Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other things

Christians, atheists, theists and skeptics: make your best case here.

Moderator: Spamcops

Forum rules
Keep it real, minimal cutting and pasting please: we want to hear what YOU have to say!

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Moonwood the Hare » Sat Nov 19, 2011 2:17 pm

Dr Mundo wrote: I guess you both have answered my question better than I thought at first. I know the hypothetical was not what would make sense to you. That was the point. IF given the choice between one or the other under the circumstances I set up for you I wanted you both to say that, "Yes Medicine is more effective than prayer and I would chose medicine." It may be unfair to you and you probably wouldn't see the point in answering such a question. It is however no different than, when I say for the sake of the discussion, that I also believe that God exists. It is not fair to me because I have no idea how it would work, what I would think, so and, and so forth. But I would grant you that, I don't care anymore that you guys wont do the same, so lets just all forget it. At least now I know neither you nor Rian think of Prayer as a way for God to magically help you in some way. Its just to make you feel better. For instance if you had cancer I don't think you would pray to god to cure your cancer, if I am understanding you both correctly. You would probably pray to make you feel at ease with the fact that you have cancer, and you just want to think of it in a different perspective. That doesn't mean you think God would intervene and provide any tangible/physical benefit though. To think otherwise would be silly. Beyond silly in my opinion.

Actually, I would pray to God to heal my cancer and I suspect Rian would as well. And maybe God would intervene. Or maybe I would have chemotherapy and it would work and I would also see that as an answer to prayer. But to make that result the central purpose of my prayer and to think God had failed if he did not do that would be wrong - actually I don't like wrong in that context because at the end of the day you feel what you feel, and of course I don't know how I would react in practice to discovering I had cancer though I suppose it is not unlikely. But you are right, finding your way into someone else's world view is very difficult. There is a thing Sartre said which I really like; it's near the end of Existentialism and Humanism. I'll quote him in full:
You can see from these few reflections that nothing could be more unjust than the objections people raise against us. Existentialism is nothing else but an attempt to draw the full conclusions from a consistently atheistic position. Its intention is not in the least that of plunging men into despair. And if by despair one means as the Christians do – any attitude of unbelief, the despair of the existentialists is something different. Existentialism is not atheist in the sense that it would exhaust itself in demonstrations of the non-existence of God. It declares, rather, that even if God existed that would make no difference from its point of view. Not that we believe God does exist, but we think that the real problem is not that of His existence; what man needs is to find himself again and to understand that nothing can save him from himself, not even a valid proof of the existence of God. In this sense existentialism is optimistic. It is a doctrine of action, and it is only by self-deception, by confining their own despair with ours that Christians can describe us as without hope.

In other words Sartre is saying that Christians project parts of their own world view onto existentialism and I think we all tend to do that kind of thing to say well if I thought that I'd feel this, and the other person knows that is not what they feel. Of course they could be mistaken about their own feelings, to have masked sorrow for example but there are limits to that. If someone shows no sign of a particular emotion then ascribing that emotion to them in some occult manner seems particularly fruitless.
Oh, just in case you are interested I'll give you a link to Sartre's essay which is available on line in entirety. http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/sartre/works/exist/sartre.htm
Epistemology is the new rock 'n' roll!
User avatar
Moonwood the Hare
Senior member
Senior member
 
Posts: 1880
Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:24 am
Affiliation: Christian - pretty traditional

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Keep The Reason » Sat Nov 19, 2011 5:20 pm

Moonwood the Hare wrote:Well, perhaps that says something about you.


I'm not the one who needs to convince myself I'm "lining myself up with the power behind the universe", so before you start worrying about me, I'd suggest you check out yourselves.

But hey, that you're not able to answer the question isn't surprising. Not in the least. For the record, that desire you have still sounds pretty pathetic and craven and even supremely -- dare I say infinitely?-- selfish.
==============
Religion is the child's method to satisfy curiosity, science is the adult's method to satisfy curiosity.
--GS
Keep The Reason
Senior member
Senior member
 
Posts: 2866
Joined: Wed May 11, 2011 4:50 pm
Affiliation: Reasonist

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Moonwood the Hare » Sun Nov 20, 2011 5:56 am

Your sum didn't add up KTR. We don't desire only things we lack, because we also desire to keep the good things we already have. Now there are lots of things I already have in some measure but that I would like more of like patience, or love for others or in short to be lined up with the values I see in God who is the power behind the universe. I don't know KTR, you claim to value critical thinking but seem in reality to spend an awful lot of time in rather amateurish quasi Freudian psychological analysis. But using psychological theories to explain away beliefs that contradict their own seems to me to be what people do when they don't really have an argument for their position, and a lot of the time it looks to me like that is where you are. Rather than encourage you to abandon critical thinking I would like to see you sharpen up your critical approach and engage in argument rather than waving the wooden sword of trite psychological analysis. I'm sorry if that sounds harsh but that is how this looks to me.
Epistemology is the new rock 'n' roll!
User avatar
Moonwood the Hare
Senior member
Senior member
 
Posts: 1880
Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:24 am
Affiliation: Christian - pretty traditional

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Keep The Reason » Sun Nov 20, 2011 9:59 am

Moonwood the Hare wrote:Your sum didn't add up KTR. We don't desire only things we lack, because we also desire to keep the good things we already have. Now there are lots of things I already have in some measure but that I would like more of like patience, or love for others or in short to be lined up with the values I see in God who is the power behind the universe.

I don't know KTR, you claim to value critical thinking but seem in reality to spend an awful lot of time in rather amateurish quasi Freudian psychological analysis. But using psychological theories to explain away beliefs that contradict their own seems to me to be what people do when they don't really have an argument against those beliefs, and a lot of the time it looks to me like that is where you are. Rather than encourage you to abandon critical thinking I would like to see you sharpen up your critical approach and engage in argument rather than waving the wooden sword of trite psychological analysis. I'm sorry if that sounds harsh but that is how this looks to me.


You'll have to support the charge of "an awful lot of time". For the record, you spend an awful lot of time discussing these beliefs purely in a historical context with little effort to speak of their present impact, but don't get me wrong-- I learn a lot form you on that point. Your knowledge of the history of how the bible played a part in human civilization is of very high interest; and I think of you as a resident expert. Bravo.

But -- I'm still asking a valid question here, your disdain for it notwithstanding and your casting it as exclusively some kind of quasi-Freudian analysis a red herring.

Since you opened up the subject by stating you seek to "line yourself up with the power behind the universe", did you not? I'm certain you did write those words.

Are you saying I have no basis for asking you WHY you seek to do that?

Let's say I went around saying "I seek to line myself up with the power behind technology" -- are you telling me it wouldn't even cross your mind to suggest such a comment wouldn't make you wonder about what my desire was about?

There's no escaping that to desire something means wanting to fill a lack. Saying "I desire to hold onto the good things" is merely another way of saying "I do not want less (read: lack thereof) of the good things"; you have some degree of fear of losing something-- be it not wanting less patience or love or whatever. And there's nothing wrong with that, as long as we're honest about it.

So if you tell me you're simply looking to line up with the values of god (which opens a whole can of worms there, as to what those "values" are, but let's let it pass for a moment) and it's to the core of you totally altruistic... well, to that I will say "Well done! Very nice for you."

And the fact that you attain everlasting life? Well, let's just agree that that's a fringe benefit you don't even have a whisper of considering is to be yours in your 100% pure altruistic devotion to line yourself up with the power behind the universe. That is the honest truth you offer, right? Nothing whatsoever in it for you other than the joy in lining yourself up with the power behind the universe and its values? Just making sure, because wow, I would say such pure altruism is.... well, it's on a par with what Jesus was supposedly able to accomplish. Utterly pure and sinless.

Now, maybe you'll say that you haven't actually attained that level of purity and that Jesus' sacrifice fills that for you, which is also fine given the argument's context. Hmmm-- alas, this means your present state isn't quite so pristine, and thus, I am asking the same question-- what is it with this desire? What is it you.... sorry, but the word just popped into my head -- covet?

Now as to god itself, we have a really different problem. Here's the author of everything, which would by definition mean that everything that is comes from his power (the one "behind the universe"). But is that the case? seems to me that god is lacking in worship points. Not enough people to sing his praises. He did ask Abraham to go forth, be fruitful and multiply, right? So it would seem he specifically wants more people. I'm not sure why he doesn't just pop them into existence, but maybe he wants us to have lots of sex -- or maybe he wants so many of us that we turn the planet into a cesspool; who knows (maybe it's just a Bronze Age myth where multiplying was needed for high infant mortality and strength of community and this god didn't know jack shit about pollution or explosive population growths because it doesn't exist) -- ok, anyway, this 100-percenter god seems to have a lot of lacks, and desires to fill those lacks, and there's a mountain of subsequent questions that come from those lacks and desires, so it's valid to ask "How Come?"

Maybe I'll start a separate thread on it.
==============
Religion is the child's method to satisfy curiosity, science is the adult's method to satisfy curiosity.
--GS
Keep The Reason
Senior member
Senior member
 
Posts: 2866
Joined: Wed May 11, 2011 4:50 pm
Affiliation: Reasonist

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Moonwood the Hare » Sun Nov 20, 2011 11:40 am

Hi KTR
You'll have to support the charge of "an awful lot of time". For the record, you spend an awful lot of time discussing these beliefs purely in a historical context with little effort to speak of their present impact, but don't get me wrong-- I learn a lot form you on that point. Your knowledge of the history of how the bible played a part in human civilization is of very high interest; and I think of you as a resident expert. Bravo.

It seems to me you have been doing a lot of this recently. You suggest that people's beliefs have some kind of hidden cause or unconscious motive going back say to childhood insecurities. Usually I go in for discussing the historical context of beliefs because someone has raised some issue where it just seemed to me the facts were wrong. So for example I did that when I thought you were reading modern evangelical ideas back into Martin Luther. But I'm not an expert (really, that would be become clear if I were grilled by a historian!) and as with so many things I don't know why people don't know stuff.
Since you opened up the subject by stating you seek to "line yourself up with the power behind the universe", did you not? I'm certain you did write those words.

Are you saying I have no basis for asking you WHY you seek to do that?

Well you can ask but you may not get a satisfactory answer. I'm all in favour of people exploring their psychological motivations; I spend quite a bit of time these days helping people to do it or having people help me to do it but I don't think it is an easy thing to do. So If my desire to do that rises from some kind of personal flaw which in turn arises from say a dodgy relationship with my father then so be it, I may discover that one day and then on the basis of that discovery I might have to re-evaluate why and whether I want to do that. But if as I believe that desire is one which itself stems from the nature of the universe and God then it does not need further explanation. So I think yes, you have a basis for asking but that stems from your own worldview; I think to you belief in God is pathological and so needs this kind of explanation. To me neither belief nor unbelief is in itself pathological, at least not psychologically. It is not clear to me whether you think religious beliefs always stem from these kind of pathological causes or whether you think they only sometimes do. For myself I would say that religious beliefs do sometimes have pathological causes and in such cases they are better abandoned.
Let's say I went around saying "I seek to line myself up with the power behind technology" -- are you telling me it wouldn't even cross your mind to suggest such a comment wouldn't make you wonder about what my desire was about?

I'd assume you meant roughly what Bacon meant when he said if we want to control nature we must first submit to her since the power behind technology is the power in nature itself.
There's no escaping that to desire something means wanting to fill a lack. Saying "I desire to hold onto the good things" is merely another way of saying "I do not want less (read: lack thereof) of the good things"; you have some degree of fear of losing something-- be it not wanting less patience or love or whatever. And there's nothing wrong with that, as long as we're honest about it.

Okay, fair enough. We say the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom and perfect love casts out all fear. It's a journey.
So if you tell me you're simply looking to line up with the values of god (which opens a whole can of worms there, as to what those "values" are, but let's let it pass for a moment) and it's to the core of you totally altruistic... well, to that I will say "Well done! Very nice for you."

And the fact that you attain everlasting life? Well, let's just agree that that's a fringe benefit you don't even have a whisper of considering is to be yours in your 100% pure altruistic devotion to line yourself up with the power behind the universe. That is the honest truth you offer, right? Nothing whatsoever in it for you other than the joy in lining yourself up with the power behind the universe and its values? Just making sure, because wow, I would say such pure altruism is.... well, it's on a par with what Jesus was supposedly able to accomplish. Utterly pure and sinless.

Now, maybe you'll say that you haven't actually attained that level of purity and that Jesus' sacrifice fills that for you, which is also fine given the argument's context. Hmmm-- alas, this means your present state isn't quite so pristine, and thus, I am asking the same question-- what is it with this desire? What is it you.... sorry, but the word just popped into my head -- covet?

Well, I wasn't thinking about that. Some Christians have argued that we should want God for himself not for what he gives, others have said the opposite. I don't really dwell on that. For me it would be seeking a theoretical answer to an existential problem which I think is nearly always unwise. To keep analysing my motives at that level would be like digging up a plant every few days to check if it was growing.
Now as to god itself, we have a really different problem. Here's the author of everything, which would by definition mean that everything that is comes from his power (the one "behind the universe"). But is that the case? seems to me that god is lacking in worship points. Not enough people to sing his praises. He did ask Abraham to go forth, be fruitful and multiply, right? So it would seem he specifically wants more people. I'm not sure why he doesn't just pop them into existence, but maybe he wants us to have lots of sex -- or maybe he wants so many of us that we turn the planet into a cesspool; who knows (maybe it's just a Bronze Age myth where multiplying was needed for high infant mortality and strength of community and this god didn't know jack shit about pollution or explosive population growths because it doesn't exist) -- ok, anyway, this 100-percenter god seems to have a lot of lacks, and desires to fill those lacks, and there's a mountain of subsequent questions that come from those lacks and desires, so it's valid to ask "How Come?"

Well I agree that our issues have changed since the days when the Old Testament was written and so we have to re-imagine the underlying values in our context. But the other issue - Why does God want worship - well we can speculate about that but in the end there are things which are basic in any worldview. It's like if you go to a materialist and say, 'yes but why does a quark have the properties and liabilities it does, why is a quark a quark?' he won't be able to answer. If you go to a rationalist and say 'but why do objects have to be identical to themselves? well he won't be able to answer. If you ask a Marxist why history is controlled by economic relations he won't be able to answer and it is the same here.
Epistemology is the new rock 'n' roll!
User avatar
Moonwood the Hare
Senior member
Senior member
 
Posts: 1880
Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:24 am
Affiliation: Christian - pretty traditional

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Aaron » Mon Nov 21, 2011 10:44 am

Rian wrote:Now let me add that I quite agree with you that we can't prove that prayer brought something about. However, we can't prove that it didn't, either. But I don't think that's the main point of prayer, anyway. However, we're told to bring things before God and to ask - and I find that often, it's a process, and what I was asking for in the beginning somehow isn't what I'm asking for anymore further down the road.


My perspective on prayer has changed recently. For quite a while now I had been of the opinion that God's will will be done no matter what so I always felt that my prayers were never really serving much of a purpose, but I never felt like I had it quite right (and I suppose I still don't) I just didn't know what to do about it. Now to be clear I am still of the belief that God is entirely sovereign and nothing or no one is able to thwart his plans. He will accomplish what he sets out to do, of that I'm sure.

But recently it was brought to my attention that in the Lord's prayer Jesus teaches his disciples to pray that God's will be done on earth as it is in heaven. It struck me then that God's will is not always done on earth. People choose to do things that conflict with his will all the time, I do stupid things all the time.

I won't pretend to have this all figured out, but it does seem to me that God has given us free choice, and with that we must accept the consequences of our actions. It became clear to me then that I should be praying without ceasing as Paul wrote, praying that God's will be done on earth as it is in heaven. This doesn't mean that we don't have to do anything though, it is God's will that we obey his commands, it would be quite the ruse to pray for his will to be done and then never get off our seats.

Anyways, ever since I have come to that understanding my prayer time has become something that I love. I have found that I love to come before God and pray for other people. As said above, I will be the first to admit I'm not really sure how it works, but perhaps it has something to do with our free will and the fact that our choices have real consequences and that somehow God will work through our actions whether good or bad to accomplish his will.
"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
User avatar
Aaron
veteran
veteran
 
Posts: 951
Joined: Mon Mar 23, 2009 9:29 pm
Location: Alaska
Affiliation: Christian

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Keep The Reason » Mon Nov 21, 2011 11:37 am

Moonwood the Hare wrote:It seems to me you have been doing a lot of this recently. You suggest that people's beliefs have some kind of hidden cause or unconscious motive going back say to childhood insecurities.


I think theism itself is a psychological symptom of a childhood need; the childhood of the human species. I've never been shy about that. I'm also not the first person to raise its specter. "Santa Claus for adults" "My Invisible Friend" "Sky Daddy", "Fairy Tales" -- none of these originate with me personally; this is the conclusion of the vast majority of non-believers out there.

The problem as I see it is that you theists claim it's all about some deeper connection (that is somehow not psychological, which I'd argue is impossible by definition), but you offer no support for that claim.

You folks like to blame us for your worldview not having any concrete substantiation, and when it comes to me, I will happily throw that right back into your laps to deal with. Until you do, I, as a materialist, Will have certain considerations to lead me to conclusions as to why you do behave and believe the way you do -- and when guys like mitchell and cleve start talking about their childhood's and their reactions to that childhood, I'm going to say "That's smoke."

Basically, your entire rebuttal to me is that -- once again -- the theist has some kind of special "contact" or "method" that those of us who don't believe are missing. Well, fine-- but then pony up and show us some evidence of what it is you have, that we don't.

Usually I go in for discussing the historical context of beliefs because someone has raised some issue where it just seemed to me the facts were wrong. So for example I did that when I thought you were reading modern evangelical ideas back into Martin Luther. But I'm not an expert (really, that would be become clear if I were grilled by a historian!) and as with so many things I don't know why people don't know stuff.


You're slippery when it comes to this stuff and it's really a completely different discussion. In short, you redefine "fundamentalist" into "Evangelical" when it suits you. Evangelicals of the 21st century are, indeed, a lot different from medieval believers, but in terms of them being fundamentalist they are not. Both would agree in a 6 day creation, a First Cause argument, and a completely ignorant view of the core planks of existence as we know them. But again-- this is so off topic that it can be dealt with elsewhere.

Well you can ask but you may not get a satisfactory answer.


Of course I won't get a satisfactory answer since all the theistic answers are how it is not X, Y and Z but rather it's grounded in some magical connection the theist happily has and the materialist does not. What would be a satisfactory answer would involve some demonstrable keystone for any of this, and we all know-- you ain't got that.

I'm all in favour of people exploring their psychological motivations; I spend quite a bit of time these days helping people to do it or having people help me to do it but I don't think it is an easy thing to do.


Well, I'm glad you've granted yourself the freedom to do that for others while castigated others for doing it in the same breath. So what would you make of Mitch's ""liberal upbringing" story or cleve's "overly critical thinking father devoid of love" model? These folks offered these comments without any prodding from me; so apparently they wanted us to know about them; now, in the venue of a forum, they are open for examination.

So If my desire to do that rises from some kind of personal flaw which in turn arises from say a dodgy relationship with my father then so be it, I may discover that one day and then on the basis of that discovery I might have to re-evaluate why and whether I want to do that. But if as I believe that desire is one which itself stems from the nature of the universe and God then it does not need further explanation.


And therein lies a totally different way to view the world, and therein lies our deepest conflict. To say, "Oh well, that's the way it is" on something like this is of huge import to one's well being, and to suggest it doesn't need further explanation (though you've provided no concrete explanation), is a chasm we aren't going to be able to easily bridge. And in and of itself stands as the engine behind why people do some pretty heinous things in the name of their religious beliefs. How you don't know better than that is somewhat astonishing to me. But then-- you absurdly compare apples to meteors on this point which I'll respond to below when you offer it as way of explanation.

So I think yes, you have a basis for asking but that stems from your own worldview; I think to you belief in God is pathological and so needs this kind of explanation. To me neither belief nor unbelief is in itself pathological, at least not psychologically. It is not clear to me whether you think religious beliefs always stem from these kind of pathological causes or whether you think they only sometimes do. For myself I would say that religious beliefs do sometimes have pathological causes and in such cases they are better abandoned.


It's psychological -- it's a need some people have and others don't.

I'd assume you meant roughly what Bacon meant when he said if we want to control nature we must first submit to her since the power behind technology is the power in nature itself.


No, I meant that someone who craves to line themselves up with power needs to account for what it is they mean. I long ago learned that all I can control, to some marginal degree, are the choices I make. I can't control anything else, not even the consequences of those choices-- but the craving for such control is delusional and damaging to us all.

Okay, fair enough. We say the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom and perfect love casts out all fear. It's a journey.


Too thin a reply. There is some honor in this fear; if I call you out on this fear claim, you'll tell me what? That it's a special kind of fear. Yes or no?

If yes, then we're back to the theist once more stating how they have something special and different; how even fear, in their case, is some noble and positive force. And when asked to show support for it, they won't be able to do so. If the answer is "no", then what kind of an ideology begins grounded in fear? And if fear isn't a psychological and even pathological keystone upon which to found an ideology, I don't know what would possibly suffice to define one as such.

By the way -- fear can motivated positive consequences; hell, I'm afraid of flying and so do it often as I can to overcome it, but I'd much prefer not having the fear at all in the first place and just doing it because it's fun and exciting and enjoyable to do. And I'm also aware of people courting fear because it turns them on; and that's fine if that's their choice. But to fear that which is supposed to love you and cherish you? That's... well, that's some weird psychology to say the least.

Well, I wasn't thinking about that. Some Christians have argued that we should want God for himself not for what he gives, others have said the opposite. I don't really dwell on that. For me it would be seeking a theoretical answer to an existential problem which I think is nearly always unwise. To keep analysing my motives at that level would be like digging up a plant every few days to check if it was growing.


You sound like you're evading the question. What's the difference between you and me then if the above is true? I at least examined the problem and came to a conclusion based on thinking it through. You don't even want to address it. What if your motive is "the wrong one"-- or what if "not dwelling on one's motive" is a wrong choice? Why doesn't Pascal's Wager suddenly apply to you and your choice? Are you supposed to look inward and consider your relationship to god and Jesus and so on? And why would the answer be "theoretical" if god exists and there's a concrete plan for salvation? If it's concrete, what's theoretical about that answer?

Well I agree that our issues have changed since the days when the Old Testament was written and so we have to re-imagine the underlying values in our context. But the other issue - Why does God want worship - well we can speculate about that but in the end there are things which are basic in any worldview. It's like if you go to a materialist and say, 'yes but why does a quark have the properties and liabilities it does, why is a quark a quark?' he won't be able to answer. If you go to a rationalist and say 'but why do objects have to be identical to themselves? well he won't be able to answer. If you ask a Marxist why history is controlled by economic relations he won't be able to answer and it is the same here.


Here's where you compare apples to meteors. Your materialists' questions are not a likewise comparison to that of an entity you claim has an intellect. The quark, the identity of an object, these are not intellectual entities with sapience. They are things; and things are what they are neutrally. There is a pen sitting on my desk; it is not alive, nor aware, nor can it reason; it is a pen because that is what it is, without volition. I can say, "It is a pen because it was designed to be a pen" and the pen cannot argue or complain. If I were to say, "That is a pen and it is compelled to want to write something" I would expect to be held to account for such a claim. But I do not make that claim; the pen will write, but not because it desires to do so.

God, however, is not of the same category, according to the theist. God is an entity with a mind of some kind, and now apparently with needs and desires. You say god has wants and needs, and one of those wants or needs is worship. In demanding an account for this, you reply "Well, that is simply the way it is" as if god is a pen or an object; well that's fine if you want to go that way, but now you worship a god that is under the preeminence of something greater than he/she/ or it. If god is trapped being beholden to worship "because that is the nature of things" you have a god who is enthralled to the nature of things he himself has created!

Are you saying he cannot be otherwise? Can he choose not to be so?
==============
Religion is the child's method to satisfy curiosity, science is the adult's method to satisfy curiosity.
--GS
Keep The Reason
Senior member
Senior member
 
Posts: 2866
Joined: Wed May 11, 2011 4:50 pm
Affiliation: Reasonist

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Dr Mundo » Mon Nov 21, 2011 3:19 pm

Moonwood the Hare wrote:Actually, I would pray to God to heal my cancer and I suspect Rian would as well. And maybe God would intervene. Or maybe I would have chemotherapy and it would work and I would also see that as an answer to prayer. But to make that result the central purpose of my prayer and to think God had failed if he did not do that would be wrong - actually I don't like wrong in that context because at the end of the day you feel what you feel, and of course I don't know how I would react in practice to discovering I had cancer though I suppose it is not unlikely. But you are right, finding your way into someone else's world view is very difficult.
Even though you thought Rian would agree with you on this I will only speak directly towards you, If she thinks what you said reflects her thoughts then include her in here too. Sorry if this sound upsetting or rude it’s not my intention, so here we go.

I don't think you realize just how idiotic your stance really is. I would also add arrogant and selfish. I am typically fine with selfish behavior as I think its impossible (extremely difficult at least) to avoid, however this type of thinking is a whole new level of selfishness that even upsets me. You are telling me that you think by telepathic communication with the author of the cosmos that it will magically heal your cancer? That is the idiotic part. The arrogant part is that you believe that the greatest being in the universe one whose existence can’t even be known, is somehow looking out for you, waiting for you to ask to remove a cancer from your body, even though you have access to some pretty sophisticated medical equipment and treatments. Yet there are literally millions upon millions of helpless children living under conditions far worse than a person in a developed nation with cancer. I don’t think you can imagine the sincerity of the prayer of those children or their mothers. And you think God will heal your cancer over providing them at least drinking water that isn’t contaminated? Idiotic is the best word I can come up with for that. On the flip side however, if God doesn’t magically heal your cancer, you are saying he still wins out as the good guy. No matter what happens in your world view God wins. It is beyond my grasp as to why there are people who, when they really think about it, still believe as you do. You need some sort of savior for your life, fine, punish your own self with this mental prison you have set up I could care less about how you wish to spend your time dealing with imaginary characters. Just don’t bring that shit to where it can do any unwanted harm for the rest of us. Not that you do it specifically, the last statement was meant to be directed at religion in general, for the most part you seem more reasonable than your buddies.
The question [Do you believe in God?] has a peculiar structure. If I say no, do I mean I'm convinced God doesn't exist, or do I mean I'm not convinced he does exist? Those are two very different questions. [Dr. Arroway]
User avatar
Dr Mundo
Senior member
Senior member
 
Posts: 1038
Joined: Fri Jul 01, 2011 6:31 am
Location: Central California
Affiliation: Chuck-e-Cheese

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Moonwood the Hare » Mon Nov 21, 2011 4:10 pm

Well Keep the Reason you have certainly given me a lot to reply to. At certain points I think you misunderstand me to the point where you attribute views to me which are the exact opposite of what I was trying to convey but I think part of the issue is that ones view can only unfold slowly. There are parts of your own view that remain unclear to me as well. And sometimes in order to answer the questions you ask I would have to go into things very deeply, and become highly speculative and would end up saying things like there have been 3 main Christian views on this and all of them have some merit and I suspect that will frustrate you. But if I don't know, I don't.
I think theism itself is a psychological symptom of a childhood need; the childhood of the human species. I've never been shy about that. I'm also not the first person to raise its specter. "Santa Claus for adults" "My Invisible Friend" "Sky Daddy", "Fairy Tales" -- none of these originate with me personally; this is the conclusion of the vast majority of non-believers out there.

The problem as I see it is that you theists claim it's all about some deeper connection (that is somehow not psychological, which I'd argue is impossible by definition), but you offer no support for that claim.

You folks like to blame us for your worldview not having any concrete substantiation, and when it comes to me, I will happily throw that right back into your laps to deal with. Until you do, I, as a materialist, Will have certain considerations to lead me to conclusions as to why you do behave and believe the way you do -- and when guys like mitchell and cleve start talking about their childhood's and their reactions to that childhood, I'm going to say "That's smoke."

Basically, your entire rebuttal to me is that -- once again -- the theist has some kind of special "contact" or "method" that those of us who don't believe are missing. Well, fine-- but then pony up and show us some evidence of what it is you have, that we don't.

I am not really persuaded by analogies between the cultural history of mankind and theories about child development. It seems to me the two are different enough for the one not to throw much light on the other. A theory of cultural development or progress is a very tricky thing to construct and I don't think it is helped by vague analogies with individual development.

I would agree that anything a human being experiences is experienced psychologically. I don't have a problem with that at all. However if to experience something psychologically means that all experience must be explained as being a product of mechanistic causes and reducible to to the interplay of physical forces then unless one treads very carefully one ends up upholding a view where there can be no valid basis for any belief since the propositional content of a belief is not physical and a purely physicalist view of psychology will have to hold that no belief is ever held in virtue of its propositional content so that one can never reach the truth by reasoning.

I never said myself that your worldview didn't have concrete substantiation. I don't even know what concrete substantiation would mean in this context. But this is the point where I am saying the exact opposite of what you think I am saying. Far from saying theism has some special basis that materialists are missing I would say that both theism and materialism have the same basis in so far as both are based on experience. A materialist experiences matter or some kind of impersonal stuff as the ultimate reality and the theist experiences God as the ultimate reality. It is true that some theists believe that God reveals himself and matter does not so we can say matter is passive epistemically where God is active but in terms of the experience of the knower I think it is broadly similar.
You're slippery when it comes to this stuff and it's really a completely different discussion. In short, you redefine "fundamentalist" into "Evangelical" when it suits you. Evangelicals of the 21st century are, indeed, a lot different from medieval believers, but in terms of them being fundamentalist they are not. Both would agree in a 6 day creation, a First Cause argument, and a completely ignorant view of the core planks of existence as we know them. But again-- this is so off topic that it can be dealt with elsewhere.

Well you're going a bit wobbly on your facts again. Terms like fundamentalist and evangelical are a bit slippery. I try to be consistent in my use of them but that only results in me being idiosyncratic. Anyway the great medieval thinkers used the best science available to them and very few believed in a literal six day creation (have you read say Augustine or Gregory or Aquinas on this kind of thing?) And I don't believe in a first cause argument (one of the problems here is that in modern science and philosophy and in medieval science and philosophy cause has a different meaning - Kuhn points this out as being a key point that lead him to his idea of changing paradigms)
Of course I won't get a satisfactory answer since all the theistic answers are how it is not X, Y and Z but rather it's grounded in some magical connection the theist happily has and the materialist does not. What would be a satisfactory answer would involve some demonstrable keystone for any of this, and we all know-- you ain't got that.

Well, so far I have not really grasped what you mean by demonstrability. We had a long discussion on this and never got to the bottom of it.
I had said:
I'm all in favour of people exploring their psychological motivations; I spend quite a bit of time these days helping people to do it or having people help me to do it but I don't think it is an easy thing to do.

You replied:
Well, I'm glad you've granted yourself the freedom to do that for others while castigated others for doing it in the same breath. So what would you make of Mitch's ""liberal upbringing" story or cleve's "overly critical thinking father devoid of love" model? These folks offered these comments without any prodding from me; so apparently they wanted us to know about them; now, in the venue of a forum, they are open for examination.

I need to develop this. In the last few centuries we have developed a lot of theories, or competing models about how human minds operate. Many of these theories try to explain how what is going on in the part of our minds which is not accessible can influence us. However these insights were developed for use in the context of therapeutic psychology where in a safe environment and over a prolonged period of time people can tease out their underlying motives. Trying to use these techniques in a forum where there is no real interpersonal context and in an accusatory way is unwise and is likely to prove highly infective. It is true that Freud did try to produce theories to account for all religious belief and his theories were rather more subtle than those of most 21st Century atheists. Nevertheless those theories have not generally been held to hold up as valid. Generally, and you can ask the atheistic therapists on this site to confirm this for you, therapists will not use the tools of their trade, the theories and models, as a means of trying to undermine a client's belief system. That does not mean than people's beliefs do not change as a result of their experience in therapy but the traffic is not one way. Scott Peck gives some very interesting accounts of his own experience as a therapist and how many clients who came as believers emerged from therapy as atheists and vice versa and it puzzled him how these opposite effects could arise from the same therapist using the same method with different clients.
And therein lies a totally different way to view the world, and therein lies our deepest conflict. To say, "Oh well, that's the way it is" on something like this is of huge import to one's well being, and to suggest it doesn't need further explanation (though you've provided no concrete explanation), is a chasm we aren't going to be able to easily bridge. And in and of itself stands as the engine behind why people do some pretty heinous things in the name of their religious beliefs. How you don't know better than that is somewhat astonishing to me. But then-- you absurdly compare apples to meteors on this point which I'll respond to below when you offer it as way of explanation.

Yes it does stem from a different view of the worldview. None the less I think the basic point stands and the differences you discuss below are not as significant as you think. After we have pushed back our explanations we all come to something we say just is and cannot be explained; we just differ about what it is. And those differences about what is basic are our religious beliefs and in this limited sense I would claim materialism is a religious belief.
I said:
So I think yes, you have a basis for asking but that stems from your own worldview; I think to you belief in God is pathological and so needs this kind of explanation. To me neither belief nor unbelief is in itself pathological, at least not psychologically. It is not clear to me whether you think religious beliefs always stem from these kind of pathological causes or whether you think they only sometimes do. For myself I would say that religious beliefs do sometimes have pathological causes and in such cases they are better abandoned.

To which you replied:
it's psychological -- it's a need some people have and others don't.

I think we have agreed that whatever we experience must in some sense be psychological but my question was is it pathological. And if people differ in their needs does that imply that one set of needs must be pathological and the other not. We know exactly where this kind of view of religion can lead; Stalin's psyche wards show us that so do the torture chambers of the inquisition.
No, I meant that someone who craves to line themselves up with power needs to account for what it is they mean. I long ago learned that all I can control, to some marginal degree, are the choices I make. I can't control anything else, not even the consequences of those choices-- but the craving for such control is delusional and damaging to us all.

Well I usually aim at a particular consequence but this is where my Popperianism comes to the fore because he points out that actions can have unintended consequences so we should always have strong mechanisms for change. But let me explain a little more of what I mean. I believe that the cosmos has a law structure that was created by God, by moving in line with that structure we act in accord with what is. That is how I think science works - that was Bacon's point - we discover laws and submit to them and by submitting we can control. It gets more subtle as me move to higher aspects of the cosmos, to control in the psychological is more complex and the laws are more subtle and we cannot and should not control people in the way we aspire to control things, none the less there are laws we can discover and use. But this is a terribly poor account of the law structure (try googling Herman Dooyeweerd). Now I find the idea that there is a way to follow which fits the way things are is a very old idea. The Greeks call it natural law, the Chinese call it the Tao which heaven and earth follows, Christians call it the way and it has other names. So I see the power behind the cosmos expressed in the law structure of the cosmos which can be discovered in a number of ways and it is this law structure which an expression on earth of the will of God to which I aspire to submit.
Too thin a reply. There is some honor in this fear; if I call you out on this fear claim, you'll tell me what? That it's a special kind of fear. Yes or no?

If yes, then we're back to the theist once more stating how they have something special and different; how even fear, in their case, is some noble and positive force. And when asked to show support for it, they won't be able to do so. If the answer is "no", then what kind of an ideology begins grounded in fear? And if fear isn't a psychological and even pathological keystone upon which to found an ideology, I don't know what would possibly suffice to define one as such.

By the way -- fear can motivated positive consequences; hell, I'm afraid of flying and so do it often as I can to overcome it, but I'd much prefer not having the fear at all in the first place and just doing it because it's fun and exciting and enjoyable to do. And I'm also aware of people courting fear because it turns them on; and that's fine if that's their choice. But to fear that which is supposed to love you and cherish you? That's... well, that's some weird psychology to say the least.

Yes, I think this is an interesting point. Yes our understand of fear could be very different from the understanding in say humanist psychology. I would say wisdom begins in fear because before we began to know we did not see the dangers, then we saw the dangers and did not act because we were afraid, then we learned to act but we no longer acted in ignorance. I think I can see that process in my work with clients. Of course I would not want to inculcate the fear but reality itself will do that for me. Thank you; that is a new insight I must dwell on.
You said:
You sound like you're evading the question. What's the difference between you and me then if the above is true? I at least examined the problem and came to a conclusion based on thinking it through. You don't even want to address it. What if your motive is "the wrong one"-- or what if "not dwelling on one's motive" is a wrong choice? Why doesn't Pascal's Wager suddenly apply to you and your choice? Are you supposed to look inward and consider your relationship to god and Jesus and so on? And why would the answer be "theoretical" if god exists and there's a concrete plan for salvation? If it's concrete, what's theoretical about that answer?

There is a kind of self examination which is helpful and a kind which is not and it is no easy matter to delineate the two. I think with Pascal's wager you have to put it in the whole context of his system. You have to remember he never finished the pensees or got things in the order he wanted and I don't think the conclusion of the wager was meant as a resting place. His resting place was fire! The God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob not the God of the philosophers! But I do regard my understanding of my own motives as being partly theoretical because self knowledge is such a slow process. So if you say are you motivated by love or fear or joy then I don't always know and I'm in the process of finding out. It may be a matter of different psychologies, maybe you have more of a need to define yourself in some ways than I do. I don't think that is a bad thing. (sorry - that reminds me of a Bob Dylan interview where someone said to him 'A lot of young people try to imitate you; is that a good thing or a bad thing?' and Dylan replies, 'It's a thing.')
Here's where you compare apples to meteors. Your materialists' questions are not a likewise comparison to that of an entity you claim has an intellect. The quark, the identity of an object, these are not intellectual entities with sapience. They are things; and things are what they are neutrally. There is a pen sitting on my desk; it is not alive, nor aware, nor can it reason; it is a pen because that is what it is, without volition. I can say, "It is a pen because it was designed to be a pen" and the pen cannot argue or complain. If I were to say, "That is a pen and it is compelled to want to write something" I would expect to be held to account for such a claim. But I do not make that claim; the pen will write, but not because it desires to do so.

God, however, is not of the same category, according to the theist. God is an entity with a mind of some kind, and now apparently with needs and desires. You say god has wants and needs, and one of those wants or needs is worship. In demanding an account for this, you reply "Well, that is simply the way it is" as if god is a pen or an object; well that's fine if you want to go that way, but now you worship a god that is under the preeminence of something greater than he/she/ or it. If god is trapped being beholden to worship "because that is the nature of things" you have a god who is enthralled to the nature of things he himself has created!

Are you saying he cannot be otherwise? Can he choose not to be so?

Here is where we get into deep water as I said right at the beginning. I think the simplest answer I can give without developing this in too much detail is to say that the distinction you are making between necessity and contingency is one which we find in creation but not in God, at least not in God as he is in himself. If we regards necessity as a type of possibility and we regard all possibilities as possibilities of a particular kind such as say logical possibility and physical possibility then God would be the creator off all these kinds of possibilities hence he would be the creator of all kinds of necessities and all kinds of contingencies. It would follow that in himself he transcends both necessity and contingency. Hence I personally do not regard any of his attributes as being either necessary or contingent but as having a unique status and a unique relation to his being which is not found in any created object. But I would stress that is just a personal view and other answers have been given to this admittedly highly speculative question.
Epistemology is the new rock 'n' roll!
User avatar
Moonwood the Hare
Senior member
Senior member
 
Posts: 1880
Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:24 am
Affiliation: Christian - pretty traditional

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Moonwood the Hare » Tue Nov 22, 2011 2:56 pm

Dr Mundo wrote: Even though you thought Rian would agree with you on this I will only speak directly towards you, If she thinks what you said reflects her thoughts then include her in here too. Sorry if this sound upsetting or rude it’s not my intention, so here we go.

Well I owe you double thanks. firstly for being honest and secondly for trying to soften the blow.
I don't think you realize just how idiotic your stance really is. I would also add arrogant and selfish. I am typically fine with selfish behavior as I think its impossible (extremely difficult at least) to avoid, however this type of thinking is a whole new level of selfishness that even upsets me. You are telling me that you think by telepathic communication with the author of the cosmos that it will magically heal your cancer? That is the idiotic part.

I don't know what you mean by magic, and in any sense in which I would use the word magic is not involved. As far as I can see this is an example of what Richard Dawkins would call the argument from personal incredulity and as such it has no intellectual force although the emotional impact is considerable and I don't want to dismiss that. none the less the fact that you find something incredible is no reason for thinking it cannot happen.
The arrogant part is that you believe that the greatest being in the universe one whose existence can’t even be known, is somehow looking out for you, waiting for you to ask to remove a cancer from your body, even though you have access to some pretty sophisticated medical equipment and treatments.

But suppose God wants me to ask for things. Why should I put limiters on him. Besides it is your idea that his existence cannot be known not mine. The God you are describing is the God of Deism and yes frankly it would be incredible if such a God ever intervened in creation. But then I never pretended to believe in that God.
Yet there are literally millions upon millions of helpless children living under conditions far worse than a person in a developed nation with cancer. I don’t think you can imagine the sincerity of the prayer of those children or their mothers. And you think God will heal your cancer over providing them at least drinking water that isn’t contaminated? Idiotic is the best word I can come up with for that.

The attitude to that is one that I sometimes come across. You meet a person who is suffering and he says, 'Yes but compared to the real suffering in the world mine is trivial'. This generally means that the person is cutting himself off from his own feelings. He has internalised the idea that really he does not matter. I would not want to reinforce that state of mind and neither I believe does God. Feeling too guilty to feel your own pain is a desperate state to be in but it is where many in the West are. A few years ago I saw an interview with a newsreader who had been assaulted and she said 'this has brought home to me how much evil there is in the world and at the time I thought, 'but the stuff you read out every day must bring that home to you.' But to say that is to ignore the first person perspective. I think God wants to be involved in the detail of people's lives, even the affluent.
On the flip side however, if God doesn’t magically heal your cancer, you are saying he still wins out as the good guy. No matter what happens in your world view God wins. It is beyond my grasp as to why there are people who, when they really think about it, still believe as you do. You need some sort of savior for your life, fine, punish your own self with this mental prison you have set up I could care less about how you wish to spend your time dealing with imaginary characters. Just don’t bring that shit to where it can do any unwanted harm for the rest of us. Not that you do it specifically, the last statement was meant to be directed at religion in general, for the most part you seem more reasonable than your buddies.

Well I honestly see more harm being done by the supposedly humble attitude you are advocating. I don't think Christians have avoided the issues of world poverty, do you? And it seems to me that it is the false humility you are advocating that is really punitive for in this view the person with cancer must look on the suffering of the world and find no place for his own pain. How is that kind?
Epistemology is the new rock 'n' roll!
User avatar
Moonwood the Hare
Senior member
Senior member
 
Posts: 1880
Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:24 am
Affiliation: Christian - pretty traditional

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Aaron » Tue Nov 22, 2011 4:36 pm

Moonwood the Hare wrote:Well I honestly see more harm being done by the supposedly humble attitude you are advocating. I don't think Christians have avoided the issues of world poverty, do you? And it seems to me that it is the false humility you are advocating that is really punitive for in this view the person with cancer must look on the suffering of the world and find no place for his own pain. How is that kind?

I see what you're saying Moonwood and I think you have a point. But then again I often find myself in one of those "poor me" states and it usually isn't until I force myself to stop and start looking to the needs of other people when I get out of that hole. But I do see your point. To ignore our pain and pretend we aren't or shouldn't be affected by it is a mistake, but then so is to sit around and feel sorry for ourselves... for some reason just thought I'd throw that in there...

False humility is a bugger.
"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
User avatar
Aaron
veteran
veteran
 
Posts: 951
Joined: Mon Mar 23, 2009 9:29 pm
Location: Alaska
Affiliation: Christian

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby mitchellmckain » Tue Nov 22, 2011 11:32 pm

Dr Mundo wrote:At least now I know neither you nor Rian think of Prayer as a way for God to magically help you in some way. Its just to make you feel better.

No aside from the problems in your use of the word "magically", that isn't quite right. I don't think that there is any doubt that Moonwood and Rian believe that God DOES have the power to heal people, just as I do. Cancer does go into remission. Does that count as magical? But regardless prayer can never be a magical means of healing people because people do not and cannot ever control what God does. That does not mean that we cannot ask. However, I think that Moonwood is absolutely correct that the primary purpose of prayer is NOT to control the actions of God but rather to change the person who is praying. BUT that does not at all mean that God cannot answer our prayers or that He never intervenes in any way in response to those prayers.

Dr Mundo wrote: For instance if you had cancer I don't think you would pray to god to cure your cancer, if I am understanding you both correctly. You would probably pray to make you feel at ease with the fact that you have cancer, and you just want to think of it in a different perspective. That doesn't mean you think God would intervene and provide any tangible/physical benefit though. To think otherwise would be silly. Beyond silly in my opinion.

That is YOU whom you are describing and you alone. I don't see anything silly about it at all. There are a lot of doctors who would not see anything silly about it either. There is a great deal that doctors have absolutely no control over and often all they are left with is hoping, wishing or praying that the patient manages to pull through.

Now what would be silly is if you think that ALL you needed to do would be to pray and that this would cure your cancer. That would indeed be a magical type of thinking -- as if God were at your beck and call to do whatever you say. God is not a tool in your hand and thus there is no comparison to the tools and methods that are available to modern medicine. Jesus showed that the proper role of prayer is to leave things in the hands of God, AFTER you have done everthing you can, otherwise it is like the suggestion to Jesus that he thow himself off the temple and expect God to catch him.

Dr Mundo wrote:I don't think you realize just how idiotic your stance really is. I would also add arrogant and selfish. I am typically fine with selfish behavior as I think its impossible (extremely difficult at least) to avoid, however this type of thinking is a whole new level of selfishness that even upsets me. You are telling me that you think by telepathic communication with the author of the cosmos that it will magically heal your cancer?

No. Again you completely miss the point.

Your attempt to force it into simpleton black and white, either or terms is what is really idiotic here.

Dr Mundo wrote:The arrogant part is that you believe that the greatest being in the universe one whose existence can’t even be known, is somehow looking out for you, waiting for you to ask to remove a cancer from your body, even though you have access to some pretty sophisticated medical equipment and treatments.


The arrogance here is YOURS. Your declaration that the existence of God can't even be known is something which YOU cannot possibly know.

The greatest being and creator of the universe has told us quite clearly that He is intimately concerned and involved in our personal lives. He is indeed looking out for us. BUT His persespective and priorities are vastly different from ours. We tend to be like children who act like we must have that piece of candy in the window or we absolutely are going to die, and just like the child's parents, God knows the truth from the BS that we indulge ourselves in. His concern has to be for our eternal spiritual life and not for passing comforts and discomforts of our physical existence. That is actually one of the wonderful thing about prayer -- that God answers them by giving us what we really need and not the desires that pretend are needs.

There is this really cool book called "The Traveler in Black" by John Brunner with stories about this traveler who basically destroys people by granting their wishes. He is not portrayed as a cruel or viscious person but as someone on a mission to reduce the power of chaos in the world by revealing the insanity and foolishness in peoples wishes and desires. It was an excellent demostration of how giving people what they ask for can be the most dangerous and destructive thing for them.
Last edited by mitchellmckain on Thu Nov 24, 2011 7:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
mitchellmckain
Senior member
Senior member
 
Posts: 4472
Joined: Sat Jul 18, 2009 1:32 am
Location: Salt Lake City
Affiliation: Christian

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Moonwood the Hare » Wed Nov 23, 2011 4:36 pm

Aaron wrote:
Moonwood the Hare wrote:Well I honestly see more harm being done by the supposedly humble attitude you are advocating. I don't think Christians have avoided the issues of world poverty, do you? And it seems to me that it is the false humility you are advocating that is really punitive for in this view the person with cancer must look on the suffering of the world and find no place for his own pain. How is that kind?

I see what you're saying Moonwood and I think you have a point. But then again I often find myself in one of those "poor me" states and it usually isn't until I force myself to stop and start looking to the needs of other people when I get out of that hole. But I do see your point. To ignore our pain and pretend we aren't or shouldn't be affected by it is a mistake, but then so is to sit around and feel sorry for ourselves... for some reason just thought I'd throw that in there...

False humility is a bugger.

Well, it has to be worked out existentially for each of us I think. But I wonder if we find self pity unattractive and so conclude that it is morally wrong. Using the needs of others as a distraction from our own inner troubles is a dangerous game; if it is played it should be at least played knowingly.
Epistemology is the new rock 'n' roll!
User avatar
Moonwood the Hare
Senior member
Senior member
 
Posts: 1880
Joined: Wed Aug 19, 2009 10:24 am
Affiliation: Christian - pretty traditional

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Rian » Wed Nov 23, 2011 4:57 pm

Just wanted to say first off that I would definitely pray for healing, and secondly that I am really enjoying this thread - I think it's a really high-quality discussion by all. I've only been able to scan most of the posts, because I'm a bit worse, but keep it up! I probably won't be able to respond until after Thanksgiving. I had my thyroid ultrasound, and there are some nodules there, so this thread might gain some added interest soon! I'll find out more on December 7th.

Anyway, I definitely have some things I wanted to say in response to Dr M's response - thanks for being so patient with my slowness, Dr M. I'll respond as soon as I can. In the meantime, keep up the good discussion!
"Aurë entuluva! Auta i lómë!" ("Day shall come again! The night is passing!") -- from JRR Tolkien's The Silmarillion

Christianity is the red pill - go for it! Seek the truth, wherever it leads you.
User avatar
Rian
Senior member
Senior member
 
Posts: 3645
Joined: Mon Jul 23, 2007 12:36 pm
Location: Arizona, USA ... for now ...
Affiliation: Christian/truth-seeker

Re: Dr M's points on prayer, eternity, and a few other thing

Postby Keep The Reason » Wed Nov 23, 2011 6:01 pm

mitchellmckain wrote:The greatest being and creator of the universe has told us quite clearly that He is intimately concerned and involved in our personal lives.


Really? How exactly do you know this? Seems to be quite the statement, said with an entrenched context of assured knowledge.

Has he spoken to you directly about this? Tell us about it.

Or is this just your subjective opinion and not anything remotely "quite clearly"?
==============
Religion is the child's method to satisfy curiosity, science is the adult's method to satisfy curiosity.
--GS
Keep The Reason
Senior member
Senior member
 
Posts: 2866
Joined: Wed May 11, 2011 4:50 pm
Affiliation: Reasonist

PreviousNext

Return to General discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot], mitchellmckain and 0 guests