(December 23, 2009 at 12:46 pm)tackattack Wrote: getting back to point I believe the original question was religions contributions to society.Stop right there. These are still unsubstantiated claims of yours. Please substantiate that claim. Why do you assume that god necessitated explanation? And why is it not the other way around?
Mythos. God necessatated explaining, creating mythos/ religion.
tackattack Wrote:That necessated a higher level of morality,
Please substantiate that claim.
tackattack Wrote:.. defining moral terpitude.Please substantiate that claim.
tackattack Wrote:I can see that leading us further away from naturalistic communal morals towards idealistic morals.Please substantiate that claim.
tackattack Wrote:The first and second great awakening.Are you referring to Enlightenment? And how was that ever an ambition of religion?
tackattack Wrote:Here is a small reference for gender equalityIt is true that in early christian history there were schools of thought with an explicit egalitarian pov. Augustine's doctrine of original sin overturned these tendencies however in late 4th century. Hence implementation failed as a result of clerical forces. It re-emerged again in clerical circles considerable time after Enlightenment in Europe. Enlightenment itself involved a struggle to separate clerical power from secular power which proved to be a precondition to implement the ideal of egality in society, the church still lagging behind.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_of_Norwich
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Egalitarianism
tackattack Wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ComplementarianismComplementarianism is a clerical school of thought that emerged considerable time after womens rights in western society have been established. Also note that it is predominantly a critique on the traditional role of women in church. Hardly something that you can bring up as an argument for a role of religion on the change itself. Instead of being the spark that ignited women's rights this is a much delayed clerical reaction on changed secular opinion. It strives to implement modernized women's rights in church..
tackattack Wrote:While I don't assert that religion has done a lot of harm to society, I'm sure a predominant amount of atheists on here can list the negative impacts. I was just atempting to round out the list from a more well rounded perspective.In fact I do acknowledge that religion can be a vehicle for positive societal developments and moral. I do think however that that property is not unique to religion and that its dogmatic nature (like all dogmatic platonic systems) and its hierarchical organisation rather inhibits moral and cultural development than facilitates it. The history of religion in the west clearly shows that implementation of moral concepts in clerical practice considerably lags behind of implementation in society from a non clerical origin.
tackattack Wrote:Up till now science has no empirical evidence suggesting such a supernatural entity. So how do you connect t he dots between god and observation?(December 23, 2009 at 10:10 am)Purple Rabbit Wrote: In science (except for mathematics) it is indeed based on observation. What makes you think it isn't.I'm glad we agree. That was in reference to the cause and effect of God.
tackattack Wrote:Your argument is clear (as it has been to me in former the post) but seriously flawed. The flaw is not just some sort of procedural issue on debating technique but at a fundamental logical level. You cannot randomly define terms like inside and outside of the universe and declare the laws of nature applicable on both sides. When you say that god being 'outside' caused/created the universe, you apply reasoning about causality to the outside. How do you account for the fact that causality has any meaning outside the universe? More accurately put, 'outside the universe' must mean without reference to spacetime since spacetime is what makes up 'the inside'. But causality cannot be understood without reference to time, since without time it is not clear how the cause can precede the effect.(December 23, 2009 at 10:10 am)Purple Rabbit Wrote: Yes, you implicitly did by stating "In our universe cause preempts effect." (underling by me). And rephrasing your statement to "In and outside our universe cause preempts effect." makes it nonsensical, since it is not clear what outside the universe means and if your cauation rule applies on the treshold between inside and outside.There you go. If god is outside the ruleset, than you cannot apply the ruleset to god and your claim about causation does not apply.I am unfarmiliar withe the definitions and application of all of the logical fallacies used in debate, so let me restate. In our know universe it is widely accepted that cause preempts effect (with a few acceptions). I define our known universe as the things we have discovered in our universe. If something outside of our known universe it has the potential to be explained by the rules science, reason and logic can measure. If it is outside of our universe, even the rules we haven't come up with yet would not be forced to apply. If (from a perspective within our known universe) God created our universe, the first action of our known universe yould be an effect of God's cause. Is that any clearer?
tackattack Wrote:I haven't brought up your debating skills in conversation. You did. I think it is irrelevant for the arguments we exchange.(December 23, 2009 at 10:10 am)Purple Rabbit Wrote: What are you referring to?per your request I was suggesting we leave God and divinity out of the conversation as well as my lack of debating skills. Let's just stick to religions.
tackattack Wrote:I have adressed that above.(December 23, 2009 at 10:10 am)Purple Rabbit Wrote: Mormonism is out the window, right after the indoor plumbing stuff. What religious movement(s) were early adopters of women's rights?So a strong independant community is not a benefit to society, or you're not willing to discuss it? See above for the latter half.
tackattack Wrote:You cannot read my mind or extract my motives from it, as I cannot yours. Don't step into the trap of mind reading. The arguments are what counts in debate, not the beauty of mine or your mind from whatever moral perspective one chooses.(December 23, 2009 at 10:10 am)Purple Rabbit Wrote: What is a psychological aversion?That would otherwise noted as a chip on the shoulder, an axe to grind, a pessimistic penchant for pietism, etc.
"I'm like a rabbit suddenly trapped, in the blinding headlights of vacuous crap" - Tim Minchin in "Storm"
Christianity is perfect bullshit, christians are not - Purple Rabbit, honouring CS Lewis
Faith is illogical - fr0d0
Christianity is perfect bullshit, christians are not - Purple Rabbit, honouring CS Lewis
Faith is illogical - fr0d0