VickiRW wrote:Yes, obviously there is no reason that life would have to have "M"eaning. If you assume it does, then I guess it makes sense to say the "M"eaning comes from god. With no real logical reason to assume "M"eaning, turning to an unreasoned reason may be ironically reasonable in that a reasoned reason isn't going to exist unless you just happen to be right about your first assumption. mitchellmckain is right that this is like language; there are no ultimate meanings to words, just the meanings we assign to them. I assign meaning to my life in the same way.
Correct. Meaning is largely subjective. It is at most that median between subjective and objective that we find in the agreement between members of a group, just as we find in language. That is to say that there is no way that we can objectively demonstrate what the meaning or value of our lives should be, and thus in a free society it is our right to find whatever meaning and value that we can for our lives. But taking that as a given, people have every right to look for such value in different places and thus that includes seeking value and meaning that is dictated by a group or some authority that they accept -- though this not something that I ever could really understand myself. I can understand the value and meaning that people find in relationships with others, and it is on that basis that I relate to the way that the theist finds meaning for their lives in a relationship with God.
humanguy wrote:Always great to hear from Mr. Sunshine himself, the Happy Christer, the smartest guy in his tiny mind. Play, Mitch, scurry and frolic, play catch with the iddy biddy budderflies.
No meaningful content here just a lot idiotic ad-hominem hostility.
Moonwood the Hare wrote:Anyway I thought humanguy was saying there is no meaning to things as a whole not to his own life.
...shrug... So just substitute "things as a whole" for "life" in what I said and it still applies.
Moonwood the Hare wrote:He finds meaning through his actions. We used to call it existetialism.
Now THAT, I have no problem with whatsoever. If what he meant to say is that there is no a-priori meaning that can be objectively established but that meaning is something we have to find for ourselves then I would say "Damn straight!" But you are not going to find such meaning for yourself if you start by saying that you don't need any, and I see no reason to have anything but contempt for the denunciation of the efforts of others to find meaning in their lives.
Moonwood the Hare wrote:Isn't this sort of what Camus' Myth of Sisyphus says Mitch.
Yes I think that the above is certainly a premise in the Albert Camus' "Myth of Sisyphus". Since we must find the meaning of our existence for ourselves then we can find meaning and even happiness in defiance of immoral gods no matter how hopeless that defiance may be.