I'd say you're adding some variant of humanism, the belief that human life is central and important. The values of atheism do not commit one to action because it isn't a set of values. Atheism plus humanism does commit you to action because it does assert a set of values that, arguably, are threatened by theism. I agree with Simon, you're adding things to atheism that are neither essential to it, nor entailed by it. The question of exactly what you're adding may be an important distinction, but you've moved the discussion outside of the purview of atheism qua atheism by doing so.
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Overstating the case for Athiesm.
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I'd say you're adding some variant of humanism, the belief that human life is central and important. The values of atheism do not commit one to action because it isn't a set of values. Atheism plus humanism does commit you to action because it does assert a set of values that, arguably, are threatened by theism. I agree with Simon, you're adding things to atheism that are neither essential to it, nor entailed by it. The question of exactly what you're adding may be an important distinction, but you've moved the discussion outside of the purview of atheism qua atheism by doing so. (March 7, 2014 at 9:18 pm)Simon Moon Wrote:(March 7, 2014 at 8:50 pm)rsb Wrote: Well then I think basically "atheism" in your definition is useless as the lack of evidence for a god has absolutely no "proof" that there is not one. Not really. It all sounds like one hand clapping to me. I guess I will have to join you on the anti-theist part, without wholehearted philosophical agreement. I reserve the right to trademark atheist though and steal it from you
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RE: Overstating the case for Athiesm.
March 7, 2014 at 10:26 pm
(This post was last modified: March 7, 2014 at 10:27 pm by Brakeman.)
Let's get this straight..
If I claim that the Paul Bunyan and his Big Blue Ox story is just a fable and not historical, how much is my position eroded by the finding of a Canadian genealogy that mentions a man named Paul C. Bunyan 1788 - 1849? How much does it change the debate if the Paul Bunyan believers conceded that the Ox wasn't really blue? If Paul was huge, but not really 40 feet tall, maybe only 12 or 15?
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(March 7, 2014 at 7:38 pm)rsb Wrote: Obviously he didn't rise from the dead. Living things don't do that. But given my observations of the numbers of multiple jesus(i?) that have existed, it could be even funnier than the life of Brian in reality. There are numerous passages about guys named "Jesus" and "Jesus Christ" in the Old Testament. Those particular guys probably existed. However, the Jesus Christ character in the New Testament was most likely a complete fabrication of Paul based upon the earlier characters who had similar attributes. The NT Jesus is further tainted because the guys who wrote the Gospels about him did it decades after his alleged crucifixion. At that time the Jews were in full revolt mode against the Romans and getting killed and enslaved by the hundreds of thousands. So the writers most likely incorporated tales involving the three main rebel leaders into their fairy tale about a guy who would restore the glory of the Jews when they were collaborators with the Assyrians and Babylonians. We do know, or should know, that the many tales where the Jesus character is talking to one or two characters, such as Satan, are pure BS. Who was there to record their conversations and activities? The same is true of the Islamic hadiths involving Mohammed and his buddies. The writers made them all up hundreds of years later. Religious fairy tales are BS. But they do present ideas for coping with the many trials and tribulations of everyday human life. There are no gods, devils, demons, angels, spirits, ghosts (holy or otherwise), resurrections, heavens, or hells other than the ones each person creates himself. When you die you will be forgotten unless you have done something noteworthy. And then future generations will turn you into a myth that will not resemble what you really were. (March 7, 2014 at 10:33 pm)Wyrd of Gawd Wrote: There are no gods, devils, demons, angels, spirits, ghosts (holy or otherwise), resurrections, heavens, or hells other than the ones each person creates himself. So you're a "strong" atheist? I haven't met too many of those.
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RE: Overstating the case for Athiesm.
March 7, 2014 at 10:53 pm
(This post was last modified: March 7, 2014 at 11:07 pm by rsb.)
(March 7, 2014 at 10:26 pm)Brakeman Wrote: Let's get this straight.. Well if you found a genealogy that Paul C Bunyan existed, and he was a lumberjack, I would suspect he told a lot of tall tales and was a good liar if he was in fact the source of the fables. However there is no comparing a genealogy to the bible, the genealogy is way more trustworthy However none of this is any sort of an argument against some guy living at one time or many people who later formed the composite of a self serving myth. (March 7, 2014 at 10:33 pm)Wyrd of Gawd Wrote: There are numerous passages about guys named "Jesus" and "Jesus Christ" in the Old Testament. Those particular guys probably existed. However, the Jesus Christ character in the New Testament was most likely a complete fabrication of Paul based upon the earlier characters who had similar attributes. I am with you on the spirit of the post, however I think you have just a couple details wrong. There is no mention I am aware of of "jesus" in the OT as written by Jews, however the whole thing probably was edited later on in history on both the Jewish and Christian sides. I go by the dead sea scrolls because they are the oldest radiocarbon dated artifacts that are not really subject to revisionist crap. But really none of those words are evidence for anything specific. How about starting with the basic laws(whatever, facts) of physics, chemistry, and biology instead of fairy tales. The oldest torah is about as old as the historical christ and the oldest bibles, not older. The events in Masada are further hard core historical evidence for early jewish nationalist movements and fanatics. These obviously build on and support the general blah blah blah one will come who will rah rah rah texts. So bottom line, I believe the movie "the life of brian" is probably a pretty accurate portrait of the historical jesus as our know history is consistent with, and perhaps the Jewish tradition is not as old as it is sold to be. (March 7, 2014 at 10:53 pm)rsb Wrote:(March 7, 2014 at 10:26 pm)Brakeman Wrote: Let's get this straight.. It wouldn't matter that there was a lumberjack who told stories, it would be much too far removed from the original story for him to be the character, despite being the muse or the author. The real lumberjack Paul would have to be "The Character" in the story with substantially the same history. As it would be, a possible "real" Paul Bunyan would not have had any history of the life told in the story but rather a completely different one. Thus he is not the "character" in the story. The story remains non-historical, just like Jeebus!
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I think you need to stop speaking to xtians and start talking to some jews.
http://www.shamash.org/lists/scj-faq/HTM...17-03.html Quote:Countering the Question: Why Don't Jews Believe in Jesus as the Messiah? Quote:The reason why Jews do not accept Jesus as the messiah is straightforward: he did not meet the requirements in the job requisition! G-d outlined these requirements in the Bible. The key aspect of proof is in the state of the world.According to the Bible, amongst the most mission of the messiah includes returning the world to return to G-d and G-d's teachings; restoring the royal dynasty to the descendants of David; overseeing the rebuilding of Jerusalem, including the Temple; gathering the Jewish people from all over the world and bringing them home to the Land of Israel; reestablishing the Sanhedrin; restoring the sacrificial system, the Sabbatical year and Jubilee. This simply has not happened. Judaism has no notion of the messiah not doing these things on the first visit, let along needing a second visit to do these things. Whenever these things are described in the Tanach, the description says that the messiah will come and do these things—once. Oh, and there is none of this 'second coming' shit, either. The messiah gets one bite at the apple. (March 7, 2014 at 11:16 pm)Minimalist Wrote: I think you need to stop speaking to xtians and start talking to some jews. I understand all of that. However none of those arguments actually prove that the jews didn't just make it all up later, just like the Christians, or that the folks on Masada or others were not really really crazy like batshit crazy. Furthermore there is no rational basis for you to impose rationality or Constancy on cross theology comparisons. If I accept your argument here I am basically saying that your evidence from the Jewish theology must be accepted as true to disprove the existence of a historical christ. That is about as plausible as saying that David Koresh was not the second coming of christ because some other guy really was. None of that is evidence of the non-existence of the historical christ. It is further evidence that all theologies are really crazy, but not convincing regarding a historical jesus. I just don't accept any religious arguments concerning truth, apparently you do because you have imposed conditions on the true historical jesus. I presume none of that, I just think that him and his followers were most likely crazy, if they ever existed. |
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