RE: YouTube: 5 Questions Every Intelligent Atheist MUST Answer
July 18, 2010 at 12:17 pm
(This post was last modified: July 18, 2010 at 12:25 pm by TheDarkestOfAngels.)
Question One: No. Atheists have no 'belief' in 'chance.' In fact, chance doesn't replace the role of god in an atheist's views of the world nor does it really have any greater place in an atheist's views of the world than any other informed person in the world. Atheism is not a belief system of any kind, rather a lack of faith in any religous views.
As a side note, I don't know what you think is 'Darwinism' but I'm reasonably certain it isn't actually a thing. You may be thinking of Evolution.
Question Two: The question is invalid. The presence of something over nothing doesn't require religion and the absence of anything doesn't mean religion doesn't exist. The two are independant of one another and there is an enormous portion of scientific thought concerning the variety of life on earth and humankind's existance (evolution) and the existance of matter (astronomy and physics). Matter exists because there is a slight disharmony in the creation of certain particles in relation to their anti-particles. When the big bang big banged, this disharmony allowed a very tiny portion of all the material that existed at the moment of the big bang to be carried over 13.7 billion years later to form all the matter that we see today and perhaps more beyond that. That does indeed mean the universe had a discernable beginning and one of a number of probable endings (the big rip, big crunch, or heat death).
As a side note, the existance of life on earth and our presence on it means nothing in respect to probability. We can't exist on a planet that wouldn't support the kind of life and ergo if this planet formed to be uninhabitable to our kind of life, we wouldn't know about it because life would have never have formed and humans would have never existed on Earth. The idea that because earth supports life means it was 'intelligently designed' because it seems improbable elsewhere is wholly invalid of a notion. No matter how probable or improbable life may or may not be, life will form only where life can form and no where else no matter how unlikely life can form. The idea that because life formed here means it requires an intelligent designer is wholly invalid a notion.
Question Three: I do not kill because murder is illegal and it isolates me from others and it forces them to see me as a threat. I do not steal from others for the same reason that I do not want others to steal from me. I do not cheat on my girlfriend for the reason that I do not want her to cheat on me. Moral behavior, such as that you describe it, is not required as you descsribe it. (More on this in question four).
Question Four: "Morals" such as that to which you call them, evolved because it is beneficial to individual members of the species and the species as a whole in evolutionary terms. Your entire arguement for questions three and four are invalid because of the assumption that a creator is required for morality. In any case, the traits that grant benefit tend to be easily passed from generation to generation. Think of the way you see piranahs, wolves, and lions working together but rarely against one another.
However, this is a very general notion about the general direction and attitude of a species. Humans and other primates are known for murdering one another on occasion but the entire species are generally known for their level of social interaction and co-operation. Instances to the contrary of a general notion doesn't necessarily disprove anything.
Side note: Evolution does not have a goal. It never has and never will. Individual creatures have a will to survive and pass on their genes. This drive to survive doesn't require knowledge of genetics, DNA, genes, or whatever.
Question Five: Yes, but your notion of intelligence and its effect and design is horrifically flawed. You reason that just because a creature is intelligent in a human sense, that it must do certain things or leave behind specific signs despite no evidence that this is a general characteristic of intelligence - even human intelligence. I don't fully understand your bullseye analogy. If it exists before you shoot the arrow, that doesn't imply anything other than it existed before you shot the arrow.
From your questions and reasoning, I can deduce that you've come to your questions and the conclusions you've reasoned based on fallicious logic.
For example, because the earth exists and life is improbable, the earth must have been desigend for life.
Because creatures can have social order, some outside force must be imposing morality.
Intelligence has, requires, or always possesses specific characterizations that humans can readily identify as such.
Life would require random chance to form without an intelligent designer.
Atheists who understand the science behind the concepts you cover do not fall under any of the above assumptions that make several of your reasonable questions as ill-informed as to which they are presented.
To answer your last question, the idea of atheism isn't a change of belief in one thing to something else, but the idea that you don't have to rely on belief to answer questions about the world around us and the life and beauty of existance to which we were all born into. As such, the only people who will ask you to believe anything are those who will try to sell you into another religious faith, but never the idea of atheism, as that is the absence of belief.
(July 18, 2010 at 4:16 am)Scott Richens Wrote: 5 Questions Every Intelligent Atheist MUST Answer
See Video above
I want to know how you guys would debunk these 5 questions...
That is how I would debunk those questions. That was entertaining. Thank you.