Religious 'Nones' are now the largest single group in the U.S.

15,212 Views | 250 Replies | Last: 9 mo ago by kurt vonnegut
AGC
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Rocag said:

You can't know your perception of reality is true either. Making the additional assumption that god exists doesn't improve your starting position.


I reject your belief that I can't know things outside of myself. You don't have such a luxury if you're to be internally consistent, that's why we arrive at nihilism (true belief) or contradiction. Nobody wants to live in your world, they just want to pay it lip service to throw off the shackles of others
Aggrad08
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AGC said:

Aggrad08 said:




Is there a single coherent argument as to why religion is so dramatically geographically determined if people overwhelmingly aren't products of their environment?


How can you possibly explain what we see? No one is claiming people 100% cannot buck the trends of their environment, every non believer on this thread is proof otherwise, but the trend is undeniable.


Yes. It's a more ancient view that you'll hear on Lord of Spirits before most evangelical churches but if you're a rational materialist I'm not sure you'll give it much credence anyways.

Edit: forgot to add, non-believers aren't bucking the trend, they are the trend. It's a small irony in your post.
I'm still waiting for an actual explanation....
Aggrad08
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Bob Lee said:




WHY do you have an aversion to people harming people? The arguments for moral relativism always break down to stealing from Christian ethics, and never justifying why it's preferable. How do you even know if you're being harmed? Does pain reveal anything to us about what's TRUE? How do you know? Would it be good if it resulted in new life and propagation? Wouldn't that be conducive to human flourishing? How do you know? You're just assuming first principles. That's the part you can't explain and don't even entertain. It's just "nah that's dumb. You can't prove it."

You can't even make sense of your own epistemology.

This is where you are completely backwards. You aren't distinct from a moral relativist; you are a moral relativist wearing an objectivist costume. The costume offers nothing, it's only pretend. You have no moral knowledge I do not, you have no moral epistemology. It's just a half assed divine command theory on paper mixed with mountains of culture influence and ordinary human empathy and gut feelings that are funny enough often in conflict with the literal text you hold as divine command. You then blindly ascribe objectivity to these ancient texts and contradictory gut feelings. You call the greater culture "stealing" from Christian ethics without realizing the reverse happens just as much.

You have no consistent methodology toward moral knowledge. We see this clearly among Christians today, let along ones from different eras or cultures. You can't even agree about something like contraception.

My aversion to harming people is rooted in empathy. If I were a true psychopath I wouldn't have such an aversion. Justifying the preference is all about outcomes. Again, this doesn't change with a pretense at objectivity. Your entire argument boils down to you not liking some imagined outcomes. We aren't really talking about any real truth, because you have no real truth to offer, no real truth to logically demonstrate. Your entire argument is an emotional appeal to the absurd notion that society will suddenly be ruled by psychopaths. You aren't arguing truth, you are arguing preferences.

You keep asking how "I know" something, blind to the fact that you have no knowledge to offer.
Rocag
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AGC said:

Rocag said:

You can't know your perception of reality is true either. Making the additional assumption that god exists doesn't improve your starting position.
I reject your belief that I can't know things outside of myself. You don't have such a luxury if you're to be internally consistent, that's why we arrive at nihilism (true belief) or contradiction. Nobody wants to live in your world, they just want to pay it lip service to throw off the shackles of others
And I reject your rejection.

You can't come to any knowledge or belief without the assumption the method you used to obtain that knowledge or belief is valid in the first place. Or if you're saying that knowledge has been implanted in your head by an outside force then there has to be the assumption that knowledge is reliable. Assumptions are unavoidable.
AGC
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Rocag said:

AGC said:

Rocag said:

You can't know your perception of reality is true either. Making the additional assumption that god exists doesn't improve your starting position.
I reject your belief that I can't know things outside of myself. You don't have such a luxury if you're to be internally consistent, that's why we arrive at nihilism (true belief) or contradiction. Nobody wants to live in your world, they just want to pay it lip service to throw off the shackles of others
And I reject your rejection.

You can't come to any knowledge or belief without the assumption the method you used to obtain that knowledge or belief is valid in the first place. Or if you're saying that knowledge has been implanted in your head by an outside force then there has to be the assumption that knowledge is reliable. Assumptions are unavoidable.


Interaction with something outside of yourself is the only way to find your own boundaries/borders. Otherwise, everything is just yourself. Do you encompass all of reality?

Your response begs the question; why do you keep arguing over it? Are you proud of not knowing anything? Are you arguing with yourself? What is to be gained arguing over meaningless nonsense like morality if it is what you assert it to be? You can't change anyone's perception.
kurt vonnegut
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Martin Q. Blank said:

kurt vonnegut said:



Reading the Bible, praying, reading historical resources on the subject, discussion, debate.

How do you know that you are refining your understanding of morality in a direction that is closer to God's true objective?
Bob Lee
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Aggrad08 said:

Bob Lee said:




WHY do you have an aversion to people harming people? The arguments for moral relativism always break down to stealing from Christian ethics, and never justifying why it's preferable. How do you even know if you're being harmed? Does pain reveal anything to us about what's TRUE? How do you know? Would it be good if it resulted in new life and propagation? Wouldn't that be conducive to human flourishing? How do you know? You're just assuming first principles. That's the part you can't explain and don't even entertain. It's just "nah that's dumb. You can't prove it."

You can't even make sense of your own epistemology.

This is where you are completely backwards. You aren't distinct from a moral relativist; you are a moral relativist wearing an objectivist costume. The costume offers nothing, it's only pretend. You have no moral knowledge I do not, you have no moral epistemology. It's just a half assed divine command theory on paper mixed with mountains of culture influence and ordinary human empathy and gut feelings that are funny enough often in conflict with the literal text you hold as divine command. You then blindly ascribe objectivity to these ancient texts and contradictory gut feelings. You call the greater culture "stealing" from Christian ethics without realizing the reverse happens just as much.

You have no consistent methodology toward moral knowledge. We see this clearly among Christians today, let along ones from different eras or cultures. You can't even agree about something like contraception.

My aversion to harming people is rooted in empathy. If I were a true psychopath I wouldn't have such an aversion. Justifying the preference is all about outcomes. Again, this doesn't change with a pretense at objectivity. Your entire argument boils down to you not liking some imagined outcomes. We aren't really talking about any real truth, because you have no real truth to offer, no real truth to logically demonstrate. Your entire argument is an emotional appeal to the absurd notion that society will suddenly be ruled by psychopaths. You aren't arguing truth, you are arguing preferences.

You keep asking how "I know" something, blind to the fact that you have no knowledge to offer.


Then you have no knowledge to offer either. Everything is unknowable. Everything. I'm not pretending at anything. You're pretending at some nonsensical dialectic.l, and you don't even realize it. Your epistemology completely undermines your convictions.
Rocag
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I disagree. Everything I experience is filtered through my own perceptions and thoughts, so in that sense the internal is all I have access to. I might not encompass all of reality, but my self is the only method I have to interact with reality.

Again though, I don't have a problem with admitting my worldview is based on some fundamental assumptions that might not be provable. In fact, I don't think we can avoid that. Not me and not you.
Martin Q. Blank
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kurt vonnegut said:

Martin Q. Blank said:


Reading the Bible, praying, reading historical resources on the subject, discussion, debate.

How do you know that you are refining your understanding of morality in a direction that is closer to God's true objective?

What do you mean how do I know? I do the best I can. There's no Archimedean point by which humans can critique varying worldviews if that's what you mean.
AGC
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Rocag said:

I disagree. Everything I experience is filtered through my own perceptions and thoughts, so in that sense the internal is all I have access to. I might not encompass all of reality, but my self is the only method I have to interact with reality.

Again though, I don't have a problem with admitting my worldview is based on some fundamental assumptions that might not be provable. In fact, I don't think we can avoid that. Not me and not you.


So now we're on the path to 'knowing' because no one truly believes the internal is all they have, that they encompass all of reality. You acknowledge something exists outside of you. Your perceptions and thoughts don't come from a void; they are resultant feedback from something objective, something real, something you didn't create and don't encompass.

However, we have lots of different boundaries. How do you decide which ones are real and which aren't?
Aggrad08
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Bob Lee said:





Then you have no knowledge to offer either. Everything is unknowable. Everything. I'm not pretending at anything. You're pretending at some nonsensical dialectic.l, and you don't even realize it. Your epistemology completely undermines your convictions.

No not "everything" is unknowable, I don't know where you pulled that nonsense from. Absolute moral truths are unknowable. Our empirical knowledge isn't reduced one iota.

Nothing about my epistemology is problematic. We can go back down that road, but we will once again come down to the point where you cannot criticize a single one of my presuppositions nor offer what additional ones I should have. Your bite has no teeth here.

As far as not having knowledge to offer. Welcome to the party pal, took you long enough to get here. Neither of us have objective knowledge of moral truths. And yes you are pretending to have objective morals. You have no logic, no knowledge nothing to lean on. Nothing besides an emotional appeal to an absurd scenario. You have nothing to offer, every single one of your criticisms can be found in the mirror. You have gut feelings and ancient texts you only partially agree with. That the sum total of what you can offer.

The only knowledge I have to offer you is that every argument for objective morality fails, as you are more than free to go back and review. It has no logical foundation, nothing you can lean on that isn't fundamentally a blind faith. So let's stop pretending.



Rocag
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How do I decide anything about reality? Easy. I make the assumption that my perceptions do provide a reliable way to observe and interact with a reality separate from myself which really does exist. If you think that's a step too far then I don't think I can help you.
AGC
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Rocag said:

How do I decide anything about reality? Easy. I make the assumption that my perceptions do provide a reliable way to observe and interact with a reality separate from myself which really does exist. If you think that's a step too far then I don't think I can help you.


If you jump off the roof of a house, do you perceive falling or do you actually fall?
Rocag
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AGC said:

Rocag said:

How do I decide anything about reality? Easy. I make the assumption that my perceptions do provide a reliable way to observe and interact with a reality separate from myself which really does exist. If you think that's a step too far then I don't think I can help you.
If you jump off the roof of a house, do you perceive falling or do you actually fall?
It's amusing that you think this is a convincing line of argument. It really isn't.

And, based on my previously stated assumption, I would say that I both perceive it and it happens. If my assumption is false and I'm actually a brain in a jar somewhere perceiving a world that doesn't actually exist then I would perceive it but it would not have actually happened. Can I prove that's not the case? Nope. We're all just doing the best we can with what we have to work with.
Martin Q. Blank
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Quote:

Can I prove that's not the case? Nope.
Well...you could jump and find out. But something tells me you won't.
Rocag
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Martin Q. Blank said:


Quote:

Can I prove that's not the case? Nope.
Well...you could jump and find out. But something tells me you won't.
What makes you think the perception of pain at the end of the fall would prove the fall actually happened?
kurt vonnegut
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Martin Q. Blank said:

kurt vonnegut said:

Martin Q. Blank said:


Reading the Bible, praying, reading historical resources on the subject, discussion, debate.

How do you know that you are refining your understanding of morality in a direction that is closer to God's true objective?

What do you mean how do I know? I do the best I can. There's no Archimedean point by which humans can critique varying worldviews if that's what you mean.

I had never heard the term Archimedean point, thank you!

But, anyway, it sure seems to me like, in the absence of said Archimedean point, we are all left to just do our best. Objective morality exists and we all just do our own bests to try to understand it and sometimes arrive at different conclusions with no way to critique varying worldviews. . . . how is this not objective morality undertstood subjectively. . . . which is what I've been arguing for over the past 4 pages?

AGC
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Rocag said:

AGC said:

Rocag said:

How do I decide anything about reality? Easy. I make the assumption that my perceptions do provide a reliable way to observe and interact with a reality separate from myself which really does exist. If you think that's a step too far then I don't think I can help you.
If you jump off the roof of a house, do you perceive falling or do you actually fall?
It's amusing that you think this is a convincing line of argument. It really isn't.

And, based on my previously stated assumption, I would say that I both perceive it and it happens. If my assumption is false and I'm actually a brain in a jar somewhere perceiving a world that doesn't actually exist then I would perceive it but it would not have actually happened. Can I prove that's not the case? Nope. We're all just doing the best we can with what we have to work with.


Of course it actually happens, otherwise you would encompass all of reality like we said earlier. You might as well have said you would want gravity to pull you down anyways, just to prove you were right.
Martin Q. Blank
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kurt vonnegut said:

Martin Q. Blank said:

kurt vonnegut said:

Martin Q. Blank said:


Reading the Bible, praying, reading historical resources on the subject, discussion, debate.

How do you know that you are refining your understanding of morality in a direction that is closer to God's true objective?

What do you mean how do I know? I do the best I can. There's no Archimedean point by which humans can critique varying worldviews if that's what you mean.

I had never heard the term Archimedean point, thank you!

But, anyway, it sure seems to me like, in the absence of said Archimedean point, we are all left to just do our best. Objective morality exists and we all just do our own bests to try to understand it and sometimes arrive at different conclusions with no way to critique varying worldviews. . . . how is this not objective morality undertstood subjectively. . . . which is what I've been arguing for over the past 4 pages?


Well, I'm not sure what you specifically have been arguing, but I've been arguing that objective morality does exist. Even if we may or may not arrive at it in this life. A supreme good exists, a supreme truth exists, and it is eternal and unchanging. We see glimpses of it in ourselves which the Greeks rightly posited we must be the offspring of it. But ultimately the closest we can get to it is through special revelations of it in holy scriptures. There we see it is not only true and good, but also gracious and merciful. Otherwise we could not approach it given we are prone to error and evil.
Rocag
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It's hard talking to you when you so very clearly don't understand or just don't read what I'm saying. It has nothing to do with "encompassing all of reality". The question is whether our perception of reality is accurate or not. If it isn't, how would we prove that?
AGC
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Rocag said:

It's hard talking to you when you so very clearly don't understand or just don't read what I'm saying. It has nothing to do with "encompassing all of reality". The question is whether our perception of reality is accurate or not. If it isn't, how would we prove that?


So you can fall off the house and not know it?

Edit: It has everything to do with encompassing reality. If there are boundaries to you, then something else exists and can be perceived. It may be perceived in many ways or few but it's no longer up for debate whether something other than you exists (even if it's, say, morality). You do not control this thing, this other, so it's fruitless to argue that you're only left to your own perceptions and feelings to interpret the world; it has its own definite reality. I

f you can't trust your perception then you have no basis to gather meaningful information about anything around you (thus back to you encompassing all reality). A six foot tall person could actually be four feet tall, and so on. In which case, why dogmatically argue at all with me or mqb or anyone else? You can't trust your perception of our arguments! But you keep doing it so we can all see you don't believe this, it's simply an academic exercise. You're going to go about your entire life trusting your perception to convey reality to you as soon as you close out your browser because you're not an idiot and don't want to die in the fiery car wreck that may not be real and which you may not perceive.
Rocag
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I have repeatedly stated that one of the fundamental assumptions I make is that I believe my perception of the world around me is valid and legitimate way of experiencing a world that really exists. You seem to act like I am saying I reject that assumption. I don't. But I do recognize it is an assumption I ultimately can't prove is true. Like others have mentioned, if we were in a "brain in a jar" scenario how would we know? Could we know at all?

I reject the idea that having to make any assumptions at all regarding the world we live in means we might as well give up because nothing is knowable. Everybody's belief has some assumptions baked into it, that's just unavoidable. I further argue that even Christians have to make many of the same fundamental assumptions as previously discussed. So all of that derision you're casting my way applies equally back to you.

Belief in god doesn't negate these fundamental assumptions, it just adds a new one to the mix.
AGC
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Rocag said:

I have repeatedly stated that one of the fundamental assumptions I make is that I believe my perception of the world around me is valid and legitimate way of experiencing a world that really exists. You seem to act like I am saying I reject that assumption. I don't. But I do recognize it is an assumption I ultimately can't prove is true. Like others have mentioned, if we were in a "brain in a jar" scenario how would we know? Could we know at all?

I reject the idea that having to make any assumptions at all regarding the world we live in means we might as well give up because nothing is knowable. Everybody's belief has some assumptions baked into it, that's just unavoidable. I further argue that even Christians have to make many of the same fundamental assumptions as previously discussed. So all of that derision you're casting my way applies equally back to you.

Belief in god doesn't negate these fundamental assumptions, it just adds a new one to the mix.


This is not a meaningful use of the word 'assumption'. You have no other way of experiencing reality; if you can't prove everything else isn't you, there are bigger problems.
kurt vonnegut
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Martin Q. Blank said:


Well, I'm not sure what you specifically have been arguing, but I've been arguing that objective morality does exist. Even if we may or may not arrive at it in this life. A supreme good exists, a supreme truth exists, and it is eternal and unchanging. We see glimpses of it in ourselves which the Greeks rightly posited we must be the offspring of it. But ultimately the closest we can get to it is through special revelations of it in holy scriptures. There we see it is not only true and good, but also gracious and merciful. Otherwise we could not approach it given we are prone to error and evil.

Ah! I can help provide a recap of the origins of the objective / subjective morality debate. Bob and I may be most at fault for propagating this debate on the nature of morality. I reacted to a post of his that described the rise in numbers of atheists to a degradation of society. And then we went back and forth and I spent a few pages trying to make the exact point that you have in bold above for the purposes of suggesting that maybe he should be less judgey toward people that have different values. Ultimately, I don't think he agrees. Either because he feels that he has arrived at perfect understanding of objective morality or that he is close enough to it to claim moral superiority. Either way, the discussion has probably run its course and has now morphed into a metaphysical debate about whether we can know anything or ever trust any of our sense.
Martin Q. Blank
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There's more to it than that, but if you believe objective morality exists, you have a leg up on these other atheists and my beef is not with you.
Rocag
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If it's a problem, then it's one everyone has to deal with including theists.

But I do agree with Kurt here, we're pretty far from the original topic of the growing population of non-religious people in this country.
kurt vonnegut
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Martin Q. Blank said:

There's more to it than that, but if you believe objective morality exists, you have a leg up on these other atheists and my beef is not with you.

I don't know if objective morality exists or not. But, belief that something exists does not equal knowledge of that thing. In order to get a leg up on atheists, you have to show that you know something about that objective morality and can prove it through some non-subjective means.

If I say that I believe there exists a scientific theory that unifies quantum mechanics and relativity, that doesn't make me an expert in physics.
Martin Q. Blank
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You can believe in God despite the fact that he is unknowable. That's the whole idea behind apophatic theology. Paul says regarding our knowledge of God we speak and think and reason like children. That doesn't mean we stop trying. And yes, it's a leg up on atheists who live their life as if there were no God.
AGC
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Rocag said:

If it's a problem, then it's one everyone has to deal with including theists.

But I do agree with Kurt here, we're pretty far from the original topic of the growing population of non-religious people in this country.


No, it's not. Most people (religious or not) accept rationally (and reasonably) that these things are the only way to experience reality and that other things exist, objectively, outside of themselves. Your pushback isn't against knowledge but even the ability to know (epistemology). That's why we've moved so far from the topic: it's the only way to engage with y'all any more. We have to establish that you can know things exist outside of yourself because objectivity, as a concept, then has room to breathe and exist.

That's what makes this line of argumentation so silly: you're arguing against knowing itself. If you can't know we're not part of you and you're a brain in a vat, why do you spend so much time arguing with yourself?

This is a dichotomy of thinking and doing. You think this way but you don't live this way. Every time you drive a car you rely on these things and treat the outside world as if it's real. You don't engage with death, pain, and other things as figments of your mind but a finite end to your real existence.
AGC
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kurt vonnegut said:

Martin Q. Blank said:


Well, I'm not sure what you specifically have been arguing, but I've been arguing that objective morality does exist. Even if we may or may not arrive at it in this life. A supreme good exists, a supreme truth exists, and it is eternal and unchanging. We see glimpses of it in ourselves which the Greeks rightly posited we must be the offspring of it. But ultimately the closest we can get to it is through special revelations of it in holy scriptures. There we see it is not only true and good, but also gracious and merciful. Otherwise we could not approach it given we are prone to error and evil.

Ah! I can help provide a recap of the origins of the objective / subjective morality debate. Bob and I may be most at fault for propagating this debate on the nature of morality. I reacted to a post of his that described the rise in numbers of atheists to a degradation of society. And then we went back and forth and I spent a few pages trying to make the exact point that you have in bold above for the purposes of suggesting that maybe he should be less judgey toward people that have different values. Ultimately, I don't think he agrees. Either because he feels that he has arrived at perfect understanding of objective morality or that he is close enough to it to claim moral superiority. Either way, the discussion has probably run its course and has now morphed into a metaphysical debate about whether we can know anything or ever trust any of our sense.


Is that not the natural end of the argument against objectivity?
Rocag
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You're trying to argue that asserting something is true is somehow superior to simply assuming it's true even when you lack the ability to objectively prove that thing is true. It's not. At some point we have to admit that our experience of reality comes with limits. Doing so isn't a flaw.

Time and time again you consistently either misstate or completely misunderstand the point I'm making. Every time you say "You think this..." you are wrong. Wrong, wrong, wrong. It's endlessly frustrating.
AGC
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Rocag said:

You're trying to argue that asserting something is true is somehow superior to simply assuming it's true even when you lack the ability to objectively prove that thing is true. It's not. At some point we have to admit that our experience of reality comes with limits. Doing so isn't a flaw.

Time and time again you consistently either misstate or completely misunderstand the point I'm making. Every time you say "You think this..." you are wrong. Wrong, wrong, wrong. It's endlessly frustrating.


Please tell me how you experience reality without any of these 'assertions' or 'assumptions' as you call them (perception, feeling, etc.). It's not possible. The irony of your statement is that I've been reflecting on your limitations of knowledge to demonstrate that something objective outside of yourself exists while you fall back on it to say that you can't reasonably claim anything else does exist, because to do so is to assume.

You should be frustrated: you're asserting madness and calling it reason. Your claim is that you can't know anything without an assumption or assertion. If that's true why argue over it? Why get angry? Why do you assume I'm wrong? What proof do you have?
Rocag
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I have never once said nothing outside of myself exists. Not once. That's all been you saying I thought that over my objections. I would certainly argue that the way in which we perceive reality places inherent limits on what information we are able to gather about it.

And just because a belief includes some assumptions baked into it doesn't make it any less impactful.
Martin Q. Blank
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And just because a belief includes some assumptions baked into it doesn't make it any less impactful.
Welcome to religion. But I'm sure yours is rational unlike mine.
kurt vonnegut
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Martin Q. Blank said:

You can believe in God despite the fact that he is unknowable. That's the whole idea behind apophatic theology. Paul says regarding our knowledge of God we speak and think and reason like children. That doesn't mean we stop trying. And yes, it's a leg up on atheists who live their life as if there were no God.

Its only a leg up if you are correct. If you are not correct, it probably has the opposite affect. If you believe that you could be wrong about God, then you might be hesitant to consider your claims a 'leg up'. If you believe that you cannot be wrong, then there is nowhere to take this conversation.

I expressed a frustration recently in a thread where I described a hypocrisy whereby so many Christians insist atheists need to be open enough to God in order to hear him, yet those same Christians are utterly closed to any possibility that they are anything other than 100% correct about God and His nature. Its my perception that many of those same Christians hide behind a false modesty of admission that they are flawed and God is unknowable. But, in practice, these Christians think of themselves as morally superior and with a God-like infallibility in their base assertions.

To bring this back on topic, I see part of the rise of the 'nones' as a reaction to a sort of idolatry of theology. To me, modern Christianity bares little resemblance to the words of Jesus. Maybe it never did resemble the words of Jesus, but I didn't see it when I was young. Today, the perception of Christianity is that it is moving toward resembling a political and social cult where loyalty and proclamation that one is a 'Christian' is far more important than living by Jesus's words. This is why you can have a political party that hates gay people, but idolizes a thrice divorced, pron star banging blowhard that uses every moment possible to brag about himself and slander his opponents. As long as he pretends he's a Christian, he's part of the cult.

In an age of the luxury of growing diversity of ideas, modern Christianity is utterly polarizing. You either proclaim your allegiance to the cult, or you are a degenerate. And the left has responded in kind with equal polarization and idolization of their own ideals. This is feeds the accelerating apart of people. And in both cases, you may have a bit of the tail wagging the dog. In which case, it has to be on the moderates of all sides to speak up and say 'woke culture' has gone too far and maybe we shouldn't call atheists 'degenerates'.

Christianity does not reach out to LGBTQ communities, or secular communities, or other communities with compassion and open ears. And if they do reach out, it is not as equals, but rather as moral superiors with condescension and pity for the poor 'others' that haven't found God. The more I look, the less I see good being done for the sake of good. Good is done for the sake of bringing in people into the cult. I only see walls being built, I don't see many bridges. And for the first time in American history, people have options on which cult they choose to join. And more and more are leaving religion because they feel it was never a good option to begin with. Just the only option.

My sense of morality is a product of my experience, my empathy, my reason, my bias, human dignity, human well being, cultural norms, and some mixture of ethical and moral philosophies. I recognize gray areas and holes and potential issues with my moral philosophy, but I can't help but think its a good moral philosophy. But, I don't claim to be right and I don't claim it to be better than yours. Nor do I claim to have a 'leg up' on you.

Nothing about Christian moral philosophy really offends me. What is offense to me is the arrogant surety with which so many Christians KNOW they are right and everyone else is wrong. And yeah, I'm picking on Christians and not secularists and the far left wing, but this is a thread about why people are leaving the church, right?

k. Rant over.
 
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