Re: Figuring Out Religion
Posted: Sat Jun 25, 2016 5:45 pm
Is that a positive or negative attribute- irrespective of content?
... M
... M
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Well, that's the kind of twisted pretzel logic I don't partake of. If that is what you have to do to believe what you do, then it's just not for me. I also don't have the threat of coercion hanging over my soul as you believe you do if you don't believe in whatever it is you're forced believe in simply to maintain cognitive non-dissonance. I prefer to be open minded and form my beliefs based on objective evidence aka facts rather than the opposite (i.e. faith). Indeed, I also upgrade my beliefs as new facts are uncovered, to paraphrase Keynes. Religions do not do that because how can they? They are "perfect" already despite being thousands of years old and thousands of years out of date (i.e. primitive anthropomorphism). Just look at the complete mess Buddhism became if you have any doubts. And Buddha specifically said DO NOT turn his philosophy into a religion. Well, it happened anyway and so it did for Christianity as well.Mountaineer wrote: Faith = based on abundance of evidence
Facts = change with new information
I don't see it either way, but its nice that you have such strong faith in what I view as fiction to be very secure about the afterlife. It helps to be very secure in your beliefs during the transition so you don't wind up as a trapped ghost or worse! Your guide(s) will gently nudge you out of your delusions into the actual reality you have to objectively deal with, so all will be well in the end either way. Its during the living that I have major problems with and that is primarily due to the exploitation of individual personal de-empowerment than anything else. (Of coruse if you believe that baloney about "God" judging you rather than you doing it to yourself, then that's just another anthropomorphic religious exploitation delusion. It's a gaping blind spot True Believers all seem to have about their ongoing personal de-empowerment to religion.)Re. the second paragraph. Perhaps many are like that, probably a whole lot of people. I honestly think that I am very secure and not scared about the afterlife; hopefully I will still feel that way when I draw my last breath. I am motivated by the love, forgiveness and mercy Jesus expresses far more than being scared of hell, whatever that might be. I do understand that many only see a god of cruelty, vengance, and punishment - perhaps because they see that kind of god as a reflection of themselves, most people are basically that way when backed into a corner. Carrot and stick. I am more of a carrot guy, perhaps because I see myself as a tiny, tiny, reflection of God, however dimly that is on this side of the Last Day. Disclosure: I am an INTJ, there are not very many of us, and, I think people are far more complicated than a Myers-Briggs type indicator. The INTJ description does seem to fit me fairly well though.![]()
Of course it would be. You need a threat of coercion to believe in anything based on faith rather than factscurlew wrote:In other words it's simply a spiritual battle between the forces of good and evil and MachineGhost and I are on the wrong side.
Please consider that it is not about what anyone seeks. It is about what God has done to seek you. The vectors are reversed from how you see it re. Christianity. Try for a moment or two to use your reason to think of the possibilities if that is true. Of course, in my opinion, and a couple thousand years of fine tuning since Jesus rose from the dead. Do people ignore the evidence of that just so they can feel more comfortable about themselves being their god? It is fascinating to think about how you see things vs. the way I do. I see Christianity as incredibly freeing, not confining as much of the world is trapped in believing for whatever reason. But, then again, I go to where God has promised to be and hear His Word. You might give that a try if you are as open minded as you profess. Who know what might happen?MachineGhost wrote:Of course it would be. You need a threat of coercion to believe in anything based on faith rather than factscurlew wrote:In other words it's simply a spiritual battle between the forces of good and evil and MachineGhost and I are on the wrong side.There must be "winners" and "losers" and all the better if the "winners" are kowtowing to some omniscient "God" lest the "losers" be tortured for all eternity or whatever nightmarish bullshit a religion can think up to get its slaves followers to stay in the fold. Where have I seen that story many times before??? It's amazing how blind True Believers are to this but then again I don't personally know what the process is like to suspend disbelief in reality to believe in faith. It's tremendously easier to do that before facts come into the picture, that much I know for sure.
And BTW just based on reason and logic alone, it makes absolutely no sense to reconcile the stark reality of nature and the multi-verse with kowtowing to a coercive "God" that created it all. Errr! Does Not Compute! If "God" and "Jesus" are the existents, then religion is where the bullshit all is. Frankly, all of Christianity is based on a flawed premise that human beings have sinned just by virtual of being born and must eternally seek forgiveness. Utter rubbish! If you want to believe in that de-empowering crap, be my guest.
You can take it whichever way you want but I thought it was interesting that it directly contradicted what you said about not automatically discounting contrary evidence that doesn't fit your beliefs because you are INTJ (I am too, according to the test, BTW). This attributes says that is exactly what INTJ's tend to do.Mountaineer wrote:Is that a positive or negative attribute- irrespective of content?
... M
My response is long - you asked. And, from my point of view, it very much matters what everyone has to say. INTJs seek knowledge and learning, and every response someone makes increases our collective knowledge. Sometimes that increased knowledge even turns into increased understanding.curlew wrote:You can take it whichever way you want but I thought it was interesting that it directly contradicted what you said about not automatically discounting contrary evidence that doesn't fit your beliefs because you are INTJ (I am too, according to the test, BTW). This attributes says that is exactly what INTJ's tend to do.Mountaineer wrote:Is that a positive or negative attribute- irrespective of content?
... M
I also noticed you didn't respond to the part about believing what the Bible says about unbelievers, so I assume you agree with it. If so, then it only reinforces what I am saying above. By holding the "Biblical" belief you have programmed yourself to reject all contradictory evidence because it comes from the "god of this world" who is out to deceive you. Therefore it doesn't really matter what any of us have to say. You are only listening for the purpose of rebutting us.
There is a biological reason why death exists but I assume you are asking a theological question based on your pre-supposition that there was a perfect creation to begin with. I know you get your own answer from the book of Genesis but that book starts out by claiming that the earth is a firmament with water above and below, that vegetation appeared on the earth before the sun was created, and that both the sun and moon are great lights in the sky. We know that none of this is true, so after laying a foundation like that, why should we believe that the story of Adam and Eve that follows is true?Mountaineer wrote: God the Father - look at the world around you? Can you really logically think all that wonder happened randomly? How do you account for why death exists? How do you explain if the physics of the universe were different by something less than 0.0000000000000000000001% we would not exist?
I agree that the evidence for Jesus existing is strong. And so is the evidence that he was a failed apocalyptic prophet and that the resurrection story as contained in the Bible contains overwhelming evidence of gradual legendary embellishment. I wonder if you have ever looked at any of it.Mountaineer wrote: God the Son, Jesus - the historical evidence is almost overwhelming that Jesus lived, died, and was resurrected? Why do you think man has been unsuccessful for two thousand years trying to disprove the resurrection?
Islamic terrorists sacrifice their lives all the time. Are you going to convert to Islam?Mountaineer wrote: God the Spirit - why do you think many men will sacrifice their lives for others? Darwinism would seem to indicate self-preservation would rule? Where does love come from and why do we even have the capacity to recognize what love is (not erotic love, the Greek agape love)?
Your faith in something is quite strong to believe that .... what is that something and how do you know it is true, not wikipedia or the like, but how do YOU know it is true? Nice use of the imperial we though.curlew wrote:There is a biological reason why death exists but I assume you are asking a theological question based on your pre-supposition that there was a perfect creation to begin with. I know you get your own answer from the book of Genesis but that book starts out by claiming that the earth is a firmament with water above and below, that vegetation appeared on the earth before the sun was created, and that both the sun and moon are great lights in the sky. We know that none of this is true, so after laying a foundation like that, why should we believe that the story of Adam and Eve that follows is true?Mountaineer wrote: God the Father - look at the world around you? Can you really logically think all that wonder happened randomly? How do you account for why death exists? How do you explain if the physics of the universe were different by something less than 0.0000000000000000000001% we would not exist?
Again, your faith in something is quite strong to believe that .... what is that something and how do you know it is true, not wikipedia or the like, but how do YOU know it is true? Re your wondering: Yes.curlew wrote: And so is the evidence that he was a failed apocalyptic prophet and that the resurrection story as contained in the Bible contains overwhelming evidence of gradual legendary embellishment. I wonder if you have ever looked at any of it.
I hate to be repetitive, but how is it exactly that you know what I know or don't know? I think the dark side of INTJ has taken up residence in you (it must be residing behind those blinders).curlew wrote: For a person with a scientific education you amaze me that you know so little about Darwinism.
Welcome to the INTJ party.interactive processing wrote:(i am intj as well, for the record) Although the religious seem drawn to argue primarily against the anti religious, i think there is a third option missed by both..
The faith religion side is like a person with a map of Arizona, they are convinced that the map proves the existence of the grand canyon, they believe in the map on faith, they talk endlessly about how the map must be a promise that we will all go to the grand canyon someday, they write hymns about the map and gather to talk about it, they even argue endlessly with non believers on the Internet.The rational non believers understand that the rules of reason and proof make such claims patently absurd and argue (accurately) that the believers actually have no proof of their claims.. but neither side gets in their car and turn they key, The believers don't have to take any perilous journeys because their blind faith has pacified them and convinced them it is unnecessary, the rational don't take the trip because the folly of the believers arguments for "just having faith" has made the whole idea seem unrealistic..
So the third option is follow the map and try to visit the canyon.... The big problem actually with following the map is its no longer much of a map it has become more of a coloring place mat handed out to children at greasy a diner to keep them busy at the table, (this is true of all great teachings Buddhism Hindu Christian etc) the minute the great teacher dies (or dies, comes back, then leaves promising to come back again some day) they get turned into political movements, a means of control, an opiate for the masses and ritualized parodies of the real message... how to manuals for liberation and a true spiritual experience..
How can you expect us to have dialog with someone like yourself who has the roles of objectivity completely reversed? If you don't understand the absurdity of your position vis a vis the rest of how society tries to operate in coming out of the Dark Ages, you're so far down the Wonderland rabbit hole, you no longer realize nor care!Mountaineer wrote: I think these descriptions are more accurate:
Faith = based on abundance of evidence
Facts = change with new information
Truth = reality whether it is currently perceived or not
Than the ones proposed by MG:
Faith = lack of proof.
Facts = proof.
I've tried arguing this before but he won't bite in that there is a historical "Jesus" vs his religious "Jesus". One is fantasy, one is mundane. The reality is much more depressing to Christianity which is why they won't want to believe it (i.e. "Jesus" is actually a composite of different people, the resurrection didn't literally happen, etc..) It's just hopeless when your entire premise of faith (defined as lack of evidentiary facts) is that anthropomorphological scribbles on paper is the literal... Nothing can be allowed to overturn that. Nothing!curlew wrote: I agree that the evidence for Jesus existing is strong. And so is the evidence that he was a failed apocalyptic prophet and that the resurrection story as contained in the Bible contains overwhelming evidence of gradual legendary embellishment. I wonder if you have ever looked at any of it.
MG, a favor please. Your quote of what you attributed to me is not correct. It is what curlew said in response to a quote of mine. Please attribute the quotes to the correct person, otherwise it gets very confusing. Thanks.MachineGhost wrote:I've tried arguing this before but he won't bite in that there is a historical "Jesus" vs his religious "Jesus". One is fantasy, one is mundane. The reality is much more depressing to Christianity which is why they won't want to believe it (i.e. "Jesus" is actually a composite of different people, the resurrection didn't literally happen, etc..) It's just hopeless when your entire premise of faith (defined as lack of evidentiary facts) is that anthropomorphological scribbles on paper is the literal... Nothing can be allowed to overturn that. Nothing!curlew wrote:Mountaineer wrote: I agree that the evidence for Jesus existing is strong. And so is the evidence that he was a failed apocalyptic prophet and that the resurrection story as contained in the Bible contains overwhelming evidence of gradual legendary embellishment. I wonder if you have ever looked at any of it.
Of course, its much, much worse for Muslims. They're all hypocrites about their religion of violence, except the extremists. There's no way in a snowball's chance of hell that Kahn "Muhammad" was a prophet of peace like "Jesus".
Come to think of it, what deductive proof is there that "Jesus" was a "Son of God" as opposed to all the rest of us that are allegedly made in "God's" image? "Jesus" was borned and died in the exact same way as any other human being. The only significance "Jesus" has is all purely in hindsight and lavished onto "Jesus" by his later devoted True Believers. Take out the alleged paranormal miracles, claims, etc., and what exactly are you left with but another failed "prophet" out of the thousands all soapboxing during Roman times?
I did not write this:MachineGhost wrote:Not sure what you mean about quote misattribution but I was just supporting what curlew was saying to you.
Oh, its how the screwy new quoting system works. It wasn't intentional. I've edited it.Mountaineer wrote:I did not write this:MachineGhost wrote:Not sure what you mean about quote misattribution but I was just supporting what curlew was saying to you.
Mountaineer wrote:
I agree that the evidence for Jesus existing is strong. And so is the evidence that he was a failed apocalyptic prophet and that the resurrection story as contained in the Bible contains overwhelming evidence of gradual legendary embellishment. I wonder if you have ever looked at any of it.
Regardless, I forgive you.![]()
... Mountaineer
Thank you ghost-er-ific.MachineGhost wrote:Oh, its how the screwy new quoting system works. It wasn't intentional. I've edited it.Mountaineer wrote:I did not write this:MachineGhost wrote:Not sure what you mean about quote misattribution but I was just supporting what curlew was saying to you.
Mountaineer wrote:
I agree that the evidence for Jesus existing is strong. And so is the evidence that he was a failed apocalyptic prophet and that the resurrection story as contained in the Bible contains overwhelming evidence of gradual legendary embellishment. I wonder if you have ever looked at any of it.
Regardless, I forgive you.![]()
... Mountaineer
Mountaineer wrote:Your faith in something is quite strong to believe that .... what is that something and how do you know it is true, not wikipedia or the like, but how do YOU know it is true? Nice use of the imperial we though.curlew wrote:There is a biological reason why death exists but I assume you are asking a theological question based on your pre-supposition that there was a perfect creation to begin with. I know you get your own answer from the book of Genesis but that book starts out by claiming that the earth is a firmament with water above and below, that vegetation appeared on the earth before the sun was created, and that both the sun and moon are great lights in the sky. We know that none of this is true, so after laying a foundation like that, why should we believe that the story of Adam and Eve that follows is true?Mountaineer wrote: God the Father - look at the world around you? Can you really logically think all that wonder happened randomly? How do you account for why death exists? How do you explain if the physics of the universe were different by something less than 0.0000000000000000000001% we would not exist?![]()
How do I know the earth isn't a firmament with water above and below? I've seen photographs.
Again, your faith in something is quite strong to believe that .... what is that something and how do you know it is true, not wikipedia or the like, but how do YOU know it is true? Re your wondering: Yes.curlew wrote: And so is the evidence that he was a failed apocalyptic prophet and that the resurrection story as contained in the Bible contains overwhelming evidence of gradual legendary embellishment. I wonder if you have ever looked at any of it.
I leave faith in the unknowable to religious folks like yourself. I have only said that there is strong evidence.
Mountaineer wrote:Here is a brief diagram on Truth for you doubters as you get ready to share (?????) your presuppositions that are the foundation of your belief system:![]()
http://adam4d.com/truth-absolute-relative/
... Mountaineer
http://www.believeinreality.com/falsity-presupposition/Presupposition is a ruse, a parlor game to confuse the dialogue and help justify preferred beliefs. It is wanting to know masquerading as what to know, tactic rather than substance, a manufactured tool of a lost argument.
There's really only one "true" answer..."relative: There is no way to decide upon absolute truth." No doubt one can certainly shorten the odds one way or the other through many methods. However, the only way to know absolute truth is you ARE God. Religious or not religious (and I am), I find both sides who are absolutists about God one way or the other to be mainly filled with a lot of personal hubris. Strong faith, strong personal experience of a religious nature is not absolute knowledge. If someone has talked physically with God and has had a tangible physical experience with God, one can say they "know." Sans that, we see through a glass darkly and exercise faith, hope, love and charity to all.curlew wrote:Mountaineer wrote:Here is a brief diagram on Truth for you doubters as you get ready to share (?????) your presuppositions that are the foundation of your belief system:![]()
... Mountaineerhttp://www.believeinreality.com/falsity-presupposition/Presupposition is a ruse, a parlor game to confuse the dialogue and help justify preferred beliefs. It is wanting to know masquerading as what to know, tactic rather than substance, a manufactured tool of a lost argument.
Great answer, although I wouldn't say that having a tangible experience with God can really allow one to "know".Kbg wrote:There's really only one "true" answer..."relative: There is no way to decide upon absolute truth." No doubt one can certainly shorten the odds one way or the other through many methods. However, the only way to know absolute truth is you ARE God. Religious or not religious (and I am), I find both sides who are absolutists about God one way or the other to be mainly filled with a lot of personal hubris. Strong faith, strong personal experience of a religious nature is not absolute knowledge. If someone has talked physically with God and has had a tangible physical experience with God, one can say they "know." Sans that, we see through a glass darkly and exercise faith, hope, love and charity to all.curlew wrote:Mountaineer wrote:Here is a brief diagram on Truth for you doubters as you get ready to share (?????) your presuppositions that are the foundation of your belief system:![]()
... Mountaineerhttp://www.believeinreality.com/falsity-presupposition/Presupposition is a ruse, a parlor game to confuse the dialogue and help justify preferred beliefs. It is wanting to know masquerading as what to know, tactic rather than substance, a manufactured tool of a lost argument.
The only problem is that that's an absolute truth statement. So is all truth relative apart from that one? :-)Kbg wrote:relative: There is no way to decide upon absolute truth.
I personally believe there are absolutes, but it's pretty tough as a human to know most of them with 100% certainty. Philosophers have been arguing over this stuff for ever so we can spare the debate which has been done with more erudition than we will ever muster here.curlew wrote:Great answer, although I wouldn't say that having a tangible experience with God can really allow one to "know".