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01-07-2003, 06:18 AM | #11 | ||
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I don't believe that there's a ghost haunting my parking garage (nor has anyone suggested as much). Technically you could call this position a 'belief'. But it is a 'belief in the negative'. By the same token, you would have a google of beliefs - belief that orange donkeys aren't stealing your celery, belief that car honks do not sound like Andy Griffith to everyone but you, belief that schizzel isn't a froopy on the mizam, etc. Do you see the distinction I am trying to draw? I too, BTW, am interested in beliefs and their origins. Quote:
And thank you for the well-wishes, but I have long since finished university and am done grad school. |
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01-07-2003, 07:04 AM | #12 |
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How do we Help Gemma Therese?
The trouble is, I fear Gemma Therese can't think beyond,
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Is there any way we can help her to think better? |
01-07-2003, 07:23 AM | #13 |
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Wow, a whole thread dedicated to me! I feel so important!
By the pyschology of atheism, I wonder how people's minds go from theistic -> atheistic, remain atheist, or remain theist, or go from atheist to theist. There is a book by that same title somewhere. I am interested in people in general, and I almost went into social anthropology. Gemma Therese |
01-07-2003, 07:46 AM | #14 |
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Go to the home page of the Internet Infidels Type the word, "DECONVERSION" into the search engine at the top right of the page. You will find the material which interests you.
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01-07-2003, 09:06 AM | #15 |
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It's easy to understand an atheist. Just belive that there isn't a ghost in your oven. Thats atheism in a nutshell.
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01-07-2003, 09:53 AM | #16 | |
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Gemma,
Here's an excerpt from Dan Barker's Losing Faith in Faith: From Preacher to Atheist: Quote:
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01-07-2003, 02:49 PM | #17 | |
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01-07-2003, 05:10 PM | #18 | |
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Contrasting the Raelians with the Vatican was my way of trying to indicate to Gemma how one can better understand the psychology of atheism. It really isn't at all difficult to see the ludicrous nature of theism when put in the context I presented. My post also offers how an atheist may be psychologically disposed to refute such nonsense in order to bring some sanity to an addle-brained world. Oh...and I'm *not* anti-theism, rather I am pro-rational thought. |
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01-07-2003, 06:33 PM | #19 | |
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What's the philosophy of theism? Why do people continue to believe in something that to me is obviously false? Regards, Richard |
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01-07-2003, 07:35 PM | #20 |
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Greetings:
I never believed, though for a time during my childhood I really wanted to. At best, I was an agnostic, then became atheist. I like the 'ghost' analogy. I don't look at the stars and say 'there's no 'God' there'; Ie look at the stars, and see only the stars...I don't think of 'God' (not even to think of the absence of 'God') at all. Keith. |
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