Moderator: Spamcops

cleve wrote:How would you define a habit? What elements constitute a habit?
cleve wrote:How would you define religion?
cleve wrote:What causes religion to occur habitually - how does this happen, both negatively and positively?
cleve wrote:What makes religion important to you? Is it merely something to be curious about? Is it more than curiosity?
cleve wrote:Do you consider yourself to think honestly?


cleve wrote:Do you consider yourself to think honestly?
mitch wrote:How can one even measure this except to see where in ones hierarchy of values, honesty is found? In my case, it is right at the top, where from my upbringing as a child of two psychology graduates, honesty to oneself defines sanity. For when one starts lying to oneself one has started down the road of cutting the function of ones own mind off from reality.
Let me stop there for a response from cleve and ask him to reiterate other questions he has asked that he still thinks is relevant given the answers I have already given.

Tim-the-Hermit wrote:As a soft atheist, religion keeps me thinking about what is right and wrong. Ironically, one of the reasons I am atheist is because I do that and cannot reconcile hell with my conscience. '

cleve wrote:Tim-the-Hermit wrote:As a soft atheist, religion keeps me thinking about what is right and wrong. Ironically, one of the reasons I am atheist is because I do that and cannot reconcile hell with my conscience. '
Can anyone reconcile the unknown aspects about hell - completely? In my own opinion, because a lot has already been said in the Bible about hell, God can do whatever He wishes. So, If He wants to save the world, He will do so, one individual at the specific time determined by God. Or something like that.

cleve wrote:Honesty does not seem to be something that we are automatically born with - instead, it's something to learn about throughout life and is given to us in similar measure to the extent that we desire it.
cleve wrote:I would be especially interested in hearing from you as to how you learned to discern when people are lying to themselves.
cleve wrote: Having parents who are atheistic psychologists must have offered many learning experiences to you in this area. At the same time, did either - or both - of these parental preferences provide the motivation for your opting for teaching instead of psychology as a profession?
cleve wrote: What caused you to turn away from atheism and toward Christianity?
cleve wrote:How have you found education to help you in thinking more honestly? Or has it? Did you find your parents' education to help them to think more honestly?
cleve wrote: When it comes to learning to think and/or communicate more honestly, do you think higher education provided an adequate substitute for the Bible for them?


Tim-the-Hermit wrote:As a soft atheist, religion keeps me thinking about what is right and wrong. Ironically, one of the reasons I am atheist is because I do that and cannot reconcile hell with my conscience. '
cleve wrote:Can anyone reconcile the unknown aspects about hell - completely? In my own opinion, because a lot has already been said in the Bible about hell, God can do whatever He wishes. So, If He wants to save the world, He will do so, one individual at the specific time determined by God. Or something like that.


Tim-the-Hermit wrote:I have a vague memory of a TV programme showing a Christian group visiting a Nazi death camp. They were saying things like ‘how can a human being do this to another human being?’ A thought occurred to me (and has stuck in my head since) – why does the act become moral when it is a god doing it to a human being? I don’t know; I don't think it does.



Tim-the-Hermit wrote:Mitch, you say your mother worked as a 'special ed teacher.' Is that similar to this side of the pond, teaching disabled kids/students?
Tim-the-Hermit wrote:Back to topic - It's ironic that you talk of a black and white reaction because I think that is true of Heaven/Hell!Most people seem to have of mixture of good and bad in them.
Tim-the-Hermit wrote:What I think is really culpable is not so much bad habits, but deliberately, willingly and knowingly harming other people.

