"Why are all you atheists so angry?"

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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby Keep The Reason » Tue Dec 13, 2011 4:57 pm

Moonwood the Hare wrote:Well the libertarian stuff at the beginning included a lot of stuff I could agree with. What I don't accept is her claim that these things happen because 'religion' as defined by her is epistemologically inferior to naturalism of various kinds.

A few months ago someone put a link to another piece by Greta Christina in which she said about a certain view
'It cannot be shown to be false therefore it cannot be shown to be true, therefore it's worthless.'
That seemed to me like the kind of muddled thinking you might hear from a bright sixth former so I asked a bright sixth former to confirm for me that this was nonsense which they did and explained why. So I had assumed that to be making that kind of mistake she must be a lot younger than she is. Once you get behind the rhetoric of which there is an awful lot her argument seems to be the same one we have heard over and over again from Keep the Reason and Dr. Mundo that religion has no reality checks and so cannot be verified. As neither of them has so far responded to the simple questions I keep asking about why we should accept this kind of epistemology I don't suppose KTR will answer for that now. Just to check though. Can you see why Greta Christina's view as given above is nonsense and if so can you wee why the epistemological basis of her critique of religion does not hold? And that seems to me to be the case; I understand what she is saying and I think it could be developed into a challenging argument but I think it flounders because religious believers are not the only people who must hold beliefs that are not solely based on objective evidence or as she would call it proof.

But Keep the Reason Can I know challenge you to listen to something by one of the great Christian political thinkers of the present day on a related issue http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/203464-5 That's Os Guinness.


Well, thank you for checking it out. I'll be happy to listen to your link and will reply as soon as I can to it. You might wish to get permission (or beg forgiveness) from mitch now that you've posted it -- you've apparently now violated his Rules for the Forum He Doesn't Own(TM). :smt005


Of course, I disagree with your assessment of the Greta speech, but the other element to this topic is the tactic of calling athiests "angry" in order to diminish or dismiss their arguments (rather than confront the validity of their arguments).

As to her other comments, that's not the point of this thread and you're free to raise it elsewhere if you wish-- I don't consider her (or anyone) perfect in their understanding, I just happen to think the angry athiest speech was solid and worth a listen and discussion. She could be completely off the rails on other issues.
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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby humanguy » Tue Dec 13, 2011 6:24 pm

Keep The Reason wrote:Well, I certainly agree with that. And I can see it first hand, right here, primarily from thiests but also from humanguy. But honestly, I don't know what hg's story is-- frankly, he kind of comes off as an unstable sort of person IMO, and I know he's reading this, and I know it'll be perceived as an ad hominem or "remote psychoanalysis" or whatever you want to call it, but what do you say to a guy who actually asks, "I don't understand that sentence, the one that's in boldface. Give me an example of religion's sway over social direction."?


I'd like to address this last para if you don't mind.

I am not a stable sort of person. I don't want to be a stable sort of person. Stability works in building but it doesn't work with humans. We're not meant to be stable, not that you asked for my opinion.

We're not meant to be anything in particular at all. But once we start believing that there is a stable human model to which we must all aspire, I either head for the bar or leave the premises because that's when the craziness starts.
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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby Aaron » Tue Dec 13, 2011 6:59 pm

short attention span = not interesting enough to hold my attention = I have other things I'd rather be doing

No offense to you KTR, I'm sure you find it fascinating, and Jim I don't know a thing about Christina...
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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby JustJim » Wed Dec 14, 2011 4:13 am

humanguy wrote:Hey Jim, I just want to thank you for explaining to Keep the Reason my reason for not watching his video.

I guess it never occurred to your well-educated, well-read, and really, really smart mind that I'll bloody well read, listen to or watch what I want when I choose to.

That is, after all, my prerogative, no? You don't decide what I read or listen to. I do.

Humanguy,

I didn't explain a damn thing to KTR that you hadn't already said. I just repeated the reason YOU gave for not watching it. (You Googled Greta Christina and decided she was not worth listening to - "a load of bollocks," I believe was your assessment.)

Of course you can read, watch or listen to whatever you want whenever you choose to. I never said or implied otherwise. So, kiss my well-educated, well-read, and really, really smart butt....

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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby yjoeyh » Wed Dec 14, 2011 10:38 am

Keep The Reason wrote: but the other element to this topic is the tactic of calling athiests "angry" in order to diminish or dismiss their arguments (rather than confront the validity of their arguments).

I second this. It is actually just a variation on ad hominem.
I've probably done this myself from time to time, and I shouldn't have.
In my experience, addressing the validity of an argument itself, even when the other person seems to be quite angry, is a good way to "calm them down" enough to talk about it. Of course if you do address specific arguments in a logical manner and the person remains emotionally charged over it, you're pretty much spinning wheels trying to argue with them. I try to avoid getting wrapped up in those kinds of discussions as much as possible, but sometimes I can still fall into that trap.
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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby Keep The Reason » Wed Dec 14, 2011 11:53 am

Moonwood the Hare wrote:Well the libertarian stuff at the beginning included a lot of stuff I could agree with. What I don't accept is her claim that these things happen because 'religion' as defined by her is epistemologically inferior to naturalism of various kinds. A few months ago someone put a link to another piece by Greta Christina in which she said about a certain view 'It cannot be shown to be false therefore it cannot be shown to be true, therefore it's worthless.'

That seemed to me like the kind of muddled thinking you might hear from a bright sixth former so I asked a bright sixth former to confirm for me that this was nonsense which they did and explained why. So I had assumed that to be making that kind of mistake she must be a lot younger than she is. Once you get behind the rhetoric of which there is an awful lot her argument seems to be the same one we have heard over and over again from Keep the Reason and Dr. Mundo that religion has no reality checks and so cannot be verified.

As neither of them has so far responded to the simple questions I keep asking about why we should accept this kind of epistemology I don't suppose KTR will answer for that now. Just to check though.


Well, that's a different discussion, isn't it? Let's focus on this one first, and then raise that, shall we?

Can you see why Greta Christina's view as given above is nonsense and if so can you wee why the epistemological basis of her critique of religion does not hold? And that seems to me to be the case; I understand what she is saying and I think it could be developed into a challenging argument but I think it flounders because religious believers are not the only people who must hold beliefs that are not solely based on objective evidence or as she would call it proof.


I disagree that it's nonsense. Ideologies create beliefs, which in turn informs actions. The philosophical underpinnings of those ideologies is certainly a valid discussion to be had, but they are not particularly relevant. What matters is that if "x" people believe "y" and that propels them to behave in "z" manner, then from a purely pragmatic stance, we have to deal with the reality of what both "y" and "z" creates.

The fact is, her litany of reasons to be angry are completely justified when one is victimized by the ideology espoused by people, regardless of its rational (or irrational) foundations. And her complaints are valid-- which of these would you insist are not valid reasons to be angry over? (I'm now linking to the text of her speech for those interested in reading it rather than watching it).

I would submit that you are, in a somewhat more subtle way, doing precisely the thing I take issue with. Because her epistemological grounding is found lacking by you, now it's all "nonsense", and therefore you find it justifiable to dismiss her every points. At best you relegate it to "the same sort of thing we have heard from KTR and Dr. Mundo."

So let's try this in a different direction as a bit of an experiment, shall we?

I'm curious-- are you at all angry about, let's say, the abuse of young children and the subsequent coverups by the hierarchy of the Catholic Church? For the purposes of this discussion, let's assume your answer to that will be "yes".

Well, frankly, I find your anger to be nonsense. For one, I've heard this anger so many times and from so many people just like you, that I can't muster much interest in it any more. Furthermore, I find your epistemological foundation to be lacking in any solid grounding, hence your entire perspective is nonsense, and therefore I can't even justify your view on this rampant child abuse issue as anything that has any substance. And to top it off, I'm sick of you angry theists railing against this and that and using your angry attitudes to make inroads into society. In fact, why don't you just shut up? Why do I have to keep putting up with your anger? So angry--- you haters. It is just hate you know. It's all about hating, and rebellion. Rebellion grounded in inherent evil.

Well, perhaps you're just too young to know any better. Maybe you should shut up, grow up, and pray more.


So -- how does that grab you? Do you feel like your opinions have any merit now? Have I effectively taken your real, valid, and deeply held anger and marginalized it appropriately enough for you? How would you like to build a better society surrounded by people who would treat you like that -- and when you got angrier still at the way they treated you and your real complaint, it was simply an endless negative feedback loop focused on how inappropriate your anger is always going to be?

But Keep the Reason Can I know challenge you to listen to something by one of the great Christian political thinkers of the present day on a related issue http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/203464-5 That's Os Guinness.


I listened to it. Os Guinness is a very well educated, erudite, well spoken and reasonable man. It was a very fascinating and enlightening conversation, and I like a lot of what he had to say -- and I thank you for posting it.

But Os Guinness, of course, is not the problem.

To briefly recap, he's spot on about prayer in school. You either marginalize those who don't buy your religion (or any religion) or you secularize your own. So I agree with him-- and I need to loop out of this to return to it briefly:

I frankly have no interest in nativity scenes even on government property, providing the onus for taking care of them is on those who erect them-- and providing equal access to all is made clear and protected (that means if I want to put up my "Atheism Rules" display next to your "Christ in the Manger" display-- well, oh well). My one objection to that would be not on public grade school grounds. Schools simply are not the place to proselytize one's religion. It should be completely neutral and blind to any and all religious perspectives. The fact is, while children have some rights, they are not granted all rights, and the school issue is too chaotic a battleground to allow this-- schools need to be neutral. and unfortunately for religious people, neutrality is somewhat indistinguishable from atheism.

I also am not unable to see the connection between religion and politics. After all, I just said at the beginning of this, one's ideology informs their beliefs, which informs their actions. So if someone is religious, this ideology is going to compel their voting / politics. I have no problem with that either, providing again that it's understood that not everyone operates under the same moral compass. And yes, there are highly sticky scenarios regarding this, such as that of abortion.

But I wonder if the deeper challenge came through to you when you listened to this. Os Guinness was perfectly reasonable in his overview, but it was the callers into this interview that were the ones who are the problem.

How many atheists called in to that show? For those who did not watch, the number was 0. For full disclosure, this interview happened in 2008, around the time Obama was being beaten up for the comments of that lunatic reverend Wright he was associated with. Sop there were a number of callers, conservatives mainly, who wanted to flag the flames of right-wing partisanship. Par for the course.

But underlying almost every call? "We need prayer back in school!" "This country was founded on the principles of the bible!" "We need to go back to when I was a kid and we prayed!" And so on. Overwhelmingly, the response was the same tired litany of insisting that what we need in this religiously divided nation is even more religion.

Now maybe the atheists out there are too busy doing other things to call into the show, or too few in number, or whatever. That isn't the issue. the issue is, what we have to contend with is the exact same attitude you heard in those calls, every day, from almost every quarter, at every level. Civility? Ok. Let's be civil. Start by acknowledging our anger is valid, because it's grounded not in our immaturity or whatever else you want to marginalize it to be, but because the behavior of the religious is abyssal. Take ownership of what the consequence(s) of religion can be, and for chrissake, when we say we're angry about things that are valid issue to be angry with-- AGREE WITH US EVERY NOW AND THEN! Not because it means "you lose the argument", but because religion's standing in the way of human freedom and progress and safety and sexual security are wrong, and should be despised -- and should be brought to justice for justice's sake, not for the sake of an argument on philosophy.

But will it happen? I don't think so, not in any meaningful way. Here's why. In this thread: Why Are You A Christian thread, mitchell says the following to Emery:

mitchellmckain wrote:Christianity is the people. Put the shoe on the other foot and think about when Christians use the same sort of rhetoric to say that they don't hate the people just the atheism that will destroy those people. To respect people you have to respect their choices when you cannot objectively establish that their choice is wrong.

The word "religion" can and often does refer to something that Christians themselves villify but that does not equate Christianity to religion. So the proper discernment here is not Christianity versus people, but rather particular beliefs that people may have and teach versus the people and Christianity itself. You can attack the beliefs because the people themselves are doing this all the time -- it is one of the main activities of Christianity. But you cannot attack Christianity without attacking the people themselves.


MM assigns this dynamic to Christianity, but he fails to assign it to every religious believer and therefore, their religions, out there. All religious believers do the above: They equate their religion not to a religion (read: an ideology) but rather to something that needs to be given a greater standing than mere ideology. Christianity in all its myriad forms is in fact, mere ideology, and from where I sit, badly flawed ideology at that. But as long as people insist that their ideology is something specialized, and above reproach, and indeed, not even ideology but something "else" -- there is scant hope for this moving towards any greater civility.

The other issue I have with this civility issue is the plea for theists to try for once to recognize the time frames we're dealing with here. Even Guinness points out this debate has become strident within only the last generation. Theists have held the entire stage (with a few lone voices in the wilderness, and some of those voices crazy, like Nietschze) for centuries, the primary debate (which rages to this day) generally about niggling differences between interpretations and/or deities. Atheists have only recently stepped up to the table of discourse, and this has certainly increased since 9/11. Even the most "strident" (so-called) atheist out there, Dawkins, has made it clear that it was 9/11 and its aftermath that motivated him to say, "Okay, enough is enough. This has got to change, and I am PISSED OFF."

And this is a completely valid response to have. Other than some Muslims cheering this act of terrorism, who is not angry about 9/11 and the carnage it caused? And when we hear how "9/11 had nothing to do with religion" -- against every shred of common sense imaginable -- it merely exacerbates the problem.

If civility is wanted, then I suggest the very first thing to do is acknowledge the anger, and allow the anger to have its voice, and do not dismiss or marginalize those who have a valid reason to be angry at the impact of religion on human endeavors. This again is nothing less than basic common sense, and it's taught in almost every course on effective communication.

Dismissing, stifling, or ignoring legitimate anger is a recipe to do but one thing: Increase the anger.
Last edited by Keep The Reason on Wed Dec 14, 2011 12:09 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby cleve » Wed Dec 14, 2011 11:57 am

Keep The Reason wrote: ...your assessment of the Greta speech,...


Anybody can complain about human incompleteness. Babies cry all the time.
Basically, we need to grow up because we need to realize that we need each other. Our need for one another tends to get thwarted easily when we have difficulty with accepting each other's humanness, finiteness and social interpretations of religious mannerisms. It's not religion that we need, but rather moral behavior that is exercised in a just fashion toward each other. Because our own "religion" tends to get exercised in unfair and unjust ways toward others, we need to experience many facets of the religious dimension in order to unlearn the unfairness and unjustness and have it processed into more fair and just ways. From my personal experiences with organized religions, the group behavior expressed by their members (especially their leaders) tends to produce a distorted understanding of Jesus and what he wanted to communicate to us during his lifetime on earth. Up to this point in my life, what I have read and learned about Jesus - not religion - has provided the best model lifestyle for me to follow.
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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby Keep The Reason » Wed Dec 14, 2011 12:08 pm

cleve wrote:Anybody can complain about human incompleteness. Babies cry all the time.


what do you mean by this? I had a reflexive response to it, but think you should be given a chance to explain what you mean by it.

Basically, we need to grow up because we need to realize that we need each other. Our need for one another tends to get thwarted easily when we have difficulty with accepting each other's humanness, finiteness and social interpretations of religious mannerisms. It's not religion that we need, but rather moral behavior that is just.


This is true but at some levels (not all) what is both moral and just are different for different cultures, times, and peoples.
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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby Keep The Reason » Wed Dec 14, 2011 12:10 pm

yjoeyh wrote:
Keep The Reason wrote: but the other element to this topic is the tactic of calling athiests "angry" in order to diminish or dismiss their arguments (rather than confront the validity of their arguments).

I second this. It is actually just a variation on ad hominem.
I've probably done this myself from time to time, and I shouldn't have.
In my experience, addressing the validity of an argument itself, even when the other person seems to be quite angry, is a good way to "calm them down" enough to talk about it. Of course if you do address specific arguments in a logical manner and the person remains emotionally charged over it, you're pretty much spinning wheels trying to argue with them. I try to avoid getting wrapped up in those kinds of discussions as much as possible, but sometimes I can still fall into that trap.


Thanks, yjoeyh for the perspective.
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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby Moonwood the Hare » Wed Dec 14, 2011 12:51 pm

Keep The Reason wrote:Of course, I disagree with your assessment of the Greta speech, but the other element to this topic is the tactic of calling athiests "angry" in order to diminish or dismiss their arguments (rather than confront the validity of their arguments).

As to her other comments, that's not the point of this thread and you're free to raise it elsewhere if you wish-- I don't consider her (or anyone) perfect in their understanding, I just happen to think the angry athiest speech was solid and worth a listen and discussion. She could be completely off the rails on other issues.

I think her argument depends on questionable assumptions as I indicated above:
1. Religion is defined as belief in the supernatural - this is questionable because not all religions do involve supernatural beliefs. It is also ambivalent because a belief in the supernatural can mean a belief that nature is not all there is or a belief that there are events which the scientific method cannot explain or a belief that there are discreet gaps in the sequence of natural causality. There is also the problem that some atheists believe in the supernatural and hence on Greta Christina's own definition atheism and religion are not mutually exclusive.
2. Beliefs about the supernatural, unlike scientific beliefs, are unverifiable. - this seems to presupose both that scientific hypotheses are types of belief and that the scientific method is a verification process for these beliefs. Both these are questionable and several key atheist thinkers have questioned them.
3. Beliefs about the supernatural, unlike non-supernatural ideologies, are not open to correction by experience. This ignores just about the entire history of Christian spirituality which is all about reality checking and just about the entire history of atheist thought where there have been fashions and fads as well as arguments. So rather than advocating anti-superaturalism why not just advocate the ideal of an open society and piecemeal social engineering, Self knowledge through reflection, and openess to others especially those with whom we differ in our fundamental beliefs?
So the problem for me is that while she has listed a lot of social issues she has naively seen the cause of all these problems (the ones listed not all social problems whatsoever) as belief in the supernatural on the grounds that all the people responsible for these problems did believe in the supernatural and so were unquestioning in their social and political philosophy; she ends by giving examples of two supernaturalists who did question the social and political philosophies of their day and so undercuts her own argument that supernaturalists do not do this. Yet she places all her hopes for justice in belief in some form of naturalism. That is she thinks it would increase the possibility of justice if more people believed what she believes. But that raises the question can purely naturalistic beliefs give any basis for a belief in justice which after all cannot be objectively demonstrated to exist. This is not to deny that naturalists can aspire to justice but to ask where on a purely naturalistic worldview can we find a basis for a belief in justice.
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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby cleve » Wed Dec 14, 2011 1:41 pm

cleve wrote:Anybody can complain about human incompleteness. Babies cry all the time.

Keep The Reason wrote: what do you mean by this? I had a reflexive response to it, but think you should be given a chance to explain what you mean by it.

We come into this world as babies, and we go through the process of maturing in order to become adults.

cleve wrote:Basically, we need to grow up because we need to realize that we need each other. Our need for one another tends to get thwarted easily when we have difficulty with accepting each other's humanness, finiteness and social interpretations of religious mannerisms. It's not religion that we need, but rather moral behavior that is just.

Keep The Reason wrote:This is true but at some levels (not all) what is both moral and just are different for different cultures, times, and peoples.

True, there is a time and/or place for all types of things, just and unjust. We all need the opportunity to grow and make mistakes so we can mature. The pains that we experience while/from growing amongst one another tend to cause friction and more/different pain, but all of the pain comes from growth. Conclusion: hardly any weakness of someone else needs to be criticized - except our own.
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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby Aaron » Wed Dec 14, 2011 1:46 pm

Keep The Reason wrote:because religion's standing in the way of human freedom and progress and safety and sexual security are wrong, and should be despised -- and should be brought to justice for justice's sake, not for the sake of an argument on philosophy.

Justice has a sake? Justice does not exist outside of the individual's vision of justice, right? And if justice doesn't exist outside of the human mind how else can the individuals vision of justice be expressed to other individuals except through philosophy?

You're angry. Okay. But I don't see how you've made a valid case as to why your opinions are right and good and truthful and someone elses are not; actually I don't see how you've made a valid case as to why things are even right and good in and of themselves, which seems to be what you are implying when you say that religion should be brought to justice for justice's sake. Otherwise won't we will just be bringing religion to justice for KTR's justice's sake?
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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby Keep The Reason » Wed Dec 14, 2011 1:57 pm

Moonwood the Hare wrote:I think her argument depends on questionable assumptions as I indicated above:
1. Religion is defined as belief in the supernatural - this is questionable because not all religions do involve supernatural beliefs. It is also ambivalent because a belief in the supernatural can mean a belief that nature is not all there is or a belief that there are events which the scientific method cannot explain or a belief that there are discreet gaps in the sequence of natural causality. There is also the problem that some atheists believe in the supernatural and hence on Greta Christina's own definition atheism and religion are not mutually exclusive.
2. Beliefs about the supernatural, unlike scientific beliefs, are unverifiable. - this seems to presupose both that scientific hypotheses are types of belief and that the scientific method is a verification process for these beliefs. Both these are questionable and several key atheist thinkers have questioned them.

3. Beliefs about the supernatural, unlike non-supernatural ideologies, are not open to correction by experience. This ignores just about the entire history of Christian spirituality which is all about reality checking and just about the entire history of atheist thought where there have been fashions and fads as well as arguments. So rather than advocating anti-superaturalism why not just advocate the ideal of an open society and piecemeal social engineering, Self knowledge through reflection, and openess to others especially those with whom we differ in our fundamental beliefs?

So the problem for me is that while she has listed a lot of social issues she has naively seen the cause of all these problems (the ones listed not all social problems whatsoever) as belief in the supernatural on the grounds that all the people responsible for these problems did believe in the supernatural and so were unquestioning in their social and political philosophy; she ends by giving examples of two supernaturalists who did question the social and political philosophies of their day and so undercuts her own argument that supernaturalists do not do this. Yet she places all her hopes for justice in belief in some form of naturalism. That is she thinks it would increase the possibility of justice if more people believed what she believes. But that raises the question can purely naturalistic beliefs give any basis for a belief in justice which after all cannot be objectively demonstrated to exist. This is not to deny that naturalists can aspire to justice but to ask where on a purely naturalistic worldview can we find a basis for a belief in justice.


Make a case why I should be civil in my reply to you. Look what you did -- you took the one section I suggested be tackled separately ignored everything else I argued, and focused on this one piece.

Which isn't even anything more than "Well, your naturalist position is every bit as weak as my religionist position".

When people do what you've done here, my response to them is this: Fuck you. You can't even take a few minutes to hear my position, you're so wrapped up in listening to the sound of your own voice and you're far too busy patting yourself on the back.

And then you link me to some high-minded talk about "civility" -- something you cannot aspire to long enough to hear what the other person is saying. Don't read this in an "angry voice" -- forget that for a moment, and listen to what's actually being said. If you can. I don't know if you can do it.
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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby Keep The Reason » Wed Dec 14, 2011 2:04 pm

Aaron wrote:Justice has a sake? Justice does not exist outside of the individual's vision of justice, right? And if justice doesn't exist outside of the human mind how else can the individuals vision of justice be expressed to other individuals except through philosophy?


Justice can be expressed through law. And there are correlations between individuals wants and needs within any social order, and that commonality stands as their sense of justice. No one wants to have their eyes poked out just to have their eyes poked out. That's a common and parallel desire amongst all people.

You're angry. Okay. But I don't see how you've made a valid case as to why your opinions are right and good and truthful and someone elses are not; actually I don't see how you've made a valid case as to why things are even right and good in and of themselves, which seems to be what you are implying when you say that religion should be brought to justice for justice's sake. Otherwise won't we will just be bringing religion to justice for KTR's justice's sake?


Then you're in a lot of trouble from the perspective of my citing the immorality of child abuse and its cover up. Do you want to get into an argument of its "right or wrongness" of sexually abusing children? Are you not angry about it? Is your anger right, and good, and truthful if you do have it? I'd say I've made a pretty valid case on that one citation alone.

And yes, I have made the case of what is right and good many, many times, in discussions on the balance between cooperation and competition which is purely naturalistic and has precedence in other animals and is demonstrable.
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Re: "Why are all you atheists so angry?"

Postby Aaron » Wed Dec 14, 2011 2:51 pm

Keep The Reason wrote:
Aaron wrote:Justice has a sake? Justice does not exist outside of the individual's vision of justice, right? And if justice doesn't exist outside of the human mind how else can the individuals vision of justice be expressed to other individuals except through philosophy?


Justice can be expressed through law. And there are correlations between individuals wants and needs within any social order, and that commonality stands as their sense of justice. No one wants to have their eyes poked out just to have their eyes poked out. That's a common and parallel desire amongst all people.

Law determined by whom? Just because there are probably very few people (if none at all) wanting to get their eyes poked out doesn't automatically mean that poking peoples eyes out is wrong because it is wrong by some independent law, I think all we can fairly deduce is that it means that a majority of people want to keep their eye balls, anything more involves us assuming things about this sense of right and wrong something I believe we appeal to which we think everyone should be held accountable to, something which certainly feels to me like it exists independently of the individual's wish or whim.

Keep The Reason wrote:
Aaron wrote:You're angry. Okay. But I don't see how you've made a valid case as to why your opinions are right and good and truthful and someone elses are not; actually I don't see how you've made a valid case as to why things are even right and good in and of themselves, which seems to be what you are implying when you say that religion should be brought to justice for justice's sake. Otherwise won't we will just be bringing religion to justice for KTR's justice's sake?


Then you're in a lot of trouble from the perspective of my citing the immorality of child abuse and its cover up. Do you want to get into an argument of its "right or wrongness" of sexually abusing children? Are you not angry about it? Is your anger right, and good, and truthful if you do have it? I'd say I've made a pretty valid case on that one citation alone.

And yes, I have made the case of what is right and good many, many times, in discussions on the balance between cooperation and competition which is purely naturalistic and has precedence in other animals and is demonstrable.

I think we MUST get into an argument of its "right or wrongness"! A hundred years ago perhaps a person would have made a similar argument about the voting rights of women and how it should be clear that they shouldn't be allowed to vote, or we could go with slavery or homosexuality or anything that's changed from culture to culture time frame to time frame. You choose sexually abusing children because you think you'll be safe. You think that no one could ever disagree with you. Well if I understand correctly that hasn't always been the case in every culture at every point in human history. Its the same with the sanctity of human life (who determines when a person becomes too much of a burden on society, i.e. special needs unborn infants or even perfectly healthy unborn infants or what about old people?) or the purity of a families daughters (from what I understand daughters are sold into the sex industry in parts of our world even today).

And you have made your case of what is right and good many times and it stinks. Why should we ever think that the unconscionable path of natural selection would ever bring us something virtuous and good? Where would we ever get the funny idea that cooperation (which if your theory has any validity only propagates down to the next generation if it is profitable for survival, not because it is in fact good or right, as far as the process of natural selection is concerned so such thing exists and if it does there is no means within the process by which it can be intentionally and virtuously employed, its purely by accident that cooperating helps with survival) is the source of this sort of transcendental law of rightness by which a person appeals to justice for justice's sake and not rather appeal to the 'feeling' of justice which has been conditioned inside of their heads by cooperation through the process of natural selection for the last million years?
Last edited by Aaron on Wed Dec 14, 2011 3:18 pm, edited 4 times in total.
"I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen: not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else" - C.S. Lewis
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