given to us, established in us, the concept of god as the ground of all creation (ie all being).

As every dictator has seen, what needs to change is language if minds are to be changed. When this is grasped, the antennae go up for all the little linguistic undermining and violation of a commonly accepted meaning of words and concept and notions.

Saying that god i just an invention may be seen as clever and transgressive but it is really a boring and low-brow avoidance of the question. If not 'god' what then is the ground of being? To declare the very question verboten (the next easy step of the unthinking) is too stupid to waste time on engaging with. It is a case of the horizon being wiped away with the silly flourish of declaring all horizons unnecessary.

But there is no wiping away the horizon. Even as all worldly establishments including the churches (clericalism) are challenged and are continually subject to reformation.






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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #440 - Mar 14th, 2013 at 10:44pm
 
Soren wrote on Mar 14th, 2013 at 9:32pm:

Since we are a great deal smarter than horses, this little quip from a rhetorician was foreseen and the formulation therefore is that god created us in his image, not vica versa.

Anyway, about being. The I am that I am in Hebrew is more like 'I am who is being' (a verb). In other words the name of god is he who is doing, actively, the being. The name in hebrew is the essence of things. Adam named creation according to the essence of each. This is a great source of fun and jokes but the gist is that god's essence is his being, hence Being.

There can be endless fulmination against dogma but the inescapable fact remains that we live in language ("Language is the house of Being" as Heidegger put it) that is not our own making and so the concepts and the mental horizons as well as the mental furniture that come to us via language have given to us, established in us, the concept of god as the ground of all creation (ie all being).

As every dictator has seen, what needs to change is language if minds are to be changed. When this is grasped, the antennae go up for all the little linguistic undermining and violation of a commonly accepted meaning of words and concept and notions.

Saying that god i just an invention may be seen as clever and transgressive but it is really a boring and low-brow avoidance of the question. If not 'god' what then is the ground of being? To declare the very question verboten (the next easy step of the unthinking) is too stupid to waste time on engaging with. It is a case of the horizon being wiped away with the silly flourish of declaring all horizons unnecessary.

But there is no wiping away the horizon. Even as all worldly establishments including the churches (clericalism) are challenged and are continually subject to reformation.






A good, thoughtful post, Soren.




It is difficult for any us to get a grasp of what is real, especially if the 'intelligentsia' are constantly trying to give words new and expanded 'enhanced' meanings.

Thereby, always changing the position of the 'goal posts', for meaningful cognition.

But the act, or the experience of being, is basic fundamental.

Yes ?

Always will be.




+++

1 Samuel 3:4
....the LORD called Samuel: and he answered, Here am I.



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"....And he said unto him, If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from the dead."
Luke 16:31
 
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Yadda
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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #441 - Mar 14th, 2013 at 11:54pm
 
Yadda wrote on Mar 14th, 2013 at 10:44pm:

But the act, or the experience of being, is basic fundamental.

Yes ?

Always will be.





I feel sorry for the poor things, that feel a need to take 'recreational' drugs, or that feel the need to get absolutely 'blotto' on alcohol every night.

Wow!

There is so much to experience, so much to learn.

And they, well many of us, choose to get 'blind' [drunk, or 'out of it', with drugs].

They can't see, because they wont look.





Meditation, is a doorway.

But that is 'boring'.           Tongue



Instant gratification, is their drug, and their god.

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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #442 - Mar 15th, 2013 at 6:29am
 
Soren wrote on Mar 14th, 2013 at 9:32pm:
Saying that god i just an invention may be seen as clever and transgressive but it is really a boring and low-brow avoidance of the question. If not 'god' what then is the ground of being? To declare the very question verboten (the next easy step of the unthinking) is too stupid to waste time on engaging with. It is a case of the horizon being wiped away with the silly flourish of declaring all horizons unnecessary.



I didn't say that the god of perception was an invention. I said that it was the "god" of humanity through the amazing neural network that we share.

"God the Creator" is an entirely different entity. Traditional religions tend to lump them together. To address that particular niche, the God of the Deists fits the bill admirably at those times when you feel a pressing need to answer the unanswerable, and it can be answered in whatever flavour you like, including pantheism. (Pantheism is effectively a special type of atheism.)

The desire to connect the two is an emotional argument.
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« Last Edit: Mar 15th, 2013 at 7:13am by muso »  

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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #443 - Mar 15th, 2013 at 7:05am
 
Soren wrote on Mar 14th, 2013 at 9:32pm:
Saying that god i just an invention may be seen as clever and transgressive but it is really a boring and low-brow avoidance of the question. If not 'god' what then is the ground of being? To declare the very question verboten (the next easy step of the unthinking) is too stupid to waste time on engaging with. It is a case of the horizon being wiped away with the silly flourish of declaring all horizons unnecessary.

But there is no wiping away the horizon. Even as all worldly establishments including the churches (clericalism) are challenged and are continually subject to reformation.

Verboten? (German?)

Horizons being wiped away?

(Wer gab uns den Schwamm, um den ganzen Horizont wegzuwischen?)

Ah, Nietzsche!

Gott ist tot... Nicht wahr?
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« Last Edit: Mar 15th, 2013 at 7:17am by NorthOfNorth »  

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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #444 - Mar 15th, 2013 at 7:28am
 
muso wrote on Mar 15th, 2013 at 6:29am:
Soren wrote on Mar 14th, 2013 at 9:32pm:
Saying that god i just an invention may be seen as clever and transgressive but it is really a boring and low-brow avoidance of the question. If not 'god' what then is the ground of being? To declare the very question verboten (the next easy step of the unthinking) is too stupid to waste time on engaging with. It is a case of the horizon being wiped away with the silly flourish of declaring all horizons unnecessary.



I didn't say that the god of perception was an invention. I said that it was the "god" of humanity through the amazing neural network that we share.

"God the Creator" is an entirely different entity. Traditional religions tend to lump them together. To address that particular niche, the God of the Deists fits the bill admirably at those times when you feel a pressing need to answer the unanswerable, and it can be answered in whatever flavour you like, including pantheism. (Pantheism is effectively a special type of atheism.)

The desire to connect the two is an emotional argument.

And could it not be argued that belief in divine interventionism is not only the lazy but the cowardly way of avoiding the unpalatable... That bad things happen to good people in equal measure to its opposite?... That being terminates at death?
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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #445 - Mar 15th, 2013 at 4:26pm
 
Soren wrote on Mar 14th, 2013 at 9:32pm:
There can be endless fulmination against dogma but the inescapable fact remains that we live in language ("Language is the house of Being" as Heidegger put it) that is not our own making and so the concepts and the mental horizons as well as the mental furniture that come to us via language have given to us, established in us, the concept of god as the ground of all creation (ie all being).


Language brought us a concept of the Earth being flat and held in space by turtles; the latter not being a widely held view admittedly.  But the important thing is we've had the big bounce in knowledge, (the enlightenment) and the post-enlightenment has no reason for hanging on to archaic creation myths.

Quote:
As every dictator has seen, what needs to change is language if minds are to be changed. When this is grasped, the antennae go up for all the little linguistic undermining and violation of a commonly accepted meaning of words and concept and notions.


I don't know what you're driving at here. Language evolves, some dictators might drive the evolution along, some might use what's there, a pope for example.

Quote:
Saying that god i just an invention may be seen as clever and transgressive but it is really a boring and low-brow avoidance of the question.


It's neither, saying 'there's no god' is just a statement of fact. 


Quote:
If not 'god' what then is the ground of being? To declare the very question verboten (the next easy step of the unthinking) is too stupid to waste time on engaging with. It is a case of the horizon being wiped away with the silly flourish of declaring all horizons unnecessary.


Who chooses to do this? If you want to discuss, 'the ground of being' I'm quite sure you'd find some takers, myself included.

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But there is no wiping away the horizon. Even as all worldly establishments including the churches (clericalism) are challenged and are continually subject to reformation.


Churches are not horizons, outdated ideas are blown away like morning mist. To listen to you Soren, you'd think that for the fundamental and underlying opposition and argument against religions to emerge from science and scientists is mere coincidence.
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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #446 - Mar 15th, 2013 at 5:05pm
 
Grey wrote on Mar 15th, 2013 at 4:26pm:
To listen to you Soren, you'd think that for the fundamental and underlying opposition and argument against religions to emerge from science and scientists is mere coincidence.



Like a child, you think that your opposition and argument is the first and only valid argument.

Like a child, your horizon is your personal life span. Your mental horizon is what you have come across in a lifetime of random education.

But religion has been under this kind of weak criticism for millennia. For you to think that you, finally, have criticised it right is to think like all those forgotten critics of religion. Think about it - religion survives because your kind of argumentation, made dozens and hundreds of times already, is beside the point of it all. There were atheist scientists in ancient Greece already. Can you name them? No. Nobody can.





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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #447 - Mar 15th, 2013 at 5:18pm
 
Soren wrote on Mar 15th, 2013 at 5:05pm:
Grey wrote on Mar 15th, 2013 at 4:26pm:
To listen to you Soren, you'd think that for the fundamental and underlying opposition and argument against religions to emerge from science and scientists is mere coincidence.



Like a child, you think that your opposition and argument is the first and only valid argument.

Like a child, your horizon is your personal life span. Your mental horizon is what you have come across in a lifetime of random education.

But religion has been under this kind of weak criticism for millennia. For you to think that you, finally, have criticised it right is to think like all those forgotten critics of religion. Think about it - religion survives because your kind of argumentation, made dozens and hundreds of times already, is beside the point of it all. There were atheist scientists in ancient Greece already. Can you name them? No. Nobody can.



I'm sorry you find the truth so hurtful Soren, nothing personal  Grin
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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #448 - Mar 15th, 2013 at 8:53pm
 
What?? Did you actually make a case? I didn't notice.
Is sneering now (again) the 'truth"?



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Re: Is Atheism a Religion?
Reply #449 - Mar 15th, 2013 at 9:34pm
 
Yadda wrote on Mar 14th, 2013 at 10:44pm:
It is difficult for any us to get a grasp of what is real, especially if the 'intelligentsia' are constantly trying to give words new and expanded 'enhanced' meanings.

Thereby, always changing the position of the 'goal posts', for meaningful cognition.



The Christian religion gave a completely new version of "god" compared with what came before. Christianity was the usurper - the intelligentsia.

Pantheism is hardly a new concept. It goes back to Spinoza and centuries before him in the remote and bucolic past. A form of Pantheism (or nature worship) predates Christianity.  It's an all-pervasive immanent form of "god".

Do you honestly think that anything I'm saying here is in any way "new" ?

Jaina dharma has been around for longer than Buddhism, but it's remarkably close to what I was talking about. 

Don't kid yourself. This is just old wine in new bottles.

Quote:
As every dictator has seen, what needs to change is language if minds are to be changed. When this is grasped, the antennae go up for all the little linguistic undermining and violation of a commonly accepted meaning of words and concept and notions.


Absolutely. That's exactly how Christianity grew in political strength. Christianity (in many of its mutations) has always been a highly political movement.

The story of Hypatia of Alexandria comes to mind, and the various inquisitions through time. They even managed to reinvent "evil" to suit their own political ends and win their arguments. A stroke of genius. I wonder if it still works?

Soren - you are the personification of evil....  Grin
(in a euphemistic sense of course)

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