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01-07-2012, 01:40 AM | #111 |
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It is psychologically effective for many people that a belief cannot be proven false. Logically, it is worthless as a proof that the belief is true.
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01-07-2012, 02:22 AM | #112 | ||
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01-07-2012, 09:27 AM | #113 |
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Destitute of what? Atheism is, by definition, simply an absence of a particular belief. It's not an ideology. It has no content.
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01-07-2012, 09:38 AM | #114 |
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... says the poster who specializes in one line posts that he seems to think are zingers, who first introduced a "witticism" from Twain, but who has now downgraded Twain to a wisecracker ...
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01-07-2012, 10:46 AM | #115 | ||
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So is atheism so destitute that it must rely on wisecracks from people who don't really know what they are talking about? Surely not? And why has there been no confession about the rumour? |
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01-07-2012, 10:48 AM | #116 |
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01-07-2012, 11:07 AM | #117 |
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sotto, you would probably be better received here if you cut down the volume of threads that you were participating in, and instead focused more of your attention on giving more depth to your responses in the remaining threads that you do participate in (and cutting down your own use of the attempted wisecracks that you are criticizing others for).
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01-07-2012, 11:56 AM | #118 | ||
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It appears so. Twain knew whereof he wrote, much better than you. Quote:
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01-07-2012, 01:35 PM | #119 | |||||
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Hi sotto voce,
Regarding Blaise Pascal: Louis the Fourteenth and the Writers of his Age”. By Rev. J.F. Astie, Boston, John P. Jewett and Company, 1855, pg. 69 Quote:
As for Goethe, the whole passage from his autobiography on pg. 409 (Thanks No Robots) his memoirs, suggests that he read the Bible with a humanist view towards understanding its traditions and literary development and not as the word of any particular God. Quote:
Søren Kierkegaard wrote against contemporary Christianity and although his beloved father was a preacher, near the end of his life, Soren denied being a Christian. He noted that the only Christian died on the Cross at Calvary. A.N. Whitehead is famous for his "Process Philosophy" which promotes an evolutionary view of God and the Universe, hardly Christian. JS Mill was noted for his utilitarianism a moral theory in direct opposition to Christian teachings. It suggests our actions should be judged by how much happiness it brings to the greatest number. This has nothing to do with pleasing or following any God and certainly not the God/s in the Bible. William of Occam was condemned as a heretic in 1326. He was considered a nominalist or conceptualist when it came to Plato's universals. This was in direct opposition to Christians like Saint Augustine who regarded them as real. His denial of supernatural explanations as the best explanations helped to lead to empiricism and modern science. Warmly, Jay Raskin Quote:
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01-07-2012, 01:37 PM | #120 |
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