RE: Is the statement "Claims demand evidence" always true?
December 13, 2016 at 4:22 am
(This post was last modified: December 13, 2016 at 5:03 am by emjay.)
(December 12, 2016 at 11:14 pm)Mudhammam Wrote:Though I will of course take on board your reading recommendations as interesting and helpful reads, that's not exactly what I meant (well it might have been what I thought I meant but now I realise it's not). What I mean really is that I shouldn't have to jump through hoops and become an expert in ancient history, philosophy, or any other subject to debunk something that shouldn't have been there in the first place... something that was put there without evidence and without my informed consent... ie indoctrinated. I don't need to jump through those hoops to 'debunk' any other religion and I shouldn't need to do it for this. I guess what I'm saying is that that which was acquired without evidence should leave without evidence, as a matter of principle and a stand against indoctrination if nothing else. Anything that is a belief not on its own merits but simply by virtue of being implanted by the back door, shouldn't have the right to require debunking. So what I'm now thinking is not to try and debunk it, which gives it more attention than it deserves, but instead to starve it of attention and let the context die out that way. And by starve it of attention I mean what I said before... mindfully dismiss/divert all related thoughts when they occur... so almost the same as before with the minimalist approach, but instead of 'that's bullshit' - which is a kind of debunking because it's a statement about the falseness of something - a better response would just be 'fuck off' as in 'fuck off unwanted thought' ...without giving it the extra attention of making a judgement about it. The fuck off is not necessary but just an optional extra(December 12, 2016 at 8:34 pm)Emjay Wrote: Well it's been about eighteen years since it clicked 'there is no god', but in the time since, my confidence in atheism has grown mainly by learning and developing other much more plausible ideas about reality from science, psychology, neuroscience etc, rather than debunking Christianity. That's where I've gone wrong I think. To put it the terms of contexts, an unrelated (to Christianity) context of science/physchology/neuroscience has taken the forefront in my mind but the old Christianity context was never truly addressed, and thus never allowed to die. In my opinion only (I have no wish to misrepresent his intentions in any way... it's me that's thinking in terms of contexts, not him... I'm just saying how imo his behaviour would fit in practically with this model but not that that is his intention) it seems that Min addresses it all the time, leaving its tendrils no opportunity to get a foothold and top up the context, and it sounds like you've done the same thing but in a different way, by reading and getting involved in presumably debunking Christianity (as opposed to learning more about unrelated subjects)? I think you guys are on the right track... you can't expect to let something go unless you debunk it and cease to feed it. I don't mean I've deliberately fed it at any point, but by not challenging/dismissing every single thought about it that comes up, I essentially give it implicit authorisation to carry on doing what it's doing, which is maintaining and bootstrapping the context. That was my mistake... so now I think I'm gonna take the minimalist approachI think a good dose of the Socratic method as you find in Plato's dialogues is helpful for de-programming from dogmatism. It really helped me to read the Classics, a variety of Greek and Roman authors, and even those more ancient works like The Epic of Gilgamesh, to put into context the sensationalized triviality of the New Testament, i.e. the recycled themes and ideas that the earliest Christians borrowed from preceding traditions -- which were often articulated far more coherently, and (in my view) aesthetically more "divine," so to speak -- and then packaged specifically for the most gullible of the masses; which, by the way, is *still* observed to be what pretty much every moderately successful religion does. All you can do is be honest with yourself. You don't choose to believe what you in fact believe. Remain open-minded and at the end of day, you'll continue to forge your own beliefs, exactly as human beings were designed to do.maybe not out loud but definitely in my head... any time a Christian thought comes up I've gotta say 'that's bullshit' or otherwise dismiss it



Anyway, thank you for the reading recommendations


Yeah, I'd agree with what you say above Rob... it feels good to trivialise it etc, but I would say that some things can't really be debunked definitively... if they could all the Christians on this site would have buggered off by now
