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Old 04-10-2002, 07:02 PM   #51
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<strong>Wizardry:</strong>
Nothing about religion even remotely resembles reasoning.
. . .

[Human religions] weren’t bad starts, either. I think that the Judeo-Christian morality is a perfectly good starting point, but that doesn’t mean that all rational inquiry should stop there.

<strong>Farseeker: </strong>Why no one sees the failure of your reasoning here is beyond me. These two statements are contradictory.
First you claim NOTHING in religion resembles reasoning, then claim at least one thing IS reasonable.
That’s not a contradiction. Something can be reasonable without involving reasoning.

Reasoning is a process. Reasonability is a property of a proposition which does not depend on the reasoning used to reach that conclusion.

For example, if I say that the sky is blue because I heard it on the radio, that is not reasoning. The proposition itself, that the sky is blue, is not necessarily ridiculous even though the reasoning is.

In this case, I am saying that the Judeo-Christian moral system is a good place to begin constructing a morality. The fact that this system was developed with little other rationale behind it other than “God said so” does not diminish its abilty to allow the construction of a stable society. It’s not all reasonable, though. Some of its principles cannot be rationally defended, and it lacks some fairly important principles. Rational inquiry is supposed to reinforce the parts of a system that work, eliminate the parts that do not, and add parts that should be there.

In other words, the Christian system is faulty but salvagable.

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Don’t you see how you are the blind leading the blind?
Who am I leading? I think we should all be trying to see for ourselves.

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<strong>Wizardry: </strong> They didn’t clearly oppose slavery or the oppression of women. They didn’t say anything about governmental power being derived from the consent of the governed. They didn’t allow for further rational inquiry of these concepts. That’s not exactly a sparkling record.

<strong>FarSeeker: </strong>Please read the Bible without the blinders that Atheist propaganda has forced on you.
What atheistic propaganda is that?

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The Bible demands justice and fairness for everyone in a time when people you defend were committing mass infanticide.
Who am I defending? I thought that I was explicitly not defending the morality of ancient peoples, but rather the rational inquiry of morality.

By the way, who are these people supposedly committing mass infanticide?

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It wasn’t the Greeks who outlawed slavery (they had 2 types of people, Greek freemen and barbarians/slaves), China (both ancient and modern) didn’t outlaw slavery.
Neither did the Hebrews.

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The Roman Republic/Empire didn’t outlaw slavery.
I know, even when it was Christian.

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The Soviet Union didn’t outlaw slavery.
That’s because slavery was already illegal in Russia in 1917. It remained illegal, though.

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England and the USA outlawed slavery and basically forced that law on the world.
First of all, in Europe and the Americas, the United States was one of the last to outlaw slavery. Only Brazil took longer.

Secondly, this is the nineteenth century we’re talking about. If Christianity was opposed to slavery, it wouldn’t have taken until the 1800’s to abolish the institution.

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But now that Europe cultures have turned away from God, they don’t care that slavery has returned.
What are you talking about.

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While you may not accept God’s authority, it is there.
While you may not accept Allah’s authority, it is there.

See how pointless that is?

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Atheism doesn’t clearly oppose slavery or the oppression of women.
The only thing that atheism opposes is the existence of God. Most secular moralities do reject the oppression of women, though.

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Those who fought against it were Christian more than anything else.
And those who supported it were Christian more than anything else. That’s because there were more Christians in general than anything else. However, there were more secular abolitionists than secular slave-holders.

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On another thread some Atheist tried to imply that Atheism was responsible for the Civil rights movement of the 20th century; completely ignoring REVEREND Martin Luther King.
Well I can’t defend that. Although I would like to point out that the Civil Rights movement would probably never have happened without the trailblazers who came before, many of whom had a rationalistic outlook and a willingness to change the status quo.

As to MLK, I have a great respect for him. I like someone who is willing to change that which needs to be changed and do so without violence.

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<strong>Wizardry: </strong> “Those who don’t learn from the past are condemned to repeat it.” Crazy us.
And we learn from their failures. Duh.

<strong>FarSeeker: </strong>But you’re not!
Sure we do. There aren’t a lot of people left that support a statist society. We’ve learned that authoritarian regimes, no matter the underlying ideology are extremely dangerous. The idea of a “dictatorship of the proletariat” that will usher in a new world order through revolution has been virtually extinguished. Marxism is largely discredited, having failed in the Soviet Union.

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There is a thread on this site dedicated to using the “all Christians are insane” idea of the Soviet Union to lock up Christians for their beliefs.
One Atheist, in the “Skeptical Inquire,” said basically that religion should be put under house arrest.
A demented judge down south is trying to outlaw public prayer.
Another writer in “Free Inquiry” hates Christians because they keep saying, “bless you” when she sneezes.
This is a very short list of Atheists not learning from history.
I am not responsible for the thoughts and behavior of all atheists just as you are not responsible for that of all Christians. I am sure I could dredge up some statements by Christians that were equally bad.

They are not representative of all atheists.

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An old cry against the unbalanced nature of this Forum.
Atheists on this site do not criticize Marxists. (Therefore I don’t see that you really disagree with them.) It has been claimed that that is because they don’t post here, but that is illogical because you would abuse Christians even if we did not post here (admitted by an Atheist). You attack Christianity and Christians for things you think they were responsible for, but hardly a peep about Marxists. This is apparently favoritism for fellow Atheists.
Paraphrased: “When they come for you, will there be any one to speak up?”
We do so criticize Marxists. Drop by the Political Forums and see if you can find who agrees with Konarmia or JM/M.J/Little War. You will see that we criticize them a great deal. It’s only that Marxists are rare on this board and elsewhere and if we did go out of our way to post critiques, there would be little if any disagreement. It’s the same reason there aren’t a lot of topics on Buddhism around here.

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<strong>Wizardry: </strong> Why should Dr. Singer change his views?
If you can convince me why Dr. Singer is wrong without appeal to the supernatural, then I will accept your wager.

<strong>FarSeeker: </strong> 1.) Because you have obviously apparent, rational proof that babies are people?
Are you saying that you have it, or you think I have it?

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Or don't you think infanticide is wrong? (I guess not.)
I do think infanticide is wrong. I also disagree with Dr. Singer on a number of his fundamental premises that lead him to his conclusion. I have reasons for disagreeing with Dr. Singer, based on my conceptions of the origins of morality.

I was just asking you if you actually had a reason for opposing infanticide other than percieved divine command.

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Maybe this is related to why the doctors mentioned above did not consider euthanasia to be murder.
I only consider euthanasia to be murder if it is involuntary. If it’s voluntary, it’s suicide.

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Without God, humans are just animals, no more special than that bacteria your body just destroyed.
Doesn’t the fact that we are the only intelligent animals, or that we are humans ourselves count for anything? It does for me.

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So under Atheism murder isn't necessarily wrong, it's just a personal choice (That adds a whole new meaning to the phrase "Pro-Choice"), and forcing your morality on others isn’t allowed. Or is it?
It’s not really an issue of “my morality” versus “your morality”. There is a pool of values that we share with other members of our society. That is the standard of morality to which we adhere under penalty from society.

Murder is one of those values that is commonly viewed as wrong. Violating the prohibition of murder will result in penalty from the society.

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If you can't convince a Princeton college professor of "bioethics" that babies are people, how are you going convince anyone that your "rationally developed" morality must be accepted?
First of all, this is not my rationally developed morality. It’s not like I’ve developed a system with a bunch of laws that everybody must follow. As I’ve said before, dictated morality is a bad thing. Why would I go and create as system like that of my own?

Rational inquiry into morality is not a task undertaken by a single individual. It is the collective act of a society, through discussion among its members, asking itself whether or not the moral constraints it places on itself make sense. Take Women’s Lib as an example. It’s not as if someone wrote a book one day called The Complete Guide to Rational Morality where it was plainly deduced that women should be given the right to vote. Society changed gradually as people found themselves unable to support the contention that women should not be allowed to vote or be educated.

It wasn’t a monolithic change in society either. There were radicals on both sides who wanted more than either was willing to give up. Dialectic is a vital part of the process. In fact, that’s part of the reason that Dr. Singer’s ideas are not necessarily a bad thing. They contribute to the process, leading to a stronger end product.

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Or are you going to simply force your beliefs on everyone?
No. If they are good ideas, society will adopt them on its own.

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No, no, that can't be right; killing a unhatched eagle will get you arrested, killing an unborn baby is "just getting rid of a blob of flesh" (which can sense the world around it, react to voices, suck its thumb, consume and eliminate; etc.). A prematurely born baby is a baby (for now at least), and its twin still in the womb is a blob of discardable flesh, that is the essence of abortion and the point of failure of Atheist morality.
I don’t know of anyone who takes the position you described. In any case, it does not follow from atheism per se, so it really can’t be deemed a failure of atheistic morality. There are a number of atheists who oppose abortion.

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2.) I can't, and neither can you. That is why you are afraid to accept my challenge.
I am not “afraid” to accept your challenge. I just think it is a foolish thing to request. Your challenge is like insisting that a capitalist convince Karl Marx of his error and embrace capitalism. Extremely difficult if not impossible and unreasonable to boot.

It is not up to you or me or even Dr. Singer as to whether his ideas succeed or fail. Society will decide whether or not Dr. Singer is correct. I highly suspect they will disagree.

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Admit it, all you are trying to do is in creating your "rational morality" is develop your own religion.
I am doing no such thing.

Peace out.

[ April 10, 2002: Message edited by: Wizardry ]</p>
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Old 04-10-2002, 10:43 PM   #52
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I would not let Christian apologists get off so easily. It has been a very short time historically speaking, since the canonical church of the Christian faith could wipe the liters of blood from her sleeves.

Take the birth of the Inquisition in southern France, and the wholesale slaughter of the heretical Cathars or Albegensians. These people who the saintly Bernard of Clairvaux himself once called a people who lived basically good lives, if heretical, were placed under the sword and axe of the church and all those who would do their dirty work for promised worldly gain and spiritual favor. Fuelled by the greed of the northern French lords, the wealthy Languedoc region of the south was eventually over-run by the forces of the Crusade sent by Pope Innocent III.

The war was led by greedy and bloodthirsty adventures and fanatical papal legates. Innocent soon after boasted that five hundred towns and castles were taken from the heretics, where every man, woman and child were butchered, noble ladies and young daughters tossed down wells where they were stoned and knights put to the gibbets in batches of eighty. Thousands were killed, tortured, and murdered, with little regard for sex, age, or even innocence of heresy.

Arnold Aimery, the Papal Legate at the siege of Beziers, famously ordered his men: "Show mercy neither to order, nor to age, nor to sex....Cathar or Catholic, Kill them all... God will know his own....". It is chronicled that over 20,000 men, women, and children were massacred at Beziers, and in the name of the Christian faith.

At Lavaur among those slain in the taking of city, 400 Cathars are burned to death. At Marmande another 5,000 or more are slain in yet another massacre under the authority of the papal legates.

By the time of the fateful siege of Monsegur in 1244, where yet another 200 or more Cathars burned at the stake, thousands upon thousands had been killed and the once noble and cosmopolitan culture of the Occitan civilization, unrivaled perhaps in all of Europe, was in ruin, once the heir to a vibrant and enlightened mixing of Arabs, progressive Christians, and Jews. Catholic leaders bragged that they had put over 40,000 to the sword or to the flame, man, woman, and blameless babe. Considering that it was held that over a 1,000 cities had originally been "lost to Rome" and that it took over 220,000 soldiers years to eliminate the heretics, many estimate that well over 100,000 and as many as perhaps a quarter of a million men, women, and children were brutally slaughtered.

From this cauldron of blood and fire would be born the Inquisition, and those that died in Languedoc would pale in comparison to the collective numbers lost to subsequent crusades and the fighting between Catholics and Protestants in the centuries to come.

Add to this the many other crusades and pogroms against both heretics and non-Christians, including among them the woeful sack of Constantinople in the 4th Crusade, from which the center of the Eastern Roman empire and Christendom, never recovered, eventually leading to the taking of this most Christian of cities by the Ottoman Turks.

Even before the modern era, the litany of strife, bloodshed, murder, and slaughter perpetuated, vindicated, blessed, or allowed by the great faiths of the world is staggering. Religion is a river whose banks are constantly washed in the blood of not just their followers and martyrs, but the blood of countless innocents and non-believers as well.

Gang warily where gods walk.

.T.
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Old 04-10-2002, 10:48 PM   #53
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Is God the biggest mass murder of all time? I don't know, but he undoubtedly holds the record for the most prolific use of justifiable homicide.
 
Old 04-12-2002, 05:02 PM   #54
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Please read the Bible without the blinders that Atheist propaganda has forced on you. The Bible demands justice and fairness for everyone in a time when people you defend were committing mass infanticide.
From the Bible:
Quote:
Numbers 31:14 And Moses was wroth with the officers of the host, with the captains over thousands, and captains over hundreds, which came from the battle. And Moses said unto them, Have ye saved all the women alive? Behold, these caused the children of Israel, through the counsel of Balaam, to commit trespass against the LORD in the matter of Peor, and there was a plague among the congregation of the LORD. Now therefore kill every male among the little ones, and kill every woman that hath known man by lying with him. But all the women children, that have not known a man by lying with him, keep alive for yourselves.
Obviously, "killing every male among the little ones" is totally different from "committing mass infanticide". Only a victim of intense atheist propaganda has a mind so warped as to confuse these quite distinct concepts.

The women, of course, are kept alive to become nuns.
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Old 04-14-2002, 05:31 PM   #55
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Interesting posts here by Wizardry, Typhon, Jack the Bodiless. The Fundies can't get any traction on this thread.
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Old 04-15-2002, 06:20 AM   #56
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David Payne wrote:

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Of course God’s innocence or guilt is subjective, and is open to interpretation by all who follow the arguments here. I think we present our case and the other side presents theirs, and the most logical, rational arguments will win the minds of those who follow such thought processes. The rest are reduced to bleating their cause to any that will listen. One can say that God can no more be held accountable for the actions of individual humans than any of us can be held accountable for the actions of another. Humanity however is not omnipotent; the Abrahamic God doesn’t have that limitation, does he? With great power comes great responsibility, and God is flunking the test, and has been for the whole of his being. Well OK, this is hyperbole I realize, as he doesn’t exist and never has; and these arguments are, in the end, just an intellectual exercise.
I don't think it is an intellectual excersise at all. I think it is something that everyone, especially religionists should face.

With the exception of the communists in this century practically every case of mass murder in history has been carried out by leaders relying on the religious fervor of their subjects to carry out the deed.

All any of us need to commit murder is the will to do so. If we happen to believe in some deity that tells us through his agents to commit murder, that may be all the will we need.

No, I think as long as we are killing each other off in the name of our gods, discussing this stuff is essential.
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Old 04-19-2002, 04:33 PM   #57
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Quote:
Originally posted by Tristan Scott:
<strong>



I don't think it is an intellectual excersise at all. I think it is something that everyone, especially religionists should face.

With the exception of the communists in this century practically every case of mass murder in history has been carried out by leaders relying on the religious fervor of their subjects to carry out the deed.

All any of us need to commit murder is the will to do so. If we happen to believe in some deity that tells us through his agents to commit murder, that may be all the will we need.

No, I think as long as we are killing each other off in the name of our gods, discussing this stuff is essential.</strong>
Tristan, I agree that this is more than an intellectual exercise, it is a forum for persuading those on the fence that there is another path to follow in relation to how one leads ones life. In addition, the mass murders committed by those not following Gods direction were in effect following a regime that resembles religion so closely, that they may as well have been doing their work in the name of God. You know Hitler, Stalin, and Mao etc all were looked upon as infallible leaders who were godlike in their follower’s eyes. Fanaticism and authoritarian belief have transcended God and now can be used by anyone with enough charisma to appeal to the downtrodden masses. It’s scary, and as 9/11 shows us it’s a long way from over.
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Old 04-19-2002, 05:12 PM   #58
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Why I have avoided this post is listed below.

"Is God the biggest mass murder of all time?"

Of course God isn't the biggest mass murder of all time! The biggest mass murder would be whatever is the largest number of humans murdered at one time, usually by fellow humans. God may be the biggest mass MURDERER of all time, but God is not a mass of innocent humans who were massacred by their fellows. At least, not in any religion I know of.

David? Since you've edited the post topic several times now, could you please correct "murder" to "murderer"? I'm the daughter of an English major, and it hurts my eyes to see it. Thanks.
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Old 04-19-2002, 06:00 PM   #59
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Kassiana, thanks for the heads up. I don't know how I missed that, kind of embarrassing. Perhaps that explains why our resident theists haven’t had much input into this thread. Surely it isn’t the question, which should be easly answered by luvluv Atticus et al.
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Old 04-19-2002, 07:09 PM   #60
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Quote:
Originally posted by David Payne:
<strong>Kassiana, thanks for the heads up. I don't know how I missed that, kind of embarrassing. Perhaps that explains why our resident theists haven’t had much input into this thread. Surely it isn’t the question, which should be easly answered by luvluv Atticus et al. </strong>
Dp there is no answer to your post, thats why the Theist fundies don't play on this thread!
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