FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 04-26-2007, 09:32 PM   #111
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: the reliquary of Ockham's razor
Posts: 4,035
Default

Don't confuse my hesitation about posting to IIDB (hardening into something more than hesitation) with a refusal to engage in critical dialogue. IIDB is not the "most critical dialogue-ish place on earth" (to abuse Disney), it is just one of many places to spend my time.
Peter Kirby is online now   Edit/Delete Message
Old 04-26-2007, 09:32 PM   #112
Banned
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 16,665
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter Kirby View Post
OK David, the further point of it is that point scoring (with smilies like :huh: so we can all keep track of who is scoring the points) is not something I'm looking for but is an inherent part of a many-to-many Internet medium (such as IIDB discussion board, IRC chat, etc.). I like the blog idea because it is a one-to-many plus many-to-one medium basically (the latter with feedback enabled), which allows for dialogue but elevates it from the prose analogue of a free-for-all rap duel.
Cough. http://peterkirby.blogspot.com/
EverLastingGodStopper is offline  
Old 04-26-2007, 09:34 PM   #113
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: the reliquary of Ockham's razor
Posts: 4,035
Default

At the suggestion of Sauron, I have a "temporary and prototypical" blog here:

http://thedarklingthrush.blogspot.com/

Enjoy if you will.
Peter Kirby is online now   Edit/Delete Message
Old 04-26-2007, 09:37 PM   #114
Banned
 
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 16,665
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by EverLastingGodStopper View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter Kirby View Post
At the suggestion of Sauron, I have a "temporary and prototypical" blog here:

http://thedarklingthrush.blogspot.com/

Enjoy if you will.
nm then

You have everything else under your real name. Why you'd choose an entirely different ... nm then.
EverLastingGodStopper is offline  
Old 04-26-2007, 10:22 PM   #115
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: the reliquary of Ockham's razor
Posts: 4,035
Default

I have started to make some posts there. I urge you all who are interested to check it out and interact with me there. :grin:
Peter Kirby is online now   Edit/Delete Message
Old 04-26-2007, 11:13 PM   #116
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Australia
Posts: 5,714
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter Kirby View Post
If anyone could explain to me a good method for posting to IIDB on faith matters without either too much acrimony or too much investment of time on my part (and please, not too much drama--I don't want a formal 1-on-1 debate in that section), then I might reconsider.
You will find that some people will view even your non-faith statements in terms of what you believe, or at least what they think that you should believe.
GakuseiDon is offline  
Old 04-27-2007, 12:01 AM   #117
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
The weather system is a chaotic system so its behaving exactly as it should. No problem there.
Better, the weather is a complex system. There are simply too many variables which should make the analogy with the human complex system clearer.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
Human beings influence each other.
This is only natural with heuristic machines. All inputs influence the organism. Humans tend to congregate so their influences tend to be more human.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
It doesnt mean we are purely the result of other people's influences. They play a part. But we also play a part. If you bring it down to the half-full half-empty perception of analogy, we see how much perception influences the signals we get.
As heuristic machines humans are garbage in garbage out affairs. If good stuff is provided as stimulus that tends to get good results.

We play our part in reading and learning the script of this play. We know our parts well and perform them well. Children are such good learners.

We are as much responsible for our children as our parents are for us. So domestic violence spawns domestic violence and we blame the wife-beater for being the animal he was trained to be. It's not the fault of the person's parents or of the society that alienated them because we believe that the individual does have responsibility and so we blame the individual while more such poor nasty creatures are produced.

You can see the semen swimming against the tide: "I won't do it! I won't do it!"

We all have choice, don't we? What cereal for breakfast (Cruncho tastes better and cleans your teeth as you eat). Whether the dudes think I'll look better in peuce or khaki. Whether to keep renting or take out a mortgage on a box.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
We are social beings. We interact but the output of an interaction is not purely determined by who we are interacting with. We have theists like Helen Mildenhall who have been in IIDB perhaps longer than any of us, yet she remains a theist.
The individual has a role. You are merely trying to snatch away the notion that we as individual are the deciders. You are reaching in and arguing that our egoes and who we turn out to be are just a product of things we otherwise have no control over. We are like bullets from fired guns...damn. Its moving back to spinoza as cited by noRobots...
I say only up to a point. That is why we talk about non-consensual sex. That is why we talk about "coercion". In fact, the basis of culpability in law is based on the idea that some actions can be blamed on specific individuals. If we were to embrace your philosophy, no individual is guilty of anything. And we wouldnt need to distinguish minors from adults.
We are all responsible for the rape and the murder.

The distinction between minors and adults is a modern invention of deresponsiblizing the young. It's another meaningless distinction. On the life line we decide that children have no power or responsibility until they reach this or that point.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
Different currents. Politics, lifestyle, economics, opinion leaders and history all these affect the likelihood of people being more religious. They werent at the same starting point when the gun was fired for starting the historical race, so they cannot be the same.
The choices your system makes are weighted choices. It can only choose from what is available to it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
You think its Sociology? Psychology? In any event, its a derived theory, not a basic one so it is largely Philosophical in my view.
Philosophy has nothing to do with. And to clarify, philosophy is actually two beasts: 1) the history of philosophical endeavor (each era has its own philosophical interests) and 2) the latest philosophical interest, ie what the legs of the latest bug do and how to pull them off.

Would you say education was basically philosophical? I wouldn't, though it includes sociology and psychology and various other inputs. (These broad subjects can be useful, but not necessarily.) The subject I'm dealing with is education at its widest. That will include linguistics (and sociolinguistics, psycholinguistics), neuropsychology

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
That is the human condition. They werent attached so that they can be located. In fact, they aren't attached at all. The male genitalia are appendages, not attachments. Your expressions are heavy with teleological import.
So you say my language is overdetermined, but we knew that already. Your pedantry is as well, but I couldn't hold it against you. Besides this general quibble is just a little tangent.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
Quote:
The person who flings himself himself to his death has probably long before lost the chance of surviving.
There it is! This fatalistic view is what makes me think we are looking at the cousin of predetermination.
I really don't follow the logic. It takes a lot of work to make a suicide. The human organism, like all organisms, usually has the grime determine to stay alive, so by the time our man is on the top of the building all the work has been done. Merely taking him off the top of the building will change nothing. You have to give him the only thing that you've got: your self. But that's usually too much to give. You don't want the responsibility. It's his life, not yours. He should have control over his life. But he hasn't, so *poof* goes the responsibility moralizing.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
So, do we excercise compassion and save the dude and risk engaging in a dubious "rescue" against the uncontrollable multivariable forces that drive us or do we sit and contemplate our bellybuttons?
If you are merely going to prevent him from doing the deed this time, what is the point? Compassion has nothing to do with salving the conscience. The dude hangs out until you've gone and checks into the nearest high building.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
I think you are making too much of it. We have people who are brought up in the gutter and end up as kings and we have people brought up in the palaces and end up in the gutter.
"next to of course god america i
love you land of the pilgrims' and so forth oh
say can you see by the dawn's early my
country 'tis of centuries come and go
and are no more what of it we should worry
in every language even deafanddumb
thy sons acclaim your glorious name by gorry
by jingo by gee by gosh by gum
why talk of beauty what could be more beaut-
iful than these heroic happy dead
who rushed like lions to the roaring slaughter
they did not stop to think they died instead
then shall the voice of liberty be mute?"

He spoke. And drank rapidly a glass of water
-e.e. cummings
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
I am a strong believer in the idea that where you come from does not dictate what you become.
In all complex systems there is error.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
I am the only atheist...
See what I mean?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
...where I come from and in my country, I only know of three other atheists. We are talking a population of 33million odd buggers.
(Canada or Morocco?)

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
Human beings are complex. Its not just identity. Even our DNA is complex. Even the collapse of the quantum wavefunction is complex. it doesnt mean we cannot understand and influence them it doesnt mean we have no role and are just being swept by currents.
You will need evidence for the idea that "We've never had a chance and we could never have a chance". So far, as you know, there is none.
You may subscribe to the school of thought that says that a man's grasp is beyond his reach. But we have a chance. We have always had a chance. We may be distracted, tired, slow, lazy or not hungry enough.
The magic word in this discourse is "we". If it were piddly "I", you'd have no real discourse at all. If "we" take some responsibility for "I", like a child with parental support or an alcoholic who can say to his group "it's been 68 days and I need a drink badly" and the group listens, understands, and strengthens his or her resolve to make it 69 days.

Compassion was what I was talking about before this long digression. Compassion is if you need my hand I can give it to you for now. I may need it back soon, but you can have it for as long as possible.

The discussion about overdetermination was just an effort to get around the anal retentive free choice rampant capitalist shill mentality. (Parse that!) You are less responsible than you think. So much of what you think is you is pastiche. You are a warping mirror. Heuristic machines are by their nature complex, but they are the sum of what they "absorb" and the arrangement of it. What's left is mainly dogma. What can you expect: you've been through seal-training until at least eighteen. Catch the ball, Bruno! Now right up on your tail. Oh boy, them fish taste good.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
But the chance is always there. Remember that there are many ways to skin a cat.
That's what you've been told.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
So even how you define "chance" will matter and be ultimately subjective.
In that "subjective" reflects how I learnt it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
This is philosophy either way.
Labelling it the way you feel comfortable with gives you some control over the idea. Overdetermination again.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
Thanks for playing.
You're welcome, Ted.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman View Post
Your point is well taken though I dont agree.
But I don't really understand why you don't. It seems so obvious to me.


spin
spin is offline  
Old 04-27-2007, 12:19 AM   #118
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Saskatchewan, Canada
Posts: 379
Default

Okay, I might sound like a jerk here, forgive me for that, but lemme drop my two cents please.

So this guy was an atheist for like ten years, wrote all this scholarly stuff on why religion is bs, and then viola he reconverts? Dude, you gave up. You fell pray to the opium. This is why religion survives! Because it is warm, communal, numbing, happy, easy! - allowing sentiment to overwhelm reason. People do what appeals to them, and religion is very appealing (even if not always in direct, obvious ways), hence its existence.

If you try to defend your position, just try to sound unlike how Sullivan did in his duel with Harris, appealing to unprovable emotions and feelings, which are in all truth readily explained by neuroscience (god-center anyone? : An evolved mechanism).

If my fellow atheists feel I'm off-base, go ahead, rip me a new one, but I find this severely disappointing.

Don't mistake me by the way, I don't have any problems with liberal religion. My best buddy is a Christian, and I am on close relations with my local Anglican church (the Dean is the coolest guy I've pretty much ever known. An awesome role model, seriously. So tolerant and funny, and smart too).
Vivo is offline  
Old 04-27-2007, 12:26 AM   #119
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

I don't recall Peter writing stuff on why religion is bs. He wrote about his deconversion based on logical arguments against the existence of God. He seems to have decided to reconvert (revert?) for more complex reasons.

Emotions and feelings are part of the human condition. They have helped the human species survive for generations.

It's not like Peter has drunk some Kool-Aid and now thinks that Gary Habermas was right all along.
Toto is offline  
Old 04-27-2007, 01:27 AM   #120
Banned
 
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: France
Posts: 1,831
Cool

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Be good and compassionate.
Why? Does he have some kind of illness? Didn't he find god again? :notworthy:

Oh I see, faith is a very serious illness. Poor chap.
Johann_Kaspar is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:40 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.